
5 Tips for Staying Sober
You’ve done the work to become clean and sober, and you want to do what you can to stay that way. Here are five great tips that will help you safeguard your freedom from a substance use disorder.
Whether you’ve already tried to quit using opioids or you can’t even imagine trying to stop, you understand that early recovery can be a difficult time, to say the least. Unfortunately, between the withdrawal symptoms and the incessant cravings, people often wind up using again just to find some relief. This is exactly where Suboxone® can help.
As addiction specialists, our team here at Northview Wellness Practice wants to provide our clients with every tool available to increase their chances of success. While breaking an addiction and recovering require multiple tools, Suboxone can play a key role.
Here’s a look at how Suboxone works to help you break free from your opioid addiction.
While it may seem counterintuitive, the use of medications to help you overcome drug or alcohol withdrawal and addiction can be very helpful. Called medication-assisted treatment (MAT), the use of medications is designed to ease both the withdrawal symptoms and the ongoing cravings in early recovery.
Whether you’ve already tried to quit on your own or you’ve heard some unfavorable stories, you know that, time and again, the combined power of withdrawal symptoms and cravings often sends people back to using to relieve the discomfort.
When this happens, many people tend to overdo usage, putting them at serious risk for overdose. With MAT, studies show that medications like Suboxone lower the risk of fatal overdose by 50%.
If you’re trying to overcome an opioid addiction, Suboxone contains two ingredients that approach the problem from two different angles:
The first active ingredient in Suboxone is buprenorphine, which is a partial opioid agonist. Buprenorphine attaches to the opioid receptors in your body, much like heroin or other opioids do. But as a partial agonist only, it doesn’t deliver the same “high.” Not only can this ingredient help wean you off of full agonist opioids, it helps to reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings that are associated with early recovery.
The second key ingredient in Suboxone is naloxone, which is a pure opioid antagonist. The role of naloxone is to shut down your receptors to prevent them from being activated.
When combined, these two ingredients work together to “satisfy” any cravings you may develop and greatly reduce your withdrawal symptoms, all while preventing you from feeling the euphoric effects of the opioids.
There is a small risk of developing an addiction to Suboxone, which is why we closely monitor your use of the medication as you negotiate early recovery.
If you’re sick and tired of being sick and tired due to your opioid use disorder, contact our office by phone or email to see whether Suboxone may hold the key to getting your life back.
You’ve done the work to become clean and sober, and you want to do what you can to stay that way. Here are five great tips that will help you safeguard your freedom from a substance use disorder.
The connection between a substance use disorder and a mental health issue is a strong one, as the nearly eight million Americans who have a co-morbidity prove. When this occurs, treating both issues is paramount.
Addiction is a chronic disease that requires constant vigilance and good management. When a person falls short, relapse can occur. If you’re worried that a loved one has relapsed, here are some signs to look out for.
You believe that you’re drinking isn’t normal anymore, and you’re tired of the overwhelmingly negative effects that alcohol is having on your life. The good news is that alcoholism is highly treatable.
The rise in availability of telehealth services has been great news for those who need (or would prefer) to receive quality health care from the comfort of their own homes. These services also extend to substance use disorders.
Marijuana may be legal, but like with alcohol, how you use this legal substance makes a difference. If you develop a use disorder, marijuana can be quite harmful and affect a number of areas of your life.