Category Archives: Methadone Programs

Characteristics of a Quality Methadone Program

methadone-programsMethadone programs across the country differ in their quality of service. Some are simply better than others. Why is this?

Each program is shaped by the experience, professionalism, and treatment approach of the staff who are employed there. Quality programs emphasize comprehensive recovery and client skill-building in addition to medication assistance (like methadone or suboxone dosing). Importantly, each client should be provided regular counseling & active support that is characterized by consistent respect shown for clients at all times.

Opioid addiction recovery involves more than just receiving methadone. It requires lifestyle change, improvements in thinking and behavior, and a willingness to learn and adapt to the challenges of life. Opioid replacement medication, by itself, cannot provide all of this. Consequently, quality methadone clinics will encourage their clients to use treatment as a means of enriching their lives and moving to higher plateaus. Methadone programs that do not provide this opportunity are called “dosing mills”.

Dosing mills usually exist to dispense methadone and collect a fee. Treatment services and attention to client growth are not a priority. There is definite value in helping an addicted person to stop using illicit drugs and in stabilizing them on a safer opioid substitute, like methadone or suboxone. But this “medication only” approach is not recovery, and does not address the root problem of addiction or its underlying causes. The goal of quality methadone treatment programs is to empower their clients to live the fullest lives possible.

While the list below does not cover every possible area, here are some characteristics of higher quality methadone programs that one should expect:

  • Every staff member in the clinic understands & endorses the value of opioid replacement therapy.
  • Staff demonstrate care for clients and treat them with respect. Clients are welcomed, and their decision to enter opioid treatment is viewed as a commitment to a better life.
  • There are counseling groups and/or the availability of individual counseling sessions, and clients are required to attend these.
  • The clinic starts new clients on modest doses of methadone, increases their dosage gradually, and monitors the client closely as he/she acclimates to methadone. This is an important safety protocol that no decent clinic should sidestep. Rapidly hiking clients up to high levels of methadone is medically irresponsible and poses an unnecessary safety risk.
  • Clients have access to an appeals process.
  • The clinic strives to be organized and efficient for the convenience of its clients. This is often a challenge, but a clear effort is made to minimize a client’s wait time before dosing.
  • Clients are subject to random urinalysis and other accountability measures. This promotes client responsibility, raises program integrity, increases client safety, and shows the community that the methadone program is all about quality and ensuring that the program is conscious of the community’s needs and concerns.
  • Illicit drug use (relapse) is not overlooked, but is addressed promptly with each client in a constructive manner. Various treatment alternatives & interventions are offered to help relapsing clients get back on track.
  • The program engages in comprehensive assessment, and either provides in-house services for co-occurring disorders (ex. depression), or coordinates a referral for help in this area.
  • The program practices diversion control in order to minimize the risk of methadone being misdirected. Additionally, take home medication awards are made based on client progress with treatment and demonstrated stability, not just the passage of time.

As a client, it is important to remember that you have rights. Your clinic staff should review these with you and should provide you a manual or handbook which outlines the program’s guidelines, dosing hours, fees, and other expectations. If you do not have this handbook, then please request it.

In closing, various methadone programs do differ in their approaches, policies, and procedures … just like any other medical service provider. There are many high-quality programs around the country staffed by capable & dedicated professionals. As is the case with most any industry, some companies/organizations rise to the top and are better than others. The “bad” ones should not reflect negatively on the good ones. Both will likely always exist to a degree.

As a treatment provider, hopefully you will continually strive to be the best that you can be. As a client, it’s important to be an informed consumer of services. Sometimes, talking with a number of other existing clients can give you a heads up on whether a particular clinic you are considering has earned a good or bad reputation. Stick with the better clinics if at all possible. You’ll be glad you did.

Effective Medical Treatment for Opiate Addiction

nihMethadone treatment has been in existence in the United States since the 1960’s, and it became fairly well-established in the 1970’s particularly in the larger metropolitan cities where heroin addiction was more pervasive. In the 1980’s, methadone clinics continued to emerge across the country since they successfully helped opioid addicted individuals experience dramatic improvement in their lives.

During the 1990’s, this expansion continued and the efficacy of methadone treatment became further substantiated through research. Eventually, full endorsement occurred by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH). In November of 1997, the NIH converged to make a formal, consensus statement for this purpose:

To provide health care providers, patients, and the general public with a reasonable assessment of the effective approaches for treating opiate dependence.

