Methadone Recovery

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Methadone Recovery

Methadone is a synthetic drug used to help combat the addiction to opiods -- drugs made from the opium poppy.

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Finding a recovery program for Methadone addiction

There are different types of recovery programs for those with a methadone addiction. It is important to find the right program. Not every program is right for every person. When you find the right program, you will have a better success rate of not relapsing, which is what family members want, and hopefully the person with the dependency problem.

There are inpatient and outpatient programs. Knowing which one is right for the person with the problem is important. They cannot get the right help if they are in the wrong program. Knowing the differences between inpatient and outpatient is important. Knowing the pros and cons of each will help you find the right program for the person in need of help.

There are inpatient programs to help those with a methadone dependency. This is a great way to still be able to visit the person, yet getting them out of the environment that could potentially hurt them more or kill them. With inpatient programs they have people watching them 24 hours a day 7 days a week. This program has all kinds of meetings, support groups, etc to help the person with the dependency out.

Then there is an outpatient program to help out. This program the person does not live at the facility. They come for the activities assigned them each day or the days they are required. They have a support group, but they are not with that support group 24 hours a day 7 days a week. If you do not need to get them away from the group causing the problem, this might be a good way to go.

Knowing how long someone has been using Methadone and how much they have been taking will probably affect which type of program they go to. Sometimes getting out of the situation can make a huge impact and can really help the person clean up. While others may need the help and support, but not need it 24 hours day surveillance. Finding the right inpatient or outpatient program is important. There are many ways to look for help. There are doctors, psychologist, and other medical professionals who can give their suggestions and even refer someone if that is needed. The right help will help you get the person into the right program, which is of up most importance.

When methadone has been used, finding the right programs is important. When you find a program that will really help them out, you will do anything to get them there and as soon as possible.


Methadone: Methadone Facts

methadone - Important information about methadone recovery and the use of methadone in drug addiction recovery.


Dr put me on methadone wouldnt give me norco which ive been using for pain 3 weeks into methadone i started to?

Question: Dr put me on methadone wouldnt give me norco which ive been using for pain 3 weeks into methadone i started to?

(Posted by: on 2010-08-08 13:23:57)

Have trouble breathing, couldn't use my cpap and started to have panic attacks told doc but he denies it being methadone stopped taking methadone and started using norco again the breathing and panic attacks stopped and i can use my cpap wonder if it was the methadone or withdrawals from norco also i do have copd



 

Answers:

Posted by: Sparrow on 2010-08-11, 10:55:47

Methadone, if taken improperly- at a higher dose than prescribed, or if taken illegally- can cause slowing of the respiratory system; that is a symptom of overdose. It should not cause any type of panic attacks; its sedation effects would rule that out as a cause. Methadone however does work against other opiates- it blocks the receptors in your brain that opiates would normally attach to, making them ineffective. Norco won't work again until the methadone is out of your system; and methadone, being a time released drug, will take awhile to leave your system, depending on how long and what dose you've been using. Norco is really a very milk narcotic in comparison to methadone- methadone, even in it's lowest doses- should only ever be used for severe, chronic pain & as MMT for opiate addiction. It's time released capacity makes it very effective for chemo-patients and those with chronic, terminal illness- but is a poor choice for mild or pain that is controllable with something as mild as Norco. 1). The Harrison drug act made it illegal for general practitioner doctors to prescribe methadone for opiate addiction- only state run clinics can do so, and must follow rigorous regulations. A doctor may prescribe it for pain without these limitations. In the last five years, there’s been a lot of issues with the use of methadone, the bulk of which get blamed on MMT, but are actually the result of physicians prescribing it for pain- they don’t have the same strict set of regulations governing them, and ignorance and miseducation has made general practitioners more lax in using it for moderate pain. Side effects of methadone include sweating, constipation, mild sedation when used in pain management (MMT for opiate addiction required serum testing of the blood called a peak and trough that determines a therapeutic dose that will not produce sedation and simply stave off withdrawal symptoms), among others, but nothing like you’ve described. On the other hand, Norco has several side effects akin to what you’ve described- it is also possible that you’ve felt withdrawal from the Norco~ which may be a mild hydrocodone based narcotic, but is still known to cause physical dependence. Many MMT clients are on it for opiate-pill addictions, not just heroin. If you discontinued Norco, and started methadone, the methadone would have first blocked any residual Norco built up in your system from working; making withdrawal from the Norco more imminent (usually it would take a few days to start). Methadone is a slow acting medication- MMT patients often aren’t stabilized- (just feeling normal, not in withdrawal)- for several weeks, as it takes some time to build up in the system, and most physicians- MMT or general- start patients off low, and will gradually increase, to avoid overdose, since it’s a strong medication. If you stopped the methadone, it might not have had a chance to work; and starting the Norco again wouldn’t help, since the methadone would still be blocking it- (methadone leaves the system astoundingly slow). Talk to your physician- you may need a dose adjustment for the methadone, or you may want to tell him you aren’t comfortable on methadone- there are certainly other meds that are stronger than Norco and milder than methadone. It’s possible your physician prescribed methadone because your condition requires long term pain management, and that is a common use for methadone, since once stabilized, the patient doesn’t usually develop a tolerance, or a need to increase the way they would with other opiates. Either way, you need to stop mixing, and take only one. Mixing is very dangerous- and the root of the supposed methadone deaths you’ve heard in the news. Methadone rarely causes overdose when taken as prescribed; but mixing it does- the person doesn’t feel it because it’s time released, and will either take more than prescribed, or take it with another med, which they also may not feel, but is still toxic enough to cause your body’s organs to fail. Even though there’s no buzz, your liver and kidney still have to filter out the toxins, and too many is dangerous. If you have more questions, feel free to email me. I can help you get in touch with some people and resources more akin to your issue. Good luck.

  

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