Oxycodone Addiction Treatment Program in Beverly Hills, CA
Oxycodone addiction can begin in ways that look responsible on the surface. A prescription for real pain. A higher dose after tolerance builds. A private decision to keep functioning, keep working, keep everything looking normal.
Then the costs show up. Sleep gets unreliable. Mood swings feel sharper. Anxiety rises between doses. The idea of stopping starts to feel impossible, not because you lack discipline, but because your nervous system has adapted to the drug.
In the U.S., overdose remains a major public health crisis. In 2023, there were 105,007 drug overdose deaths, and 79,358 involved opioids. Deaths involving natural and semisynthetic opioids were reported at 10,112 in 2023. (This category includes prescription opioids such as oxycodone.)
At Safe Haven Recovery, we provide oxycodone addiction treatment in a private Beverly Hills setting built for people who value confidentiality, clinical depth, and a clear plan forward.

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Why oxycodone can become addictive
Oxycodone is a prescription opioid used for moderate to severe pain. It can also be habit-forming, and it can cause serious or life-threatening breathing problems, especially early in use or when doses increase.
Addiction does not require chaos to be real. Many people with oxycodone use disorder still show up for work and keep commitments. What changes is the internal experience, the rising preoccupation with dosing, the shrinking window of feeling okay, the growing fear of withdrawal, and the way life starts to organize itself around avoiding discomfort.
How oxycodone use shifts from relief to reliance
With repeated exposure to opioids, the brain adapts. You may need more to get the same effect. You may feel “off” without it. You may start using oxycodone to regulate stress, sleep, or mood, not only pain.
Oxycodone addiction often shows up as patterns like:
- Taking more than intended, or taking it more often than planned
- Running out early and feeling panicked, irritable, or unwell without it
- Trying to stop, then restarting because withdrawal feels unbearable
- Hiding use, minimizing it, or making private rules around dosing
- Noticing motivation, focus, and relationships gradually erode
Opioid use disorder is a medical condition, and it responds best to structured care that treats both the body and the psychological drivers of relapse.
Counterfeit “oxycodone” pills and hidden fentanyl risk
A major modern danger is that pills can look legitimate and still be lethal.
The CDC reported increasing harms linked to suspected counterfeit “M-30” oxycodone pills, including fentanyl exposures and severe withdrawals. Public safety agencies also continue to warn that counterfeit pills are widespread and can contain fentanyl in unpredictable amounts.
If pills come from any source other than a pharmacy, the safest assumption is that the dose and ingredients are unknown.
Oxycodone withdrawal and why medical detox matters
Once your body has adapted to oxycodone, stopping or cutting back can trigger opioid withdrawal. Symptoms vary by dose, duration of use, and individual health, but they can feel overwhelming and drive relapse.
Common withdrawal symptoms can include:
- Intense cravings
- Muscle aches, restlessness, and sweating
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
- Anxiety, irritability, agitation
- Insomnia and exhaustion
Even when withdrawal is not typically the most medically dangerous type, the risks can still be serious. Dehydration, heart strain, and impulsive relapse are common concerns. Another critical risk is that tolerance can drop quickly. Returning to an old dose after a short break can raise overdose risk.
Safe Haven Recovery provides medically supervised detox in a private setting, with a clear transition into the next phase of care:
Detox is not the full treatment plan. It is the stabilization phase that makes real recovery work possible.

Who Is The Cocaine Addiction Treatment Program For?
This program is designed for individuals grappling with oxycodone addiction who are also experiencing co-occurring mental health challenges. It’s an ideal fit if you’re seeking to understand the intricate connection between your opioid use and your mental well-being.
We offer comprehensive, integrated support for those who need a professional diagnosis or treatment for these intertwined conditions, addressing both your mental and physical health needs simultaneously.
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Get a confidential consultation and explore your options.
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What happens after detox
Once you are medically stable, treatment shifts to what actually protects long-term recovery: cravings, triggers, stress tolerance, sleep repair, emotional regulation, and the “why” behind use.
Your plan may include:
- Individual therapy using evidence-based approaches (often CBT, DBT skills, motivational interviewing, and trauma-informed care)
- Group therapy and recovery education that builds practical relapse prevention
- Support for co-occurring anxiety, depression, trauma, or chronic stress
- Family involvement when it supports healthier boundaries and communication

