Sam Low

In the Grip of Heroin Addiction, Suboxone Can Be Path to Healing

Several Islanders credit the medication known by the brand name Suboxone for successful, extended recovery from opiate addiction.

He is a confident, smart, healthy young man with a good job and a future. He is also an addict.

He has been clean for 10 years, but he still occasionally thinks about shooting heroin into his veins. Living on Martha’s Vineyard, hit hard by the same heroin epidemic gripping many communities, he still faces triggers that present a challenge to staying clean. He now recognizes, however, that his mind is capable of playing cruel tricks on him.

“It’s only remembering that one little 30-second feeling of euphoria, nothing else,” he said. “When those thoughts pop into my head, it’s only those 30 second clips, my brain never plays the tape through. My addict brain is programmed to remember those little bits of good. I don’t remember the hooker kicking me in the stomach in the morning. I don’t remember the gun shots. It’s amazing how powerful heroin is.”

According to scientific research studies, four out five heroin users in the current epidemic first became addicted to opioid pain medications. These were often prescribed for legitimate pain management such as a sports injury or recovery from surgery.

He was one of those four out five.

“I got hooked on pain pills for a back injury,” he said. “It was pretty much right off the bat. I really liked the way opiates made me feel. I managed to go to college and get a degree and a good job, but all the while my addiction just got worse and worse. I lost my job, and my wife and my house. Everything that I had, I sold for drug money. I was homeless living on the streets, right behind the building that I once worked at. Hookers, gun battles. It was a nasty place.”

She is a respected and admired member of the Vineyard community. She is also an addict.

For much of her life she battled heroin addiction. She was clean and sober for many years until a doctor prescribed opioid pain medications for a back injury. She was soon hooked, and desperate.

“It brought me to my knees,” she said. “I didn’t have a way out at that point. I was ready to go back and pick up heroin.”

She and others spoke to the Gazette recently about their addictions. The Gazette agreed not to use their names. They credit the medication containing buprenorphine and naloxone, often known by the brand name Suboxone, for successful, extended recovery from opiate addiction.

“It saved my life,” she said. “It’s given me back a life.”

Buprenorphine and naloxone themselves are classified as opiates, which makes them the subject of some controversy. The medications work on the central nervous system to short circuit the euphoria associated with heroin, as well as the symptoms of heroin withdrawal. The symptoms — chills, diarrhea, cramping, nausea and vomiting — can set in within hours of the last heroin use, and they are often severe. Addiction experts say that after a short period of addiction, most addicts do not use heroin to get high, but to avoid those withdrawal symptoms.

Buprenorphine is a long acting opiate, but with very different characteristics than those associated with heroin or prescription pain medications. It does not deliver a “high,” but it suppresses the craving for heroin, and also blocks the euphoric effects of subsequent opioid use. It has an effective “ceiling,” according to addiction experts. Unlike more harmful opioids, taking higher doses does not produce a more intense effect. In addition, if an addict uses heroin while taking buprenorphine, the addict will not experience a high.

Buprenorphine is illegal to possess without a prescription, and there are numerous cases of people abusing the medication. Some addicts use it to avoid withdrawal, until they can get more heroin.

The addicts interviewed for this article all said they had tried many forms of treatment, but could not kick their habit until they began taking buprenorphine, under the supervision of a doctor.

“I was in and out of so many treatment programs, they just never worked,” said one addict, who said he had gone through medical detoxification more than a dozen times. “I would get out and I would immediately go right back to it. The cravings were just so intense, it was impossible to stay sober. It took me two months before I actually got sober. I did have a few slips in the beginning. If it wasn’t for that, I’d be dead, no question. You can only overdose so many times and eventually your luck runs out. I’m one of the lucky ones.”

Several recovering addicts tried to explain the grip of heroin addiction, and the perception that they are weak or lack willpower.

“The last couple of years shooting heroin, I despised it,” said one man. “I didn’t want to get high, all I wanted was to not be sick. I had a $300 a day habit. It wasn’t fun.” He said the addiction was so intense, that when he attended 12-step support programs for heroin addicts, he didn’t believe recovering addicts who said they got clean.

“I couldn’t imagine getting through the meeting without shooting dope in the bathroom, never mind a whole day or years. That hump seemed so insurmountable.”

Addiction experts on Martha’s Vineyard say the biggest barriers to effective treatment are not the lack of services or the cost. They say there are two primary reasons addicts don’t get help. The first is denial.

“I thought I had a little problem,” said one person who used heroin for many years. “If you still think you’re having fun, then you’re going to keep using.”

“When I was ready, it seemed easy, almost,” said another recovering addict.

The other major barrier for addicts seeking treatment is the stigma associated with addiction. That stigma, according to addicts and medical providers, is more pronounced in a small isolated community like Martha’s Vineyard. Addicts said they feared seeking medical treatment would identify them as drug users, and they would be scorned. They also said once they got effective treatment, many realized their fears were unfounded, that their families and friends supported their treatment, and welcomed them getting clean.

