Looking at these statistics, I thought back to something that addiction specialist Sarah Wakeman told me when I was reporting on the opioid crisis five years ago. “Most people get better,” Wakeman, who is the senior medical director for substance use disorder at Mass General Brigham, said then. “That’s what we don’t ever talk about in the opioids conversation.”

When she says “most people,” she means most people who get long-term medication-assisted treatment (MAT), widely considered the gold standard in addiction care. It combines regular counseling and behavioral therapy with the medication methadone or buprenorphine (often prescribed under the brand name Suboxone). Both contain synthetic opioid compounds, which prevent withdrawal and cravings, and they can lower overdoses by as much as 76 percent. (A third medication, less often used, is naltrexone, which blocks the high from opioids.)

The philosophy of MAT — a departure from the moralizing, abstinence-based rehab and 12-step programs that dominated addiction care for most of the 20th century — began to take shape in the early 2000s, when the Food and Drug Administration approved buprenorphine and a federal law authorized primary care physicians to prescribe it.

  • CaractacusPottsOPM
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    7 months ago

    What part of knowing people who take drugs recreationally and having had chats on the subject - and seen that people can infact take drugs without issue made you think I’m preaching about Abstinence? I am just really curious.

    Fixing addiction can’t start with a pill. That has to be a last resort Maybe we should stop trying to fix things with pills, making pharmaceutical companies billions for patching a problem they in effect created