Between 6pm and 2am, a withdrawal severity score can jump from mild to severe.
That is not a worst-case scenario pulled from a textbook; it is what happens when alcohol withdrawal is progressing faster than expected, and the only reason it gets caught is because a nurse is physically present and running assessments through the night.
Most people who contact us about supervised withdrawal are not asking clinical questions first.
They are scared, unsure what their body is about to do, and wondering whether travelling to Bali in that state is even a reasonable option.
That fear is valid, and it is exactly why the medical structure of our programme matters as much as it does.
What the clinical team actually does in those first 72 to 120 hours, and why round-the-clock nursing cover is non-negotiable for certain cases, is what this post explains.
Withdrawal Is a Medical Event, Not a Test of Willpower
The withdrawal process from alcohol and benzodiazepines can be life-threatening.
Suddenly stopping when someone who has been drinking heavily for months or years causes the nervous system, which has been chemically suppressed throughout, to become dangerously hyperactive.
That hyperactivity leads to everything from tremors, sweating and severe anxiety to seizures and, in the most severe cases, severe alcohol withdrawal delirium.
Severe alcohol withdrawal delirium is the most dangerous type of alcohol withdrawal, typically developing between 48 and 96 hours after the last drink and necessitating urgent clinical management.
Opioid withdrawal sits in a different clinical category.
In otherwise healthy adults it is rarely life-threatening, though the physical experience is extreme: severe abdominal cramping, insomnia, agitation and intense cravings that dramatically raise the risk of relapse during the acute phase.
That distinction influences how we organise the way in which people receive care.
Cases of alcohol and benzodiazepine require active seizure prevention protocols and frequent clinical assessment, while opioid cases require symptom-targeted relief and close psychiatric monitoring.
How Our Clinical Team Assesses Withdrawal Severity
Before a client physically arrives, the assessment process begins. During the admissions process, we use our clinical staff to take a complete history – in all its details, including patterns of alcohol and drug use, history of withdrawal, seizure history and current health status.
That information determines the monitoring schedule from day one and the medication plan as well.
For alcohol withdrawal our nursing staff utilise the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol, Revised, or CIWA-Ar.
It scores ten domains: nausea, vomiting, tremor, sweating, anxiety, agitation, abnormal skin sensations, hearing and visual disturbances, headache and orientation.
A score below 10 indicates mild withdrawal. Scores of 10–15 reflect moderate withdrawal and often require medication, while scores larger than 15 are severe and require immediate clinical review and dose change.
In the earliest acute stage, our nurses perform these assessments several times a day, with a higher frequency observed when scores increase.
It’s not a one-shift check, and the disparity between hourly and four-hourly monitoring in a rapidly accelerating withdrawal indicates a difference between catching a problem before it can go so bad and treating a crisis.
For opioid withdrawal, we measure pulse rate, pupil size, tremor, goosebumps and anxiety in real time with the Clinical Opioid Withdrawal Scale (COWS).
When withdrawal severity can change quickly in the first 72 hours; continuous assessment is the only reliable way to respond before problems escalate.
Medication During Alcohol and Benzodiazepine Detox
We treat moderate to severe alcohol withdrawal with diazepam (Valium-like) as the main agent. Its active state in the body prolongs efficacy, helping to provide more consistent management for symptoms and lower the likelihood of breakthrough seizures between doses, a key advantage over shorter-acting alternative treatments in clinical practice.
Dosing is not tied to a schedule. It is symptom-oriented, based on individual client CIWA-Ar score and adapted as withdrawal occurs.
A rigors tapering regimen, to give the same amount while ignoring the client’s actual condition, creates a counterproductive situation.
Thiamine is given in conjunction with diazepam from the very beginning. Long-term heavy alcohol use depletes vitamin B1 and raises the risk of a serious brain condition called Wernicke’s encephalopathy, a serious neurological condition with potentially permanent consequences if left untreated.
We give thiamine injection early on because oral absorption can easily fall through the cracks when the digestive system is under withdrawal stress.
Managing Opioid Withdrawal: What We Treat and Why
Since opioid withdrawal presents differently from alcohol, our focus is on symptom-targeted prescribing rather than a fixed protocol. We address insomnia, abdominal distress, pain, blood pressure and heart rate changes and the severe agitation that characterises the most intense withdrawal period.
We aim to move clients through withdrawal without creating a secondary dependence, unless a substitute is medically indicated and forms part of the treatment plan.
For clients who are pregnant, have high dependence or carry additional medical vulnerabilities, we tighten the supervision schedule and adjust care accordingly.
Why 24/7 Nursing Care Is a Clinical Requirement, Not a Feature
The period of highest risk for alcohol withdrawal seizures is between 24 and 48 hours after the last drink. Delirium tremens, if it develops, generally appears between 48 and 96 hours.
Those windows do not coincide with standard business hours.
A client who scores an 8 at 6pm can score a 22 by 2am, and in the absence of a nurse physically present to assess, medicate and escalate, that trajectory becomes a medical emergency rather than a managed event.
Our night-shift nurses carry out the same structured assessments as the day team.