Medication-assisted treatment for oxycodone addiction
Medication-assisted treatment (also called medications for opioid use disorder) can be a major layer of protection, especially for people with long-term opioid use, high relapse risk, or a history of overdose.
The FDA recognizes three medications approved for opioid use disorder treatment: buprenorphine, methadone, and naltrexone. Leading guidance also supports combining medication with counseling and behavioral therapies to improve outcomes.
Medication choices are individualized. The goal is stability, reduced cravings, lower overdose risk, and enough mental clarity to do the therapy work that changes outcomes.
Levels of care at Safe Haven Recovery
We provide a continuum of care, so support can match your needs as you stabilize and rebuild.
Medical detox and stabilization
A supervised setting for withdrawal management, monitoring, symptom relief, and early planning for the next level of care.
Residential treatment
Many clients step into residential care after detox, especially when privacy, structure, and distance from triggers are essential. Our residential program provides round-the-clock support and a daily rhythm built around therapy, recovery skills, and stabilization.
Outpatient care
Outpatient programs can serve as step-down care after residential treatment, or as structured treatment for clients who do not need round-the-clock supervision. It keeps therapy and accountability in place while you return to real-life responsibilities.
Aftercare planning
Recovery holds best when care continues past discharge. We plan next steps in advance, including therapy continuity, medication follow-up when appropriate, and relapse prevention strategies tailored to your lifestyle and risk profile.
What to expect in our Beverly Hills Rehab
Safe Haven Recovery is a luxury rehab in Beverly Hills built for people who want serious clinical care without sacrificing privacy. Our discreet setting supports nervous system regulation, restorative sleep, and the focus needed for lasting recovery.
Clients often appreciate:
- A confidential admissions process and clear communication
- A setting that feels residential, not institutional
- Structured therapy paired with supportive wellness services
- A care plan built around medical stability and long-term outcomes

Oxycodone Rehab FAQs
How long does treatment take?
Detox timelines vary, and the length of residential and outpatient care depends on your dose history, how long you’ve been using, relapse risk, and any co-occurring mental health concerns. The goal is enough time and structure to stay stable after you leave, not a rushed finish line.
Do you treat prescription oxycodone dependence?
Yes. Many clients come to us after prescribed use becomes difficult to control, even when it began for legitimate pain. Treatment focuses on both physical dependence and the underlying factors that keep use going.
Is medication required?
No. Medication-assisted treatment may be recommended when it improves safety, reduces cravings, or lowers overdose risk, but it is never forced. Decisions are made with you and tailored to your medical needs and recovery goals.
Does insurance cover oxycodone addiction rehab?
Many PPO plans cover detox, residential care, and outpatient treatment when medically necessary. We can verify benefits confidentially so you understand coverage and potential out-of-pocket costs before admission.
What if I have chronic pain and I’m afraid I won’t cope without oxycodone?
That concern is common, and it’s treatable. Your care plan can address pain and function alongside addiction recovery, using evidence-based therapy, non-opioid strategies, and medical support so you are not left to “push through” on willpower alone.
We Accept Most Insurance
Start with a confidential conversation
If oxycodone use has started to feel risky, unpredictable, or hard to control, you do not have to wait for a worst-case moment. Safe Haven Recovery offers private oxycodone addiction treatment in Beverly Hills, with medical detox, evidence-based therapy, and medication options when appropriate.
Call (855) 893-3566 for a confidential consultation, or use our secure form to begin.
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Scientific References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (n.d.). FastStats: Drug overdoses (2023 mortality data via CDC WONDER). https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/drug-overdoses.htm
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (n.d.). Understanding the opioid overdose epidemic. https://www.cdc.gov/overdose-prevention/about/understanding-the-opioid-overdose-epidemic.html
- Glidden, E., et al. (2024). Suspected counterfeit M-30 oxycodone pill exposures and acute withdrawals reported from a single hospital, 2017–2022. MMWR. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/wr/mm7329a2.htm
- MedlinePlus. (2025, September 15). Oxycodone. National Library of Medicine. https://medlineplus.gov/druginfo/meds/a682132.html
- MedlinePlus. (2025, September 15). Oxycodone combination products. National Library of Medicine. https://medlineplus.gov/druginfo/meds/a625053.html
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2024, August 21). Drug overdose death rates. National Institutes of Health. https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/trends-statistics/overdose-death-rates
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2025, March 20). Medications for opioid use disorder. National Institutes of Health. https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/medications-opioid-use-disorder
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2021). TIP 63: Medications for opioid use disorder (PEP21-02-01-002). https://library.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/pep21-02-01-002.pdf
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (2024, December 26). Information about medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD). https://www.fda.gov/drugs/information-drug-class/information-about-medications-opioid-use-disorder-moud




