Last Updated:
February 2nd, 2026
The impact of addiction on women’s health
Addiction can take hold differently in women, both physically and emotionally, which influences how harm develops and how quickly it can escalate. While fewer women develop substance use disorders compared to men, those who do tend to experience a faster progression from use to dependence, meaning serious consequences can appear before the situation feels fully understood.
So, what’s driving this difference?

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These differences in how addiction impacts women’s health are why rehab for women is such an important step. But it isn’t as easy as just reaching out for addiction treatment for women, as we’ll cover in the next section.
Common barriers women face in addiction rehab
In many cases, the biggest barriers to seeking addiction treatment for women are emotional rather than practical, even when practical obstacles exist. Here is just a small sample of the common barriers:
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Stigma
Many women feel they are expected to keep going no matter what, especially when others depend on them. When treatment services appear shaped around male experiences, it can feel harder to speak openly about abuse or parenting concerns without feeling questioned.
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Practical challenges
Childcare responsibilities can make attendance for treatment sessions difficult to maintain. According to UK Gov studies, 27% of women reported either living with a child or being a parent, making treatment a choice: either get better or look after your child.
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Safety within services
In mixed-gender environments, some women report feeling exposed or unable to speak freely, particularly when past experiences involve violence or exploitation. When treatment spaces mirror dynamics that contributed to harm, disclosure becomes harder, and recovery feels further away.
What types of drug and alcohol treatment programmes are available for women?
In England, drug and alcohol treatment takes place largely within community services, which remain the most accessible route for many women. These programmes can be adapted to meet women’s needs through female key workers, separate group sessions and partnerships with services that address safeguarding or family support.
Residential rehab can be appropriate when a woman needs distance from unsafe environments or constant triggers. Some centres provide women-only treatment, while others offer dedicated women’s spaces within larger facilities. These settings combine medical detox with therapy that addresses both substance use and the experiences beneath it, while offering a level of consistency that can be difficult to maintain elsewhere.
Peer support groups, including women-only recovery meetings, can also provide connection and understanding beyond formal treatment.
Ongoing support after treatment, through counselling or structured follow-on care, helps stabilise progress and reduce the sense of being left to manage alone once formal support ends.
Why rehab for women is so important
In women-only spaces, safety changes how recovery unfolds, and without the need to stay guarded, many women find they can finally speak about experiences that have shaped their substance use. In rehab centres for women, these conversations do not sit on the edges of treatment and become part of the work itself.
Research into gender-responsive services shows that women engage more fully when they feel protected and understood. Connection builds more naturally when shared experiences do not require justification and this sense of belonging can strengthen commitment to recovery. Rather than feeling singled out, women find themselves reflected in others.
Also, practitioners who are trained in domestic abuse and perinatal mental health are better equipped to understand how addiction has functioned as a coping mechanism rather than a failure.
What to check when choosing a women’s rehab centre
When you start looking into treatment, the number of options can feel overwhelming very quickly. Different centres offer varying levels of support, and it is not always clear which will suit your situation. One helpful step can be to contact private drug rehab centres directly and ask a few focused questions. This can help you understand how care is delivered and whether the environment feels right for you.
Feel free to print this section off and use this as a checklist to find the right programme for your needs.
Do you offer women-only spaces and clear safeguarding?
You deserve to feel safe enough to stay and open up. Centres that offer women-only spaces and clear safeguarding in day-to-day care can make it easier to relax into treatment and speak honestly.
Are your staff trained in trauma-informed care?
If your addiction connects to difficult experiences, the right staff will already understand that. When care is trauma-informed, you do not have to explain or justify what you have been through in order to be supported.
What support do you offer around childcare and parenting?
If you are caring for a child, practical support matters. Some centres can offer mother-and-baby arrangements or help coordinate childcare, which can ease anxiety and help you focus on recovery.
How do you plan aftercare and ongoing support?
Recovery does not stop when treatment ends. Programmes that plan carefully for what comes next can help you move forward with support in place, rather than feeling left to manage on your own.
What are the next steps?
If you are struggling with addiction or are concerned about someone you care about, reaching out for an initial assessment can be a grounding first step. This might begin with a GP or local service, but it can also involve speaking directly with specialist providers, like recovery.org, who can spend time understanding your situation in full. These conversations can explore safety, childcare, emotional support and the type of environment that would feel most appropriate, without pressure to commit straight away.
Call us for support today to get any additional information needed to start the treatment process.
Frequently Asked Questions
(Click here to see works cited)
- Fonseca, Francina, et al. ‘A Gender Perspective of Addictive Disorders’. Current Addiction Reports, vol. 8, no. 1, 2021, pp. 89–99. PubMed Central, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40429-021-00357-9.
- ‘Adult Substance Misuse Treatment Statistics 2023 to 2024: Report’. GOV.UK, https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/substance-misuse-treatment-for-adults-statistics-2023-to-2024/adult-substance-misuse-treatment-statistics-2023-to-2024-report. Accessed 27 Jan. 2026.
- Page, Sarah, et al. ‘Raising a Public Health Concern: Women Overlooked in UK Drug Policy and Disadvantaged in Mixed-Gender Community Services’. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 22, no. 10, Oct. 2025, p. 1584. PubMed Central, https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101584.

