On the surface, the addict comes out of the detox with all or most physical Zenith Detox Review withdrawal symptoms gone. As I said, this is usually accomplished by a drug called Naltrexone. It is administered intravenously and it basically blocks the opiate receptors from working. So any traces of opiates left in your system do nothing to make you feel high. Naltrexone generally lasts a few hours, so ultra rapid detox patients have to take a Naltrexone pill every day for (usually) a year after detox.
This certainly helps ensure that if the addict relapses, there's no physical enjoyment from the drug -- in other words, you can shoot up, but there is no euphoria. The bad part is that the addict can skip a dose of Naltrexone, shoot up and get the euphoria. The biggest drawback to ultra rapid detox is that it only solves half the equation. You are still addicted psychologically. Physically you don't need the drug, but mentally and emotionally, you do. The literature you read comparing detox programs tends to downplay the after care question. It's easier to sell a one-time cure and not discuss the true journey that is recovery.
So, it seems to me, that this type of detox can certainly be part of the cure. If you want to get to the mental and emotional parts of addiction recovery more quickly, explore the "ultra" method. It cost 5 to 10 times more money than a more standard detox, which in my book makes it much less attractive. On the other hand, for many people the withdrawal scares them. They've experienced the tiniest taste of the hell of opiate withdrawal and fear keeps them from taking the next step to being drug free. Whatever it takes to help you get sober, whatever the cost, it will be the best thing you've ever done. All of us want a great body.