Methadone Addiction is No Longer a Necessary Treatment for Heroin Detox Addiction
In the 1960's, methadone, previously used for pain relief, started being used as treatment for the escalating problem of heroin addiction. At that time it was considered a viable solution - but that was in the days when effective drug detox and drug rehab technologies were almost unknown. Today, methadone treatment is antiquated, and it's creating methadone addiction - an addiction even more dangerous than addiction to heroin.
Why is methadone
treatment antiquated?
"It is important
to remember that a methadone user is still physically dependent on the drug -
they will experience horrible withdrawal symptoms if they can't get a dose in
time - and will almost always become an addict. In fact, methadone has proven
to be even more addictive than Heroin
Detox
," said Steven
Hayes, director of Novus Medical Detox Center, an inpatient detox facility in
Florida that helps people through withdrawal from heroin, methadone and other
drugs or alcohol.
"We now get people
off heroin with relative ease," Hayes said. "Still, instead of
sending people to a good medical detox and then rehab, millions of people
around the world are advised to use methadone treatment. Unfortunately, this
treatment more often than not results in methadone addiction."
But isn't methadone
addiction or dependency better than Heroin Detox addiction?
"Absolutely
not," says Hayes. "There are twice as many methadone-related deaths
as heroin-related deaths every year. Also, because the opioid receptors that
were being stimulated by heroin and now by methadone will become less
sensitive, most methadone users will keep requesting and obtaining larger and
larger doses of methadone. When they try to get off it they're in trouble. It's
more difficult to kick than heroin."
So, why is methadone
addiction still used as a treatment option for heroin addiction?
Many people have been
told that their use of heroin or other opiates has inhibited their body's
ability to produce endorphins - a natural hormone the body uses to block pain
signals from the nervous system so as to provide pain relief and, in some
cases, increase the feeling of pleasure. Methadone users have been duped into
thinking their body will not be able to produce endorphins without methadone or
that they have to take methadone for months or years before their body starts
producing the amount of endorphins they need.
However, there is no
science to prove this endorphin theory. Although it may take a while for a
heroin addict to get their body back to normal when they stop using heroin,
being unable to produce endorphins in adequate quantities is very rare, if it
happens at all.
In fact, endorphin
production is usually remedied through a good heroin detox and rehab program.
Nevertheless, many
heroin addicts are told they need methadone and, consequently, simply trade
heroin addiction for methadone addiction. They are never given the opportunity
to do the drug detox or rehab that could have handled their heroin addiction in
the first place and they are now saddled with methadone addiction for years
and, in some cases, for life.
What can you do if
you're dependent on or addicted to methadone?
Though the victims of
the methadone clinics may have been convinced they need methadone, in fact,
they've been misled. Fortunately, a few medical detox centers are able to do a
methadone detox and the person can truly be drug free and no longer dependent
on getting their dose.
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