An examination of over 10,000 rehabilitation files indicates the increasing government involvement of the General Directorate of Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Affairs in treatment, follow-up and social reintegration. The Ministry of Interior in Iraq, via the General Directorate of Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Affairs, is demonstrating how a security agency can equally have a significant public-health mission: taking in thousands of individuals with substance use, taking them down the rehabilitation pathways, and assisting many of them to get back to normal life. In Iraqi rehabilitation centers, a retrospective review of the institutional records revealed that there were 10,246 residents registered in the year 2024 and 2025. The number increased from 4,827 in 2024 to 5,419 in 2025, a rise of 12.3%. In a strict sense, such an increase can appear as an increased national load. It is also indicative of increased access to services, stronger referral networks, increased community trust, and the increasing ability of the state to accept cases rather than leave them outside the care in a broader one. The activity of the Directorate appears to be of special importance as the highest percentage of residents was young adults, mostly aged between 25-30 and 30-35. These are not just characters in a book. They are students, employees, sons, fathers and future breadwinners at the most productive age. This is why rehabilitation is not a marginal service. It is an investment in families, workplaces and social stability at the national level. The scale of the stimulant problem is also illustrated in the paper. In both years, 74.4% of the cases were crystal methamphetamine and 21.2% were Captagon. The trend presents a daunting clinical and social cost to rehabilitation teams because the use of stimulants is often linked to sleep disturbance, craving, impulsivity, emotional instability and inability to resume normal functioning in everyday life. The outcome indicators reported on that difficult background are reflective of a great improvement. The compliance with the program increased to 84. Completion increased from 61% to 79%. The six-month relapse rate was reduced to 18% as opposed to 34% and the rate of going back to work or education rose to 67% as opposed to 42%. These developments indicate that the rehabilitation system is not just taking the cases; it is keeping them, pursuing them and assisting them to resume productive social functions. These statistics are supported by a greater institutional project. The Ministry of Interior and the Directorate have been working on several fronts at the same time: cracking down on drug dealing, referral and reception of affected individuals, rehabilitation in special centers, awareness, cooperation with health and community partners, and post-treatment follow-up. This integrated strategy is important. The supply networks and social stigma are the only two aspects that can ensure the success of security operations and the failure of drug harm and treatment. It was also discovered that the records had an enhanced performance on functional and health-related outcomes, including executive functioning, stress regulation, sleep stability, reward-circuit balance, renal and hepatic recovery scores, blood glucose stability, and a lower rate of active Helicobacter pylori positivity. These are measures that should be done cautiously as they are institutional composite measures but not entire laboratory or neuroimaging measures. Nevertheless, they also include a significant message recovery is not just abstinence. It is healthier sleep, healthier control, healthier and a better opportunity to rise again within the society. Researchers and officials believe that the next step should be based on this. The future directions in this area should involve more robust national data systems, extended post-discharge follow-up, increased staff training on more specialized staff, expanded application of objective neurobiochemical and laboratory markers, and enhanced interconnections between rehabilitation, vocational training, education and family support. To the masses, the message is obvious. The war on drugs is no longer a tale of confiscation and penalties. In Iraq, it is gradually turning into a rescue, rehabilitation and reintegration tale, and the Ministry of Interior and its anti-narcotics directorate are playing a leading and challenging role in the middle of that endeavor.


  • Date:06/03/2026 09:49 PM - 06/04/2026 12:49 AM
  • Location Baghdad, Iraq (Map)

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