The on-call doctor is available at any hour to make clinical decisions beyond routine nursing scope, and any escalation in a client’s condition triggers an immediate review rather than a note on the morning handover sheet.
Continuous nursing cover is the clinical standard for high-risk alcohol and benzodiazepine withdrawal. Treating it as an optional upgrade would be a fundamental misunderstanding of what the acute phase actually involves.
Why North Bali Matters Clinically, Not Just Aesthetically
Our facility is in Kaliasem, near Lovina Beach in North Bali, and the choice itself is a clinical choice, not an aesthetic one.
The acute withdrawal period places enormous load on a nervous system already overwhelmed to such a degree that decreasing external stimulation lowers physical demand from the body on a system that is already in crisis.
North Bali does not have Kuta or Seminyak’s nightlife and drinking culture.
Clients are not within walking distance of bars and lack the set of environmental cues that increase relapse risk early on in recovery.
Nick, 28, from Australia, who received our 90-day programme, mentioned that he was surfing and enjoying life by the end of treatment.
That sort of physical recovery is fostered in part by a physical environment that is tranquil, organised and physically distanced from active use triggers.
At Seasons Bali we provide supervised outdoor time in the later acute phase to enhance sleep regulation, lower agitation and help improve overall quality of life.
Starting to get outside and find joy in the little things again is an important part of long term healing.
Approximately 10 kilometres east of our facility, Singaraja provides access to hospital and specialist care in case of need for clinical escalation.
What Happens After the Acute Phase Ends
Medical detox is not recovery but rather stabilisation. After the acute withdrawal period is completed and the body is medically stable, the psychological work follows, and long-term recovery is either constructed or skipped.
Daryl, 52, had been using alcohol and drugs for 35 years before coming to us. He said he came on day one “hopeless, bitter and spiritually bankrupt”, and he was willing to try anything.
60 days later he departed physically well, with a support system, and, in his words, “a hopefulness about the future that I have never experienced before”.
That change did not occur in the acute phase. It occurred in the weeks that followed, and our guide to what the first 30 days of sobriety look like shows what that transition looks like in practice.
We don’t provide detox as a separate service, and that’s a very real decision. When leaving detox, the risk of returning to use is much higher if you stay without follow-up treatment.
Stabilising the body without examining the patterns at the root is not a long term treatment approach.
Common Questions Before Admission
Clients and families generally want to know before admission what to expect, how detox is managed, and what level of care is actually needed. These are some of the questions that we hear most often.
1. Can I detox at home with a GP-supervised taper?
For mild alcohol dependence or low-dose benzodiazepine use with active GP oversight and a clear monitoring plan, a home taper is sometimes appropriate.
Home detox carries real clinical risk for anyone with a history of withdrawal seizures, long-term heavy use, or an existing health condition.
NSW Health’s clinical guidance on withdrawal from alcohol and other drugs outlines the risk indicators and monitoring requirements that determine when inpatient management is necessary, and it is worth reviewing before making that call.
2. How long does the immediate detox period really take?
In the case of alcohol, CIWA-Ar scores usually begin to decline by day three or four and most clients are out of the acute phase by day five to seven.
Benzodiazepine withdrawal durations are longer and vary with the type of agent used and duration of use.
Short-acting opioid withdrawal peaks between 48-72 hours and usually resolves within five to seven days, although symptoms that linger beyond the acute phase can last for weeks to months after the acute period ends.
3. What if my detox becomes worse?
So escalating clinical symptoms result in an immediate nursing review, not waiting until the next check-up. If a patient’s CIWA-Ar score spikes overnight, the on-call doctor is called and the medication regimen is amended as promptly as possible.
For those situations that go beyond the capacity of our hospital to care for safely, Singaraja’s hospital is accessible within 10 to 15 minutes.
This has rarely been needed because the monitoring framework is established to locate deterioration well in advance of reaching that point.
4. Do you treat clients who are withdrawing from prescription medication?
Yes. Our clients do withdraw from alcohol, benzodiazepines, prescribed opioids, codeine-based medications and methamphetamine. Methamphetamine withdrawal is not at seizure risk but monitored for psychiatric symptoms including psychosis, severe anxiety and thoughts of suicide.
Each case is evaluated individually, and the protocol is designed around the particular substance, the type of use and the client’s full medical history.
Our Clinical Credentials
Our clinical team consists of registered nurses and doctors who have experience in addiction medicine and medically managed withdrawal. Care is provided within a structured clinical framework designed to support safe detox, close monitoring, and timely intervention when symptoms escalate.
Our program is based on Australian Government Department of Health treatment guidance and research findings from the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre.
That is, our approach is based on established clinical principles rather than improvised from case to case. We are also transparent about how we work.
We can explain how we work (clinical protocols, monitoring process, staff roles, and programme structure) simply and succinctly at the admissions consultation so clients and families clearly understand what level of care is being provided.
Wrapping Up
That decision should be made with clinical input, not resolved by searching online. Contact our admissions team directly and we will assess the situation honestly, explain what our protocols involve and tell you plainly whether our programme is the right fit.
If it is not, we will say so.
What is the biggest concern stopping you or someone close to you from taking the first step? We are happy to answer questions directly, without pressure.





