Portland Maine Methadone Treatment

Discovery House of South Portland CTC

Discovery House of South Portland Comprehensive Treatment Center
400 Western Ave. 
South Portland, ME 04106

Phone: (207) 560-0436
Website: mainectc.com

Acadia HealthcareTreatment Types
Methadone, Subutex
Suboxone

Facility Type
Outpatient serving Adults

Discovery House of South Portland Comprehensive Treatment Center provides individuals aged 18 and older with outpatient treatment for opioid addiction. Our medication assisted treatment offers patients the opportunity to experience relief from the physical symptoms of withdrawal while progressing towards a future that is substance free. The following prescription medications are available for patients to incorporate into their comprehensive plans of treatment: methadone, subutex, and suboxone.

Discovery House of South Portland Comprehensive Treatment Center
Phone: (207) 560-0436

 

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Portland, Maine is conveniently served by Discovery House of South Portland Comprehensive Treatment Center who offer a range of effective opioid treatment options. There are a number of local physicians who can also prescribe suboxone (containing buprenorphine) which also offers effective relief from opioid withdrawal symptoms such as nausea, insomnia, body ache, and chills. Methadone has been in use in the United States for over 40 years as a leading opioid addiction treatment. Suboxone became available in 2002 as an alternative to methadone and was readily accepted in the opioid treatment community due to its success in alleviating painful opiate withdrawal. Below are links to more info on methadone program effectiveness, opioid treatment programs, and job openings in methadone clinics.


Portland Methadone Clinics
Discovery House of South Portland
Comprehensive Treatment
Center
400 Western Ave.
South Portland, ME 04106
(207) 560-0436
Health Care Resource Centers 2300 Congress Street
Portland, ME 04102
(207)221-2292

 

Portland Buprenorphine Providers
Discovery House of South Portland
Comprehensive Treatment
Center
400 Western Ave.
South Portland, ME 04106
(207) 560-0436
George Paul Savidge, M.D. 377 Fore Street
Suite 3
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 772-3221
Charles H. Mitchell, M.D. Catholic Charities Maine Counseling
250 Anderson St.
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 775-5671
Jeremy Ashley Spiegel, M.D. 371 Fore Street
Suite 201
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 772-3221
Malcolm Porteous Rogers, M.D. Portland VA Clinic
144 Fore Street
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 771-3500
Daniel R. Filene, M.D. 178 Middle Street
Suite 300
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 774-0046
Shyam K. Bhat, M.D. Mercy Hospital
144 State Street
Portland, ME 04101
(207) 879-3000
Dena L. Whitesell, M.D. 22 Bramhall Street
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 662-4463
Scott Mitchell Davis, M.D. Community Substance Abuse Centers
2300 Congress Street
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 356-7153
Anthony John Kozma, D.O. 632 Brighton Avenue
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 772-1411
Ben Weinberg, M.D. 632 Brighton Avenue
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 772-1411
Susan Moner, M.D. 2300 Congress Street
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 221-2292
Stanley James Evans, M.D. 632 Brighton Avenue
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 772-1411
Robert E. Blaik, D.O., M.P.H., Ph.D. 166 Neal Street
Portland, ME 04102
(207) 773-3307
 


Federal Rules For Methadone Access Are Changing

The synthetic opioid, fentanyl, has led to an increase in overdose deaths in recent years. As many as 112,000 in the last year according to NPR. As a result, some physicians are pushing to make methadone more available to those who need it.

The Biden administration has created new federal rules for methadone treatment designed to widen access for more patients. In particular, the requirement of one year of active opioid addiction is being reduced to just 6 months of opioid addiction in order to become eligible to receive methadone.

There are about 2000 federally-approved opioid treatment programs (OTP) in the United States. Many thousands of patients are receiving life saving services from these clinics. Since COVID, many OTP clinics have made take home medication more accessible to those in early phases of treatment.

With illegal opiates still flooding the country, increasing access to opioid treatment and medication is easily justified. The question remains as to how local law enforcement can ultimately stem the flow of drugs into the community, as well as how youth can be educated to avoid risking first drug use.

Posted in Buprenorphine, Harm Reduction, Methadone, Methadone Clinics, Methadone Take Home, Opioid Treatment, Prescription Drugs, Suboxone | Tagged , | Comments Off on Federal Rules For Methadone Access Are Changing

How Bad Is Opioid Withdrawal

There is an informative video by Sarah Wakeman on the physical and psychological perils of severe opioid withdrawal. Sarah is a Medical Director at Mass General Brigham. They are an integrated health care system that conduct medical research, teaching, and patient care.

In the video, Sarah explains how opioid withdrawal can become so severe with diarrhea and vomiting that individuals can die from extensive dehydration. As physicial dependency progresses, the brain becomes increasingly imbalanced and unable to function without the presence of opioids.

When opioid withdrawal commences (usually 8-12 hours after last use), it becomes increasingly unbearable as the body is flushed with stress hormones. The withdrawal discomfort builds in intensity over days, and can last up to a week or more. For many, this withdrawal process feels akin to a severe case of the flu, but then potentially reaches levels of sickness even far beyond that.

In the video, Sarah goes on to discuss the benefits of methadone and buprenorphine in reducing severe withdrawal symptoms and in helping patients to ultimately not die from overdose. She also illuminates on how rational decision-making is so extremely difficult when struggling against the intense pain of opioid withdrawal.

Please check this video out, and share it with anyone you believe can benefit from its message.

