Category Archives: Addiction Recovery

Methadone Clinic Counseling For The Family

methadone_family2Every client who enters a methadone treatment program has a unique set of family circumstances. He or she may be disconnected from their family, or alternatively, living at home with numerous extended family members all around. Whatever the situation, a methadone client must determine who should be informed about their decision to choose opioid replacement therapy.

The range of family responses can be surprising in regard to starting methadone treatment. Some family are relieved & hopeful that their loved one is finally getting help. Other members may not be well-informed about methadone and quickly adopt a critical opinion. Still others approach the decision from a strictly financial point-of-view, and assess the treatment decision based on its cost.

For methadone clients, it may become important for your family to gain an education on opioid replacement therapy, and to understand its benefits & risks. Families often experience considerable stress around addiction issues, and this stress can build over time while chipping away at family relationships. Addicted people need time to recover and to properly orient themselves again to a new life. Similarly, family also need time to deal with hurt feelings, fear, guilt, and even anger.

Methadone clinics provide education and counseling on a wide range of addiction and recovery issues. If you are a methadone client with involved family or friends, ask your counselor about having a family session. It is extremely helpful for your loved one to walk into the clinic and meet the staff. Many family have no idea what a methadone clinic is like and may harbor fears about the other clients or the methadone program itself. Usually after meeting clinic staff, the ice is broken in a matter of minutes, and family can see that caring professionals are there to support their loved in becoming drug free and in living a healthy life.

Our clinic once had a female client who elected to not tell her mother for one year that she had been participating in methadone treatment. She feared her mother would become upset. In that one year, the client's life changed dramatically with very obvious improvements. She decided to then tell her mother how methadone had made such a difference in getting her life sorted out. Instead of becoming upset, her mother hugged her and told her how proud she was of her. The client invited her mother to the clinic where she met all of the methadone staff that had been involved in her daughter's recovery that first year. It was a beautiful moment, and one which meant so much to the client.

The client progressed in her recovery and eventually switched over to suboxone before tapering off of opioid replacement completely. And her mother was involved every step of the way in a constant show of support.

Families are a powerful force. Sometimes it is better to proceed without direct family involvement. At other times, family participation may be exactly what is needed. No two situations are just alike so it comes down to the individual client, and what he or she feels is most fitting for their needs. Whatever the decision in regard to family, treatment staff are there for education, counseling, and support. Recovery usually occurs within the context of one's family, friends, coworkers, church or community. Recovery is about reconnecting with oneself, and with others. It may be just one other person that makes the difference.

Never Give Up On Yourself

methadone39I had the pleasant good fortune of seeing a former client the other day who had entered methadone treatment for his opiate addiction about 7 years ago. I remember him struggling for the first 2 years with relapses (mostly to cocaine, not opiates) and our clinic offering a variety of different treatments to help him get on track.

Due to a string of drug tests always positive for illicit substances, we were critically close to detoxing him from our methadone program. As you might imagine, he was a daily prisoner in his addiction and the pieces of the recovery puzzle were just not connecting yet in a way that worked for him.

As a last chance run in formal treatment, he attended a Day Treatment program that we offered which provided group and individual counseling, psycho-educational classes, and activity therapy Monday through Friday from 8:00 am – 3:30 pm. It was at this time that he obtained his first clean drug test. This first success led to a second clean test, and then a third.

I remember believing in this person's sincerity. He wanted to change, and he needed the unconditional support of others who were not willing to give up on him … even when he was close to giving up on himself. Toward the end of treatment, there was a noticeable shift in his sense of hope. He had come to believe that recovery was possible for him. And where he used to see only a dead end, he now saw a light on the path just ahead of him getting brighter and brighter with each passing day.

When we sat and talked the other day, he was celebrating 5 uninterrupted years of recovery – no drugs, no probation, no jail, no longer financially destitute. He continues to take methadone and has enjoyed an ever-improving life in which he is meeting personal goals including: employment, home ownership, and the ability to care for his sickly, aging father. This is a great source of pride for the client being able to care for his father. It's a commitment he keeps every single day. Recovery, via methadone assistance and counseling, made this possible.

I am reminded how easy it is to judge addicted people, and to give up on them. But there is a reality that we must never forget. And it is that a suffering addict may be just one step away from turning the corner and passing through that doorway into a new life of recovery. We must not extinguish that dim light, that glimmer of hope, that helps people hold on just one more day. Recovery is always possible. As a counselor, I learned a long time ago that you cannot predict who will make it, or when. Never should we be so presumptuous or jaded.

Never give up! I believe in that. Congratulations to all of those who are still trying. Recovery may be closer than you think.

Addiction Is A Brain Disease

methadone33Former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Koop, speaks in this short SAMHSA video about the need in America for ready access drug treatment. Many diseases and health conditions, including drug dependency, can be effectively managed through proper medications and best practice treatment interventions.

Drug addiction is a true brain disease. Drug use causes disruption in the brain's normal production of many natural chemicals including neurotransmitters essential to mood stability and emotional regulation.

Opioid addiction is not just about heroin or traditional "hard drugs". There has been a rapid increase in the use, and abuse, of prescription pain killers in America. Government estimates now put prescription pain pill abuse considerably ahead of heroin addiction. For more on this important topic, consider Dr. Jana Burson's book, Pain Pill Addiction: A Prescription for Hope.

Opioid dependency is a treatable illness. Addiction can be effectively managed. Detox, outpatient counseling, inpatient rehab, 12 Step support, and medication assisted treatment (such as methadone or suboxone) can all play a role in helping individuals to establish a healthy, drug-free life. 

Opiate Addiction and Recovery

methadone35With an estimated two million people in America dealing with an opioid problem, finding solutions is obviously important to a great many individuals and families. Drug addiction treatment has been around for many decades as have Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous self-help programs.

Opioid dependency, in particular, can be a very tough addiction to live with due to the powerful physiological addiction (and withdrawal syndrome) that opiate addicts must face. However, people find recovery every day. Or perhaps more accurately said: People choose the path of recovery every day.

Recovery from opiate addiction is entirely possible and always available. Unfortunately, addiction tends to wear people down and sap one's energy. For this and other reasons, individuals will sometimes put off seeking treatment telling themselves "I'll call for help tomorrow." When tomorrow comes, something else seems to inevitably pop up delaying the decision yet another day.

Recovery is literally waiting. It is an open door. And one only needs to decide they are willing to step forward to get the process started. This first step is sometimes a simple phone call, or asking someone to help you find a recovery resource. There is an old saying "Today is the first day of the rest of your life."

Recovery represents an investment in the rest of one's life. Waiting for things to change does not work. But you do not have to wait around. Decide to take action, and set the wheels in motion. Your recovery … begins with an honest desire to get help. Do something today. Choose recovery. Make the call. Ask for help. The rest of your life is waiting for you.

Take Our Online Methadone Assessment

methadone36bMethadone.US is now offering a free online methadone assessment. The assessment is meant to help site visitors review treatment interventions that may be appropriate for them based on their self-reported level of opioid dependency.

If you are a family, friend, or professional visiting the site, please feel free to refer those with an opioid addiction, and invite them to complete the assessment online. It takes very little time, is free, and visitors do not have to reveal their identity. The methadone assessment scores users' responses and then offers results & recommendations immediately following completion of the assessment.

Methadone.US aims to connect opioid addicted individuals with local treatment resources that can help them change their lives. Online assessments are useful tools for increasing a person's awareness of options. Choice, in addiction recovery, is a powerful and beneficial component of positive change. Thanks for visiting Methadone.US!