A 12 member panel, assisted by 25 experts, had coordinated a study. Various professional fields were represented including psychology, psychiatry, family medicine, behavioral medicine, epidemiology, plus participants from the general public. This group shared with the world their conclusions in a single, definitive, all-encompassing statement, which read:

Opiate dependence is a brain-related medical disorder that can be effectively treated with significant benefits for the patient and society, and society must make a commitment to offer effective treatment for opiate dependence to all who need it. All opiate-dependent persons under legal supervision should have access to methadone maintenance therapy, and the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy and the U.S. Department of Justice should take the necessary steps to implement this recommendation. There is a need for improved training for physicians and other health care professionals and in medical schools in the diagnosis and treatment of opiate dependence. The unnecessary regulations of methadone maintenance therapy and other long-acting opiate agonist treatment programs should be reduced, and coverage for these programs should be a required benefit in public and private insurance programs.

This endorsement further validated what many addiction professionals had known for years, that methadone maintenance was an extremely beneficial therapeutic intervention. As time rolled forward into the new millennium, 2000 and beyond, methadone clinics continued to be established in areas where no opioid treatment had previously existed, including America’s smaller rural areas and modest-sized towns.

Today, methadone and buprenorphine (suboxone) treatment are more readily available than ever. A major focus of many opioid treatment programs is to now treat a client’s co-occurring disorder(s) either within the OTP clinic itself or though a local referral to another mental health provider/specialist. A substantial number of addicted individuals suffer from depression, bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety or panic attacks, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), or other psychiatric illnesses which can be successfully managed once properly diagnosed.

While some communities are reluctant to embrace methadone treatment & methadone clinics, this can change with education & time. Treatment changes lives for the better, and allows addicted individuals to become more responsible and more productive. It was highly beneficial that the NIH publicly recognized the validity of methadone maintenance. This was a positive, and justified, large step forward in advancing help for opioid addicted people everywhere.

Why Self Administered Home Detox Rarely Works

methadone-patientMany opioid addicted people have discovered that trying to detox off of opioids “at home” does not work and leaves them feeling miserable. There are some individuals that have “kicked the habit” without medication-assistance or a medically supervised detoxification. However, these success stories are somewhat rare, and usually pertain to people with a comparatively milder opioid addiction or an addiction of relatively shorter duration.

Somewhat compounding the challenge of addiction recovery are outspoken critics who wrongly assume that every drug addiction is the same, and that an addict should just pull themselves up by their bootstraps and tough it out. Individuals who hold such views are typically uneducated on the physiological characteristics of opioid addiction and the underlying brain neurochemistry that has been radically altered once opioid addiction sets in.

I have spoken to many suffering opioid addicts who have attempted home-based detoxes. The story is almost always the same: “It didn’t work. I just couldn’t make it. It was a horrible experience.” And they return to active drug use in order to cope with a myriad of sudden & protracted withdrawal symptoms, and to regain some momentary ability to function again.

Unfortunately, even some addiction professionals are poorly schooled on opioid addiction, and consequently may hold a bias against opioid replacement therapy (methadone, buprenorphine) until someone comes along to properly educate them.

Acute withdrawal from opioids results in a plethora of extremely uncomfortable physical symptoms and psychological stress that builds for days. With a home based detox, users try to self-administer decreasing amounts of opioids only to find the process overwhelming. Even a seven day detox in a medically-supervised setting using suboxone (and other medications) often leaves users with discomfort and protracted symptoms that are difficult to deal with.

In either scenario (home or hospital detox), individuals typically must deal with PAW (Post Acute Withdrawal). PAW for opioid addiction can last for months and results in lingering feelings of depression, tiredness, physical ache/pain, powerful cravings, inability to concentrate, insomnia, etc. Scientists have suggested that chronic opioid use/abuse affects the body’s metabolism and may temporarily (possibly even permanently) shut down the body’s ability to manufacture natural endorphins. This leaves the person feeling not normal. Obviously, the possibility of opioid relapse is greatly increased as a result of this post acute withdrawal process.

PAW (Post Acute Withdrawal) is greatly magnified as opioid addicts go from using daily fast-acting opiates to nothing at all. Alternatively, tapering down gradually off of methadone or suboxone introduces much less stress and allows a patient’s neurochemistry to adapt slowly to medication reduction. It also allows for much better preparation, planning, stability, and support-building as patients pursue a gradual medication taper. Tapering gradually off of an opioid replacement (methadone, suboxone) is often a much more comfortable experience than a short-term detox at home or in a hospital. Importantly, it must be said that a “social setting” or hospital-based detox is far superior to attempting a detox at home.

