Why Veterans Face Unique Addiction Risks
Veterans experience substance use disorders at higher rates than the general population for several well-documented reasons, including:
At Sanctuary, we understand that addiction in veterans is rarely about weakness or lack of discipline. It is often a learned survival response that no longer serves its purpose.
Veterans, Substance Use, and Mental Health: Key
Statistics
Substance Use
Disorder (SUD)
~11% of veterans seen in
VA healthcare have a
diagnosed SUD
Addiction is one of the most
common clinical conditions
among veterans receiving care
Alcohol Use
Disorder
Alcohol is the most
frequently diagnosed SUD
among veterans
Drinking often becomes a
primary coping mechanism post-
service
Opioid Use
Disorder
Veterans are nearly 2x as
likely to die from opioid
overdose compared to non-
veterans
Pain treatment and prescription
exposure increase long-term risk
Polysubstance
Use
Many veterans with SUD
meet criteria for more than
one substance
Alcohol combined with opioids or
benzodiazepines is common
PTSD
11–20% of post-9/11
veterans experience PTSD
in a given year
PTSD significantly raises
addiction and relapse risk
Treatment Gap
Many veterans with SUD
never receive specialty
addiction treatment
Barriers include stigma, access,
and self-reliance culture
What Makes Sanctuary’s Veterans Program Different
Our Veterans Program is built for primary substance use treatment, with mental health care integrated as support rather than the main focus.
Veteran-Centered, Addiction-First Care
Treatment is designed around substance use disorders such as alcohol addiction, opioid use disorder, stimulant misuse, benzodiazepine dependence, and polysubstance use. Mental health conditions like PTSD, anxiety, or depression are addressed as they relate
to addiction and relapse risk.
Military-Aware Clinical Team
Our clinicians understand military structure, rank dynamics, operational stress, and the transition to civilian life. Veterans are not asked to explain military culture or justify their experiences.
Peer Connection and Group Cohesion
Veterans often engage more deeply in treatment when surrounded by others who “get it.” Group therapy includes veteran-specific process groups that emphasize accountability, trust, and shared experience.
Structure Without Punishment
The program balances routine and responsibility without replicating punitive systems. Structure is used to support recovery, not control behavior.
Core Components of the Veterans Program
Substances Commonly Addressed in Veteran Treatment
Our Veterans Program regularly treats addiction involving:
Neurofeedback therapy is a non-invasive procedure that uses sound and vision to reorganize or retrain the signals of the brain and is used at our treatment centers around Los Angeles, CA. It is a therapeutic intervention that provides immediate feedback from a computer program to assess the client’s brainwave activity. Neurofeedback observes, qualifies, and trains the patient’s brainwaves to help regulate brain function.
The goal is to help the brain reclaim optimal functioning so that it can manage certain mental health issues more efficiently. A therapy session with neurofeedback in Los Angeles can last between 30 and 60 minutes. Sessions may be 2 to 3 times per week. The therapy is safe and painless and does not involve electric “shocks.”
Substances Commonly Addressed in Veteran Treatment
Our Veterans Program regularly treats addiction involving:
We also help veterans who began using substances after discharge, even years later, as delayed onset addiction is common.