How to quit pain pills…Methadone or drug rehab?
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An addiction to pain pills can so easily sneak up on you.
Whether prescribed the medications for a legitimate reason initially, or whether experimenting with recreational use, the seductive nature of these pills proves too much for a great many of us, and with more than 6 million Americans currently addicted to pain pills, if you do get overwhelmed with abuse and addiction, you are certainly not alone.
Some of these pills are as addictive as heroin, but since they come from the pharmacist, and are legitimately recommended by doctors and other medical staff, we underestimate the warnings, and when the pills fell so good, and take all the pain away, it can be very easy to take just a bit more than recommended, and just a bit more frequently than prescribed.
Once addicted, the way in which it happened is irrelevant, and even if you were prescribed the drugs for a legitimate reason, your situation with dependency is no different from any other drug addict. It doesn’t make you a bad person, and there should be no morality assigned to the use and abuse of drugs anyways, but it does mean that you likely need professional help to get sober.
The most commonly abused pills are opiate type narcotics, and whether vicodin, Demerol, oxycontin or morphine, they all share a commonality of physical addiction, and a very long and painful period of withdrawal. When you make the decision to get off of the drugs, you have three basic options for your cessation of use.
3 ways to get off pain pills
1) You can try a long and gradual tapering of the dosage, until ultimately you are down to none a day.
2) You can try an opiate substitution program, such as methadone maintenance, where intoxicating opiates are switched for non intoxicating methadone, and then the dosage of methadone is gradually reduced.
3) You can enter into a rehab or drug treatment program, and detox quickly yet painfully off of the opiates, and then undergo therapies and counseling to ensure that you stay off of the pills for good.
Try it on your own first, then get help
Obviously, if you can do it on your own, this is preferable, and as such the gradual tapering off is the optimal way to get off of opiates. A gradual tapering of the dosage is safe, does not require a lengthy commitment to treatment, and also saves you the expense of therapy. Unfortunately, a lot of people who try this method find the cravings and pulls back to heavy use overwhelming, and find that they cannot significantly cut their dosage.
Most people with a serious addiction to opiate type pain killers will require some form of professional therapy, and as such there are two general options for consideration; and they both have some advantages and disadvantages.
Methadone maintenance
The largest single advantage of methadone maintenance as a way to get off of opiates is the avoidance of a long and painful cold turkey detox. Methadone, (and now also buprenorphine) is not very intoxicating, and at the doses given addicts will feel no particular high, be able to participate safely and actively in society, and will also avoid the pains of complete detox. Methadone programs are popular with addicts, and not least because they spare people from a very uncomfortable week or so of withdrawal.
The disadvantages to methadone are that it can take a long time, you are still addicted to an opiate, and you still need to invest considerable time and energy into your addiction.
Some doctors argue that methadone addiction is actually more potent and entrenching than for drugs like heroin, and that although we do get people off of intoxicating substances, we do them no favors when substituting for a drug that makes eventual detox, longer and more arduous than the drug originally addicted to.
Because the process is so long, and because methadone must be taken under supervision in a clinic, the continual time and energy investment in your drug habit remains substantial, and many addicts will need to visit methadone clinics several times a week for years, if they can ever even completely wean themselves off of the drug.
Drug rehab
While methadone is relatively painless, but long and slow, the intense period of detox as in a drug rehab can be very uncomfortable, and addicts can expect several days of very painful withdrawal. Medical management can ease the worst of the symptoms and ensure safety during the process, but those days of detox will be tough, and the medications given to ease the pains can only do so much.
The advantage though, is that once those few days of withdrawal are completed, patients are no longer physically addicted to opiates, and they are ready to really benefit from the offered therapies and programming of drug rehab, and ready to learn how to stay drug free for ever. Although they will probably need to retain some participation in aftercare therapies, they do not need to continue taking any other drugs.
Which is right for you?
If you have not yet tried to gradually reduce your dosage on your own, then this is very likely a good place to start your battle with addiction, but if you are like so many of us and find that you just can’t quit without help, you need to consider the relative advantages of either long and painless methadone maintenance, or short, uncomfortable, but effective drug treatment and detox.
Price is always a consideration, and although methadone maintenance is likely cheaper in the short term, the time commitment required for a painless detox can stretch into the years, and some people never mange to get completely off methadone. In some ways, even though rehab will cost more at first, it is the cheaper option over the long term.
Either way is far better than nothing, and either way can help you to get off of the drugs, and get back to a happier and healthier future of sobriety. Speak with your doctor or therapist about the relative advantages of the two types of programming as related to your individual situation, and start the road to recovery soon. Life is far too short to squander ever more time to addiction, especially when the answer to your problems is only as far as the nearest drug treatment center or methadone maintenance clinic.