Posted in Buprenorphine, Medication Assisted Treatment, Methadone, Methadone Clinics, Opiate Withdrawal, Opioid Treatment, Pain Management, Prescription Drugs, Suboxone | Tagged | Comments Off on How Bad Is Opioid Withdrawal

Helping Skeptics Understand Methadone

When it comes to addiction, reactions and opinions are often intense. Addiction is a devastating illness that can rapidly derail a person’s life, and seriously impact the lives of those around them.

Sadly, addiction leads people to behave in ways that make no sense to their family, friends, and co-workers. Therein lies an important part of the problem. Family feel confused, angry, and fearful as their loved one tumbles down the hill of active addiction.

When it comes to something as perplexing as drug addiction, grasping for answers is an understandable reflex for family and friends. What family often don’t comprehend is the power of physical dependency to opioids and the severe sickness that results from opioid withdrawal.

Family and others incorrectly assume that mere “choice” is all that’s needed to overcome the addiction. When the addict fails to remain drug free, harsh judgment by others usually follows.

Halting withdrawal sickness is a paramount step for an opioid addicted person. This cannot be overstated. As long as a person is suffering from severe opioid withdrawal, their ability to think and “choose” logically is greatly impaired.

Statistically, individuals who utilize medication-assisted treatment (like methadone) are far more likely to avoid incarceration, a continued downward spiral, or death by overdose. Medication assistance successfully removes debilitating withdrawal sickness so that the addicted person can experience greater clarity of thought and the ability to make more sound decisions that lead to improved quality of life.

If you are a skeptic about methadone or suboxone, you may think “they’re just trading one drug for another”. This is not true. People, once therapeutically stabilized on methadone or suboxone, do not get high from the medication. Health generally improves, and the person is able to function much better on the job and at home. This brings hope. It offers a new opportunity for further recovery.

When you care about a person’s survival, one more chance to help them can be quite valuable. Don’t let judgment or excessive skepticism get in the way. Medication-assistance in opioid recovery is effective for many people, and it has been the life saving next step that some never got the chance to take.

Posted in Methadone, Methadone Benefits, Methadone Clinics, Recovery, Suboxone | Tagged | Comments Off on Helping Skeptics Understand Methadone

Methadone Treatment in Oregon

Like most states, Oregon is in need of quality treatment options for opioid-addicted individuals who are ready for recovery.

This article, in the Hillsboro News-Times, features the recent approval by Washington County commissioners to add a new methadone clinic in Hillsboro, Oregon.

Acadia Healthcare is aiming to establish the new methadone clinic in Hillsboro in order to better serve the local community. Acadia already operate a mobile unit in the general area as well as a comprehensive treatment center (CTC) in nearby Tigard located about 20 miles away.

The commissioners voted 5-0 to approve the proposed site which will be on the local bus route thereby providing improved access. The article mentions that Oregon presently has 17 operational methadone clinics serving the state, where fentanyl, opiates, and other substances are causing a grave overdose crisis.

Having local opioid treatment available is a critically important step in saving lives and providing hope to patients and families. Methadone has been proven to decrease opioid use, reduce relapse risks & overdose deaths, as well as increase employment and overall health. Clinics offering medication-assisted treatment (MAT), like methadone and buprenorphine, are forging a new path to safety for those people once stuck in active addiction.

Posted in Acadia Healthcare, Addiction Treatment, Buprenorphine, Methadone, Methadone Clinics, Oregon Methadone Clinics, Suboxone | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Methadone Treatment in Oregon

Remote Observation of Methadone Dosing

There’s a new spin being proposed on the dispensing of methadone to Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) patients. A federally-funded project is underway between Scene Health and The University of Washington in which patients video themselves taking their daily methadone dose, and then submit that video to the treatment provider.

The project is evaluating this new modified approach that falls somewhere between in-person daily dosing and unsupervised take home dosing.

This new approach is currently being referred to as Video DOT (video direct observation therapy) and has been successfully implemented with other health issues including hepatitis C, asthma, and diabetes.

While this experiment seems appealing at first glance, it does raise legitimate questions about the ability to insure proper safety protocols with the provision of methadone medication to new patients. The project may possibly demonstrate the usefulness of Video DOT methadone dosing. But assuming this new approach one day becomes common practice, it will be important that physicians or clinics have in place a procedure for quickly reclaiming methadone doses that are not ingested on schedule.

Imagine a new patient receives 7 take home doses of methadone, but then only sends in the required video of their medication use on day one. At what point does the prescribing clinic intervene, and how will the unaccounted for doses be retrieved?

Approved Opioid Treatment Programs currently have “callback” procedures in which stable patients are randomly selected to return to their home clinic with their unused take home doses. This allows the clinic medical staff to perform a medication count, and it acts as a safeguard to insure patients are taking their medication as prescribed.

Patients who have earned take home privileges through months of treatment progress are less inclined to divert or misuse methadone than someone who just started treatment. New patients must be inducted gradually on a stabilizing dose of methadone. And time is typically needed to help these patients adjust to methadone while eliminating use of all other illicit substances. This is where the benefit of a structured treatment program is most relevant. OTP’s provide extremely valuable life management skills training in conjunction with medication therapy.

It remains to be seen if “easy access” to methadone is truly an advancement in care, or a step backwards in accountability & safety for patients and the public.

Posted in Medication Assisted Treatment, Methadone, Methadone Clinics, Methadone Programs, Suboxone, Suboxone Clinics | Tagged | Comments Off on Remote Observation of Methadone Dosing