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Amphetamine Addiction Rehab in Spain – Private, One-to-One Care

Amphetamine Addiction Treatment in Spain: Private One-to-One Care (Adderall, Dexedrine, “Speed”)

Oasis Premium Recovery provides private, one-to-one residential treatment in Southern Spain for adults struggling with amphetamine-type stimulants—including prescription products (Adderall/amphetamine salts, lisdexamfetamine, dextroamphetamine) and non-medical “speed.” We differentiate ADHD treatment needs from habitual or performance-driven misuse, coordinate with physicians where medication is involved, and rebuild sleep, focus and routines so gains hold at home. If you’re comparing settings, see Rehab Spain, our format in One-to-One Therapy in Spain and Why Private Therapy in Spain Works, plus the market view in Luxury Rehab Clinics and Spain Treatment Centres.

What we treat · Common signs & risks · ADHD vs stimulant misuse · Adult ADHD symptoms & overlaps · Why one-to-one works · Assessment & mapping · First 7–10 days: stabilise · Therapies & skills · Study & work protocols · Relapse prevention · Programmes · Aftercare · FAQ

What we treat

Safety note: chest pain, fainting, severe headache, shortness of breath, agitation/confusion, or suicidal thinking require urgent medical help. We are not an emergency service. Any medication plan is set by a physician; we do not prescribe or alter doses.

Common signs & risks

  • Sleep collapse: late nights, early meetings, weekend “crashes,” circadian drift.
  • Anxiety & mood: jittery focus, agitation, low mood on off-days, irritability and anger spikes.
  • Cardiovascular & neuro: palpitations, blood pressure concerns, headaches; in some, paranoia or psychotic-like features when sleep-deprived/high dose.
  • Appetite & GI: appetite suppression → night eating; dehydration, stomach discomfort.
  • Dental & muscle: bruxism (jaw clenching), muscle tension, “wired and tired.”
  • Function drift: starting many tasks, finishing few; secrecy around pills/suppliers; money spikes.

ADHD vs stimulant misuse: getting it right

Some clients have genuine ADHD but are under-supported (poor sleep, no skills). Others have no ADHD and use stimulants for deadlines or nightlife. Some are a mix. Our job is to:

  • Clarify context: review prior assessments where available; we don’t diagnose ADHD here, but we plan around it.
  • Coordinate with prescribers: physician-led taper/adjustments when indicated. We do not prescribe or change doses.
  • Build non-pharmacological scaffolding: sleep, calendar hygiene, deep-work blocks, task design and cue control that reduce reliance on stimulants. See ADHD Treatment.

Adult ADHD symptoms & overlaps with stimulant misuse

Many adults arrive unsure whether they have ADHD, stimulant dependence, or both. This guide clarifies common adult features and where they overlap:

Core adult ADHD patterns

  • Inattention: sustaining focus, losing steps, unfinished tasks, misplacing items, “time blindness.”
  • Hyperactivity/impulsivity: inner restlessness, fidgeting, interrupting, fast decisions, risky spends/driving.
  • Executive function: planning, prioritising, starting/switching/finishing; working-memory slips.
  • Emotion & rejection sensitivity: quick mood shifts, overwhelm in conflict, strong reactions to criticism.
  • Sleep/circadian: late nights, hard mornings, irregular meals; weekend “jet lag.”
  • Masking: high achievers who over-prepare to cope, especially women.

When it’s more likely stimulant misuse

  • Non-prescribed use or dose escalation beyond medical advice.
  • Chasing productivity highs/euphoria; marked low mood on “off” days.
  • Sleep collapse, appetite suppression, crash–binge cycles.
  • Hiding pills, multiple online sources, night-time ordering, spending spikes.

Shared/overlap cues (need careful assessment)

  • Missed deadlines, task switching, relationship strain, anxiety/depression.
  • Hyperfocus on narrow interests (can occur in ADHD and with stimulants).
  • Use of benzodiazepines or alcohol to “land.”

Medical note: Any medication/taper decisions are physician-led. We coordinate and support adherence; we do not prescribe or alter doses.

Why one-to-one treatment works

Stimulant recovery is detail-heavy: device and money rules, sleep, high-pressure timelines, social image. Large groups add exposure and rarely solve your exact routine. A one-to-one model gives privacy, more clinical time, and precise planning for your US/UK/EU/Middle East context.