“One day I woke up and said I’m done,” said one addict. “Didn’t like the way my family looked at me. Didn’t like the way my daughter looked at me. Nobody trusted me. I didn’t trust me. I kind of felt ashamed of it. A month or two into it [buprenorphine treatment] for me it was a spiritual experience. I’ve not had the desire to use at all. I look at myself now compared to who I was then; it’s really two different people.”

The addicts stressed that buprenorphine should not be thought of as a miracle drug, but a tool to stay clean. They see doctors, counselors and attend support groups or 12-step meetings to stay on track.

Every addict who spoke to the Gazette, however, credits the medications with a remarkable transformation in their lives, from a life of stealing, lying and isolation because of their heroin use, to a normal, productive life with jobs, families and a future.

“I might [have been] one of the statistics,” said one woman. “I’m married, I have kids. Now I have a good life. My husband accepts me. He says I don’t know what it does to you, but keep doing it.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/01/2016 - 09:36

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Nannie Bee South Shore

Thanks for the encouraging article. I hope my ex son-in-law is able to get through a recovering program. He has lost so much due to pain killers and alcohol.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/01/2016 - 13:14

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Michaelis Vermont

Of course the opioid epidemic is massive in lovely Vermont as well as beautiful Martha's Vineyard. The problem will not be adequately addressed until the drug dealing doctors who have ruined tens of millions of lives to feed their own greed are held to account. Addicts like the above should have the opportunity to confront the physicians who quite knowingly gave them a disease from which they could never completely recover, as they did in South Africa under Mendela after the removal of apartheid. Medical leadership (AMA, APA) should be publicly named and shamed. Every element of society must be involved in this effort to speak truth to the medical/industrial complex and its minions.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/01/2016 - 17:14

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gina nyc/Menemsha

Of course there are unscrupulous drs.. with heavy scrip pads.. But no one has a gun to a potential addict's head taking the opioids for the "high".. It's a choice although a very poor one.. Remember methadone?? That was supposed to be the cure all and ???

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/02/2016 - 09:00

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Islander Martha's Vineyard

Saying the addict was clean "until the doctor prescribed opioid medication" sounds so passive on the part of the addict. Did the doctor force the patient to take the prescription? Why on earth would a recovering heroin addict take opioids for pain? Did she tell the prescribing doctor she had been addicted to heroin? That would be, NO. Otherwise, the doctor could lose her license.

Addicts lie. Forgetting to mention to a prescribing doctor that, oh, by the way, I was a heroin addict, is lie of omission. Not all pain has to be treated with opioids, and certainly not for an addict. You can't blame it all on the doctors.

Doctors are often quick to hand out opioids for pain in general, and even when necessary, they prescribe too many and in too high a dose. I've had opioids offered and said no more than once to my doctor. But it is a patient's responsibility to be honest about past drug abuse. Any "recovering" addict who takes a prescription for opioids from a doctor is an addict acting like an addict.

Vineyard Haven Strong Vh

Wow you sound so perfect! I wish everyone was so in control of their life as you seem! COME ON...that's not real life pal. Addiction is a disease and those affected by it will do whatever they need to to feed the illness. I agree it's not all on the doctors, but this article isn't about that. It simply shows another way out of the cycle of addiction. So stop preaching and start educating yourself.

Islander

No, not perfect, but educated enough to know that an addict who accepts opioid medications from a doctor without informing the doctor of her heroin addiction is NOT a clean and sober person. Giving a free pass from responsibility to an addict for that behavior is called ENABLING. Anyone who has worked with addicts knows not to let that slip by as any sort of excuse. Every drug addict must tell her doctor of her drug abuse. That's the first lesson they're supposed to learn in rehab. Neither is an person addicted to suboxone clean and sober. Substituting one addiction for another is not a way out of the cycle-- But it is a different drug dealer, a legal one-- I'll give you that.

Matt BONITA SPRINGS, FL

Islander,
Your comments show that you can never really understand addiction,and good for you.
But, as a former addict saved by suboxone, I am sure that the patient who did not tell the prescribing physician had a million thoughts going through his/her mind as the doctor was writing that prescription, unfortunately the habit overpowered and won.

Zac White Lake MI

How about the Dr's that hand out opiods like candy? Some of them are good physicians and can tell if one is lying or not, or they can also use the automated prescription checker that our government has in place. You seriously need to get off your high horse and show compassion, after all addiction starts with one's own mental health.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 04/02/2016 - 15:39

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BF

Don't be fooled.
Suboxone and Methadone are as bad as the heroin as far as an addiction is concerned. Maybe even better cause you can do it legally.
I have witnessed the hell of someone "jonesing" for their suboxone or methadone fix, and also the near deadly nightmare of someone trying to get off of it!!
Clean, means CLEAN...it does not mean substituting for another drug!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 04/03/2016 - 12:16

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

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Vineyard Haven Strong Vh

I love this argument in opposition to Suboxone. How ignorant! Suboxone has saved tens of thousands of lives that would have been lost to overdose otherwise. I would love to see you sit down in a room with parents of those patients who have gotten clean using Suboxone. Then you could explain to them how their sons & daughters are worse off now then when they were shooting heroin. Or explain the logic behind "they are not clean". Heroin addiction is lethal...period. For most, Suboxone is a last choice after being in & out of rehab. I can tell you my life is precious and Suboxone saved it

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