SACRED HEART
  • PROGRAMS
  • ABOUT
    • SERVICES >
      • WITHDRAWAL MANAGEMENT
      • RESIDENTIAL INPATIENT
      • WOMEN'S SPECIALTY
      • OUTPATIENT
      • MEDICATION-ASSISTED TREATMENT
      • OUTPATIENT AMBULATORY WITHDRAWAL MANAGEMENT
      • OUTPATIENT STATEWIDE TELEHEALTH
      • SUD HEALTH HOME
      • HOUSING
      • RECOVERY SUPPORT
      • PREVENTION
      • HIV/AIDS CARE
    • WHY SACRED HEART?
    • HISTORY
    • QUALITY ASSURANCE & CLIENT SATISFACTION
    • BOARD MEMBERS
    • MEMBERSHIPS, ACCREDITATIONS & AFFILIATIONS
  • RESOURCES
    • PUBLICATIONS >
      • BROCHURE
      • FRIENDS & FAMILY BOOKLET
      • ANNUAL SNAP SHOT >
        • Sacred Heart
    • VIDEO TOURS
    • FAQ'S >
      • What to Bring
      • Treatment Cost
      • Transportation
      • Confidentiality
      • Contacting a Client/Visitation
      • Clothing Donations
      • Intervention
    • MERCH SHOP
    • COMMUNITY RESOURCES
    • Grievance Form
    • UFAM RESOURCES
    • NEWS & EVENTS
    • About CEHR Client Portal
    • About Zoom Virtual Services & Download
    • About Engage App & Download
    • Medications for Substance Use Disorders
    • MDHHS Communicable Disease Links
    • SUD Health Home
    • FASD Clinic Referral Resources
    • Nami Resource Guide for Families Dealing with Mental Illiness
    • Michigan Smokers Quit Kit
    • Funding-Regional Prepaid Inpatient Health Plans
  • CAREERS
  • CONTACT
  • CEHR
  • GIVING

MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT:From Skeptic to SupporterĀ 

9/30/2008

0 Comments

 
I should begin with a confession. My first contact with methadone maintenance therapy was when I was invited two years ago to participate in the development task force that created the Sacred Heart Opiate Treatment Program. I suspect that that the reason I was invited to participate in the task force was to provide a sobering influence on the committee since I was brought up in the 12-step abstinence model.
 
Secretly, I felt a like a poison pill. Up until this point in time, “I HAD ALWAYS SEEN METHADONE MAINTENANCE AS UNACCEPTABLE. THE TRUTH IS I HAD NEVER REALLY GIVEN IT MUCH THOUGHT BEYOND AN OFF-HAND DISMISSAL.” I began my work on the task force by plowing through research study after research study. I was really looking for evidence that the methadone medication-assisted model was not good practice. I didn’t find it. The preponderance of evidence supports methadone maintenance. There is solid evidence for the practice of methadone replacement therapy that has accumulated over a very long period of time that can be found even by an old skeptic like myself.
 
The evidence for methadone maintenance therapy shows reduction in illicit drug use, criminal activity, needle sharing, risky sexual behavior, suicide, and overdoses as well as improvements in health conditions, productivity, retention in therapy and cost-effectiveness.
 
The body of evidence that supports these conclusions is based on matching the client to the appropriate treatment and providing that client not only with medication but also structure, accountability and therapy.
 
My second contact with methadone medication assisted therapy was when I was asked to be the program therapist for the Sacred Heart Opiate Treatment Program. I discovered in the clients of the Sacred Heart Opiate treatment Program confirmation of the evidence provided by all that research. “EVERYDAY I SAW MIRACLES. MEN AND WOMEN, WHOSE LIVES HAD BEEN RAVAGED BY HEROIN OR PRESCRIPTION DRUG ADDICTION, BECOMING HEALTHY, GOING TO WORK AND TAKING CARE OF THEIR FAMILIES.” I saw these individuals at various stages of their recovery.
 