There is no point wishing an addiction away, and it makes no real difference how that addiction came to be. You need to get serious, get help, and get better.
Recovery is always possible, and no other goal makes much sense.
Addiction and treatment
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Comments
I got injured 2 years ago was on pain killers. then i was taken off i could not quit. so i went to DR.to get help coming off of them and can't get help. now im going through terriable withdrawls and can't get help so i have to keep taking them. can you help please?
I HAVE BEEN USING FOR AT LEAST TWO YEARS I JUST GOT OUT OF A SHORT TERM REHAB FACILITY AND ALMOST INSTANTLY RELAPSED I AM SICK OF WAKING UP EVERY DAY WITH NOTHING ON MY MIND BUT HOW TO GET MORE MONEY TO BE TOTALLY HONEST I JUST MADE THE DECISION TO BECOME SOBER LIKE TEN MINUTES AGO BUT I KNOW I CAN DO IT ITS ALL IN MY HEAD IM 18 YEARS OLD AND I KNOW THERES MORE TO LIFE THAN GETTING HIGH I RANDOMLY CHOSE THIS SITE AND I KNOW IT MUST HAVE BEEN FOR A REASON I COULD USE SOMEONE TO RELATE TO IF ANYONE WOULD LIKE TO TALK TO ME MY EMAIL IS GREG17U@HOTMAIL.COM I WOULD BE GRATEFUL IF ANYONE COULD TAKE THE TIME TO TALK TO ME I WOULD BE EXTREMLY GRATEFUL FOR THAT IF NOT ITS COOL I UNDERSTAND THANK YOU FOR TAKING THE TIME TO LISTEN TO ME GREG L
After a nearly fatal accident that left her crippled, my wife was prescribed large doses of Methadone for years. No doctor was able to help her detox from it. Ultimately she did it herself, a very painful process. But she succeeded.
However she was also on bensodiazepine drugs which she, occasionally, abused. Coming off these medication is just as hard as detoxing from narcotics and, no doctor has been able to help.
The symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and depression to list a few.
I have been desperately looking for help but it is either going to detox centers we can't afford (we have tried one that left her in a worse condition physically as well as financially) or seing doctor who prescribe more of the same.
I would be forever grateful for information that could help us.
Well I gotta tell ya,there are alot of great people here that really deserve alot of credit for what they are trying to do. There are alot of people out there that will never know the pain of comming off of opiate addiction.I have been going thru this on and off for about 35 years now.I have allmost died,and gotten completely sober more times than I can count,I am gratefull that the doors of A.A.and N.A.are allways open.There are some rough people there,But there are some really good people there too.People that know true recovery is about helping others,If your Blessed enough to meet someone like that,hold on to them tight,And then be willing to do the same for someone else down the road.Thats the secret of how it works.Really pretty simple,Ya gotta be willing to give it away to keep it.My experence has been that what God is really looking for is Willingness.When we are Willing, He will provide the circumstances.I have met people with 3 month's of recovery that have alot more to offer than some of these cranky oldTimers I see hanging around,I said "Some"of the oldTimers.Of course there are some Wonderfull folks that have been around for awhile,But what I'm saying is that sometimes quality is alot more valuable than quantity,ya know?I get tired of that,"If ya want what I got ya little piece of shit,ya just shut up and listen!"mentality.No,ya cranky old grouch,I don't want what you have,but I am gratefull that you no longer drink or abuse other drugs,because my kids drive on the same streets you do!... Anyway,I am a very Gratefull man today,and my experience is that there are some things alot worse than dieing! Be Well, John : )
reading ur comments i have realised that im not the only one who has addiction problems...i had a fatal bike accident which broke the bones of my left legs my knee bones were so badly broken that the docters had to implant titaneiam metal plates...after the accident my life has gone totally out of control....i broke with my girlfriend stoped seeing my friends and started living a life of a convict the only difference between me and a real convict is he is forced to live in a cell but me i live in a cell with my own will.....the drugs were the only thing that kept me going its been more then 3 years since my accident my legs have healed...i still have pains in my knees while climbing and walking down the stairs...i cant run like i used to and when i see young guys driving bikes on full speed and i remmber my days when i was so full of ego that i was unbreakable and i could never fall....now for me has long as i live i will keep taking the pills till it kills me.....because i cant quit so im hoping that it quits me....
Oh yeah drugs are bad to say the very least, and the numbers of people that religiously use drugs are greater than people who are clean! Well that is the case where I live (here in Las Vegas, NV) but I assume most other bigger cities are not much diffrent. The scary part to me is how young kids today start "experimenting" with drugs. It just seems like kids start younger and younger. People, or adult parents for sure are not showing a good example either. It seems way too often that I see gaurdians of young kids setting a very bad example right out in the open. It's like they are so corrupted by all the stuff they went through in their days doing drugs they don't seem to see the mental corruption that is being installed in their kids. So so sad, but so damn true!
