Addiction is not a private affliction alone; it is a social crisis that steadily erodes families, communities, and futures. Addressing it requires more than medical treatment or punitive measures. It demands a rehabilitation strategy that is practical, inclusive, and capable of producing measurable outcomes. Such a plan must be rooted in consultation, drawing on the expertise of medical institutions, civil society, and those who understand the psychological and social dimensions of recovery. Without their involvement, the effort risks becoming another bureaucratic exercise rather than a genuine response to human suffering.
The idea of mentorship stands at the centre of this vision. Rehabilitation is not a single intervention but a long process of reintegration into society. A dedicated pool of mentors, trained through specialized modules and equipped with basic qualifications, can form the backbone of this initiative. Their responsibilities must be clearly defined, aligned with the individual needs of patients, and supported by incentives that recognize the seriousness of their work. Identifying a substantial number of mentors in each district is not simply a numerical target but a pledge to build a human infrastructure of care. These mentors can serve as bridges between patients and society, offering guidance and continuity in a process that often falters without sustained support.
Livelihood opportunities must be woven into the rehabilitation framework. Skill development, self‑employment, and pathways back into education are not optional—they are essential to breaking cycles of dependency. Addiction often strips individuals of dignity and purpose, and rehabilitation must restore both. Facilitating the return of rehabilitated individuals to schools and colleges, or equipping them with skills for self‑reliance, ensures that recovery is not just about abstinence but about reclaiming a future. Technology can support this effort. A dedicated digital portal for monitoring progress can provide transparency, accountability, and long‑term stabilization. Yet technology must remain a tool, not a substitute for human connection, ensuring that data supports rather than overshadows the lived realities of recovery.
Categorization of patients by severity of addiction is another crucial step as the rehabilitation cannot be uniform; interventions must be calibrated to the depth of the problem. Tailored mentorship and treatment strategies can prevent relapse and ensure that resources are directed where they are most needed. Financial sustainability is equally important. Exploring support through government mechanisms and corporate social responsibility initiatives can provide the backbone for such an ambitious plan. But resources alone will not suffice unless the structure is shaped around the specific needs and aspirations of victims and their families. Replicating conventional schemes will only perpetuate gaps; what is required is a model that listens, adapts, and responds to ground‑level realities.
The importance of defining roles and responsibilities for every stakeholder cannot be overstated. Rehabilitation is a collective effort, and clarity in accountability ensures that no institution shirks its duty. Financial implications and expected outcomes must be worked out in detail, with timelines that measure progress rather than delay it. This is not merely about drafting another plan but about creating a framework that can withstand scrutiny and deliver measurable change. Every department, every stakeholder, must know its role and be held accountable for its performance.
Addiction is a wound that festers in silence, often hidden behind stigma and shame. A comprehensive rehabilitation strategy, rooted in consultation, mentorship, livelihood support, and accountability, can begin to restore hope. The measure of success will not be in the number of directives issued but, in the lives, rebuilt, the futures reclaimed, and the communities strengthened. The task ahead is immense, but so is the opportunity: to replace despair with dignity, and silence with the promise of reintegration. If the plan is pursued with seriousness and clarity, it can become not just a policy but a turning point in the way society confronts addiction.