Pregnant women whose maternal instinct was to protect their babies, but who could not escape the overwhelming power of their addiction, stabilized on methadone, bringing them and their fetus into a medically controlled support system.
 
New clients would come into the clinic beat down by their disease after many fervent attempts at quitting. Most had undergone more than one detoxification episode only to return to illicit use because they never really felt normal without some sort of opiate augmentation in the same way that a diabetic never really feels normal without insulin.
 
Truly, methadone maintenance is a program of progress not perfection, but through medication assistance and persistent therapy, science is transmuted into life.

-Sacred Heart Therapist

0 Comments

    Submissions from the Heart

    POEMS, ESSAYS, ART & STORIES FROM SACRED HEART CLIENTS, FAMILY,  STAFF & THE RECOVERY COMMUNITY.

    Archives

    December 2019
    June 2013
    May 2013
    December 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    October 2010
    September 2010
    December 2009
    December 2008
    October 2008
    September 2008

    Categories

    All
    Addiction
    Celebrate Recovery Walk
    Clearview
    Essay By Client
    Family
    Heroin
    HIV/AIDS
    Holidays
    Job Loss
    Medication Assistance
    Methadone
    New Year's Eve
    Opiate
    Poem By Client
    Pregnant Women
    Prescription Drug
    Recovery
    Relapse
    Staff Essay
    Staying Sober
    Substance Abuse
    Treatment
    Working For Sacred Heart

    RSS Feed

      Submit an entry to the blog

    Submit
Picture
MISSION, VISION & VALUES
PRIVACY POLICY
CULTURAL COMPETENCY & DIVERSITY
​STRATEGIC PLAN
Picture
If you think you have a medical emergency,  call your doctor or 911 immediately. Do not rely on any electronic communications or communication through this website and/or apps  (such as; email, chat, VM, or text messaging) for immediate, urgent medical needs.  This  website and/or apps are not designed to facilitate medical emergencies.
  • PROGRAMS
  • ABOUT
    • SERVICES >
      • WITHDRAWAL MANAGEMENT
      • RESIDENTIAL INPATIENT
      • WOMEN'S SPECIALTY
      • OUTPATIENT
      • MEDICATION-ASSISTED TREATMENT
      • OUTPATIENT AMBULATORY WITHDRAWAL MANAGEMENT
      • OUTPATIENT STATEWIDE TELEHEALTH
      • SUD HEALTH HOME
      • HOUSING
      • RECOVERY SUPPORT
      • PREVENTION
      • HIV/AIDS CARE
    • WHY SACRED HEART?
    • HISTORY
    • QUALITY ASSURANCE & CLIENT SATISFACTION
    • BOARD MEMBERS
    • MEMBERSHIPS, ACCREDITATIONS & AFFILIATIONS
  • RESOURCES
    • PUBLICATIONS >
      • BROCHURE
      • FRIENDS & FAMILY BOOKLET
      • ANNUAL SNAP SHOT >
        • Sacred Heart
    • VIDEO TOURS
    • FAQ'S >
      • What to Bring
      • Treatment Cost
      • Transportation
      • Confidentiality
      • Contacting a Client/Visitation
      • Clothing Donations
      • Intervention
    • MERCH SHOP
    • COMMUNITY RESOURCES
    • Grievance Form
    • UFAM RESOURCES
    • NEWS & EVENTS
    • About CEHR Client Portal
    • About Zoom Virtual Services & Download
    • About Engage App & Download
    • Medications for Substance Use Disorders
    • MDHHS Communicable Disease Links
    • SUD Health Home
    • FASD Clinic Referral Resources
    • Nami Resource Guide for Families Dealing with Mental Illiness
    • Michigan Smokers Quit Kit
    • Funding-Regional Prepaid Inpatient Health Plans
  • CAREERS
  • CONTACT
  • CEHR
  • GIVING