I just recently started looking up web pages on how to get help to detox and info on rehab centers. My boyfriend was sent two days ago to a rehabprogram in Madison, Alabama. I am back home in East Tennesse waiting for his return. He is required to stay for 14-17 days. He is 19 and I am 18. He has been snorting opiates for a little over two years and as for myself I have for almost a year. I had alot of family problems and lost my grandfather, whom raised me, and turned to pain pills to ease my emotional pain. My boyfriend fell into the habit from peer pressure. Neither one of us were injured in an accident nor prescribed any of the medication we took. We simply "bought them off the streets." We both hid our addiction from his family and would wake up every morning wondering how we were going to get money for our pills. We stole jewelry and anything with value from his family and took to pawn shops to receive money. Just last week we hit rock bottom and confessed to our addiction hoping to get help. Like I said earlier, he was sent to rehab and I am back home getting clean with will-power. I love my boyfriend and I know if he comes back pill-free and I am still taking, that he would either leave me or join me, and the last thing in the world that I would want would be for him to relapse. So by myself I am getting clean! The past couple days have definitely been the worst days of my life but each day gets better. Anyone can get clean if they just set their mind to it and realize that it's definitely not easy or fun, but will be worth it in the end. I love my boyfriend with all my heart and I cannot wait for the day he comes home and we can both continue our lives clean and drugfree!
i only had a slight addiction to pain killers,and methadone was suggested.thought it was a good idea the doctors all said it would help,but no one ever told me that your teeth would rot (and im a very HYGENIAL person) that your personallity would change ,and here is the worst of all once your on it you will probally never get off. im on day 8 of quitting cold turkey at 55 miiigrams and i can say that this is the worst pain of my life,and yes im still working well im going through this ,and society doesnt really care cause after all were the addicts. im stubborn and i will do it but i think what will keep me off is the memory of all this pain,but i nwver did heroin never did coke, so i never should have been given this drug period,i traded a week of feeling like shit for a 6 week priod of feeling like im going to die.from my personal experience i would say stay the hell away from any methadone it s not worth it its simply replacing one poison with a stronger poison...i hope it stops hurting ssoon but untill then ill keep a stiff uper lip, but when im done. and im a little stronger, ive promised myself that i will be the biggest advocate against methadone,,,,,it truly has become big buisnessssssss just my two cents brian
I BLAME THE DOCTORS FOR EVERYONES ADDICTION TO PAIN PILLS. ITS TOO EASY TO GO TO THE DOCTOR AND GET A PRESCRIPTION FOR PAIN. I HAVE BEEN SNORTING PILLS FOR ABOUT 2 YEARS NOW. I SAY THE SAME EVERYONE SAYS I WAKE UP EVERY MORNING WONDERING WHERE I CAN GET THE MONEY TO BUY ANOTHER PILL. I HAVE STOLE ALOT FROM MY FAMILY AND TAKEN TO PAWN SHOPS. IT HAS WRECKED MY MARRIAGE, LOST MY HOME, AND LOST EVERYTHING I HAVE EVER OWNED AND NOW I HAVE MOVED BACK IN WITH MY PARENTS. I HAVE EVEN BEEN TO JAIL SEVERAL TIMES. I AM 26 YEARS OLD AND HAVING TO START FROM SCRATCH. IM THROUGH WITH ALL THE PILSS AND MEDICATION. IM QUITING FOR GOOD THIS TIME.
Ive been using for 4 years... I am 18 years old.. I can't get off of these.. I would really like to sometimes though.
Will start drug treatment in a week. :)
Hello everybody,,,I feel for each and every one of you's..I do not have a problem with drugs or alcohol, my son does. I am a mother that has dedicated her life to helping my son. He has an oxicontin addition, I believe for about 4 yrs off and on,,maybe more on. I alwawys knew it because of symptoms but he actually admitted this to me. Wow I cannot believe what I am reading, I did not realize this was so hard to come off of..This drug has really put a damper on his whole life,education work etc. My question is, how do I know he needs rehab and how do you get him there, I am very proud of each and every one of you's for stating your problem on here, I believe it is the first step to the rest of your lives, come on people you can do it!!!! Your sooo worth it!! thankyou for sharing ,any advice I would truely appreciate...Mother looking to save her son
I have been addicted to pain pills and alcohol on and off for 25 years. I have finally decided to quit because I can't afford this and my health has suffered. I have fatty liver disease and it scares the hell out of me. I am going through big time withdrawals and it does not feel good at all. I am definitely tired of this roller coaster ride.










jamey says:
8 months ago
i have used these for a year recreationally, and have tried to quit , but the pain is too much . why does anything tsake the pain away