Assessment & mapping

  • Use profile: IR/XR type, dose, timing, frequency, study/work/nightlife context; co-use (benzos/alcohol/cocaine/cannabis/MDMA).
  • Performance map: tasks stimulants “help,” where they backfire, decision quality vs speed.
  • Sleep & physiology: latency, night waking, morning readiness, caffeine timing. See Sleep Disorder Treatment.
  • Devices & money: scripts/refills, online sources, saved cards, late ordering windows.
  • Risk & co-occurrence: Anxiety, Depression, ADHD, OCD traits, Trauma & PTSD, Dissociation.

First 7–10 days: stabilise

  • Sleep reset: fixed wake time, morning light, device curfew, caffeine cut-off.
  • Nutrition & hydration: planned meals/snacks to reduce evening surges and night eating.
  • Physician coordination: if taper/medication changes are indicated, they are physician-led; we monitor routines and support adherence.
  • Grounding & arousal: breathwork and TRE micro-sets for jitter and come-down irritability.
  • Calendar hygiene: fewer concurrent tasks, protected recovery windows, “no new projects” rule week one.

Therapies & skills

Daily one-to-one sessions with a small, stable team. Evidence-informed methods translated into simple rules you can run on busy days.

  • CBT: cue–urge–use loops, attention traps, realistic task planning, exposure to “boring” tasks without stimulants.
  • DBT skills: emotion regulation, distress tolerance, refusal scripts for pill offers.
  • MET: resolve ambivalence between performance and health; align values and if–then plans.
  • TRE & breathwork: reduce physiological arousal so sleep and focus stabilise.
  • Family Therapy (with consent): align expectations and boundaries at home/work.
  • 12-Step integration (optional): stimulant-specific support if aligned with your preferences.

Study & work protocols (that actually hold)

  • Deep-work blocks: 45–75 minutes, device-off, followed by 10–15 minute reset; maximum three blocks before lunch.
  • Task slicing: turn “write report” into first keystrokes and a 20-minute ugly draft; reward completion, not speed highs.
  • Device & money charter: delete sources, remove saved cards, spending caps, delay timers after 20:00, accountability window photos. See Life Skills & Relapse Prevention.
  • High-risk calendar: exams, launches, quarter-ends, travel; pre-book buffers and extra check-ins.
  • Evening landings: light, movement, warm shower, low-stimulus routine; no problem-solving after 21:00.

Relapse prevention you’ll take home

  • Early-warning grid: sleep drift + device drift + deadline pressure → immediate reset day.
  • People & places: graded exposure to campus/work/nightlife zones; exit scripts for “just one for the exam/event.”
  • Slip drill (72-hour): sleep protection, clinician contact, remove sources, partner/family check-in, review of physician plan if relevant.

Programmes (Marbella, Spain)

Aftercare that does not expire

Planning begins in week one and continues through discharge. Support includes Lifetime Aftercare and Aftercare Support across time zones, with refreshers around exam seasons, launches and travel. We can liaise with your prescribing physician and local clinicians you choose.


Frequently asked questions

Are amphetamines addictive

Yes. Prescription and non-medical amphetamines can create dependence and problematic patterns, especially with dose escalation and sleep collapse. We plan medical steps with a physician where indicated. We do not prescribe or alter doses.

Will you stop or change my ADHD medication

Medication decisions are physician-led. Our role is to clarify needs, coordinate care and build non-pharmacological scaffolding (sleep, calendar, task design) so any plan is safer and more effective.

How long should I plan for

Many begin with two weeks for stabilisation and extend to four–six weeks for consolidation. Final length is set after assessment.

Can I work or study during treatment

Limited, structured work or study can be considered once stabilised. We protect recovery momentum first, then add carefully.

What if I also use Xanax, alcohol or cocaine

We map cross-risk and set aligned rules and supports. See Xanax, Alcohol, and Cocaine.

How to start

  1. Send a confidential enquiry. Outline your pattern, goals and any ADHD history.
  2. Pre-admission assessment. We map use, sleep, devices, calendar demands and risks via secure video.
  3. Receive a tailored plan. Programme length, weekly clinical dose, study/work protocols and (if relevant) physician coordination.
  4. Plan travel. We align arrival with private ground transfer to the residence near Marbella.
  5. First 72 hours. Sleep reset, device guardrails, nutrition baseline; begin focused one-to-one work.
  6. Step down. Continue via aftercare with high-risk calendar and skills refreshers.

Speak in confidence. If stimulants are running your days, contact Oasis Premium Recovery to build a one-to-one plan that holds.


  • One-to-one session mapping amphetamine triggers across deadlines, devices and nightlife
  • Device and money charter showing source removal, spending caps and delay timers
  • Deep-work block planner with protected recovery windows
  • Calm bedroom suite supporting sleep reset in a low-exposure residence near Marbella