My final point is this. Don’t judge individuals struggling with an opioid addiction. And do not condemn them when they fail to successfully detox at home, or even in a hospital setting. Getting well, and succeeding in recovery, is a process that takes time and which may vary in procedure from one individual to the next.

We like to think that “all addicts are the same.” But, they are not. And treating them all the same is antiquated, and a failure in approach. Let’s stop to consider that medicine, science, and recovery are evolving through the years. Medication-assistance is not a cop-out or some negative compromise. It is today’s best practice approach in helping people live much improved lives. Medication-assistance is evidenced-based, and has been proven (not just theorized), but proven … to be effective.

Thanks for visiting Methadone.US, today! For more on opioid dependency, click here.

Florida Methadone Clinics Serve Many

florida-methadone-3Florida currently hosts opioid treatment clinics in about 30 of its largest and most popular cities. The state is ranked 4th nationally in population with an estimated 18.6 million people residing in The Sunshine State. As is typically the case, the number of suboxone-approved physicians considerably outnumber actual “clinics” that dispense methadone or suboxone. The Miami area, for example, has about 60 such suboxone-approved doctors treating opioid addicted persons.

Florida is one of the most visited states in America as a vacation destination, and attracts millions of visitors annually from all around the world. For opioid treatment clients traveling to Florida, guest dosing is a common occurrence and relatively easy to set-up. This is usually accomplished by speaking to one’s primary counselor (or possibly the dispensing nurse) at one’s home clinic.

The staff at the home clinic must fax a request for guest dosing to the travel destination clinic. Bear in mind that many clinics require at least 72 hours advance notice to arrange for guest dosing, and a client must always produce a picture idea at the travel clinic verifying their identity in order to receive medication. Guest clinics typically charge a little more than normal dosing fees due to the administrative time & expense involved in setting up a visitor’s guest dosing.

For a complete listing of Methadone.US Florida cities, visit our Methadone Clinics By State page. There, you will find a number of Florida hot spots with methadone clinics and Suboxone (buprenorphine) providers listed near the bottom of each city page. Also see the page, Florida Methadone Clinics.

Methadone Plus Counseling Equals Treatment

methadonetruthThe two primary components of opioid addiction treatment are opioid replacement therapy (methadone or suboxone) and behavioral health counseling. Each of these therapeutic interventions address very different aspects of one’s addiction. And one intervention, without the other, is generally not sufficient to promote lasting recovery from opioid addiction. Both must work in unison to produce meaningful, lasting change.

When entering treatment, most clients are initially very focused on their physiological dependency to opioids and the associated withdrawal symptoms that emerge when their drug supply runs out. Recurrent opioid withdrawal takes priority over most all other considerations. Consequently, addicted people place much emphasis on their methadone dose due to its ability to provide relief from painful opioid withdrawal. There is such a clear connection between methadone dosing and symptom relief that clients often assume that dosing alone is the complete answer to their addiction problem.

However, this is a false & inaccurate conclusion. Real recovery involves not just the absence of withdrawal symptoms, but deliberate changes in thinking, attitude, and behavior. Without improvements in these areas, a majority of clients will relapse again and again, and consequently be unable to sustain progress over time.

There is an old saying in the recovery field that goes “You can’t go back to being the same person you were … because that person became addicted.” What is meant by this is that one cannot afford to remain stuck with the same old ways of thinking and living. It was those old ways that led down the addiction path. In order to experience lasting quality recovery, one must adopt new approaches to living and coping with life. It is the development of these new approaches, skills, and tools that will allow a person to deal with life using healthy methods … instead of drugs.

Counseling not only teaches key skills for managing life, but aids clients in developing inner resources that will empower them to achieve new things that were previously not attainable. Many clients dedicated to personal recovery become much more complete people, more capable, and ultimately more satisfied. Addiction sucks the life out of individuals day by day, but recovery brings people back in contact with life & opportunity, and opens doors that were previously shut tight. Counseling is an extremely important piece of the recovery puzzle. Counseling facilitates positive change and positive results.

Use counseling to learn more about yourself. It will allow you to become better educated on managing the disease of addiction, and it will strengthen you in numerous ways, if you let it.