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Ex-jail inmates staying off drugs with breakthrough non-narcotic treatment

poledriver

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Jul 21, 2005
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Ex-jail inmates staying off drugs with breakthrough non-narcotic treatment

A once-a-month injection that curbs narcotic cravings is helping newly released inmates keep off drugs and avoid return trips to jail.

“My biggest downfall is trying to stay off heroin,” said Brandon, describing his 10 years of narcotics addiction. “I always seem to go back to it. I’ve never been able to get the right tools to stay clean.”

But after pleading guilty to a felony DUI in 2016, the Davis County man was accepted into a drug court program.

The 31-year-old receives an injection of Vivitrol every four weeks that he says allows him to shrug off thoughts of heroin, excel at work and mend damaged relationships.

“When I found out about Vivitrol I had such a sense of relief,” Brandon said. “It keeps my mind occupied and not on the urge to use. I can focus on getting myself better.”

Brandon is one of dozens of released criminal offenders who have been receiving Vivitrol over the past year after stints in the Davis, Weber and Salt Lake County jails.

It’s part of a local, state and federal effort to attack surging opioid drug addiction and help save former inmates from going back behind bars.

SW-083117-Vivitrol-Davis-Behavioral-Health-01-1.jpg


Despite its successes, the Vivitrol program barely dents the substance abuse wave washing over Utah.

An estimated 134,000 people in Utah are eligible for assisted drug abuse treatment, but government agencies can afford to serve only about 15,000, according to data from the Utah Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health.

That’s a conservative estimate of the need and does not even include the potential demand for addiction treatment for people with private insurance, said division spokesman Jeff Marrott.

The state budgeted $66.3 million to fund local substance abuse programs around Utah in fiscal year 2016, Marrott said. That was up from $57.9 million in fiscal 2015, according to the division’s annual reports.

“That seems like a lot of money, but the need is so great, it’s not enough,” Marrott said.

Widespread adoption of Vivitrol is also hindered by the drug’s high cost, about $1,400 per injection.

Earlier generations of addiction withdrawal drugs are much cheaper, such as methadone, about $20 a month, and Suboxone, $200, but those medicines are narcotics-based and prone to be abused..

PILOT PROGRAMS IN NORTHERN UTAH JAILS

In local jails, inmates with drug abuse histories are evaluated for post-release treatment potential.

Since mid-2016, 10 to 15 Davis County Jail inmates have graduated to Vivitrol, said Nancy Moss, who coordinates medication-assisted treatment for Davis Behavioral Health. The group still distributes methadone and Suboxone because they can be effective and their regular administration help caregivers keep close tabs on the recovering addicts.

“We thought (Vivitrol) might be a magic bullet, but it really appears it works best when they are just released from jail, to save lives and help them become stabilized and get into treatment,” Moss said.

Vivitrol is probably the best way to treat opioid addiction recovery, said Brandon Hatch, Davis Behavioral Health CEO.

“We’re about to step it up a little bit, because it’s such a big deal,” he said.

Kay Haw, the Weber County Jail’s health services coordinator, said that each month, up to half a dozen inmates receive Vivitrol injections when they are being released.

“It’s working very well,” Haw said.

Cont -

http://www.standard.net/Police-Fire...h-Davis-Salt-Lake-Vivitrol-methadone-Suboxone
 
lol naltrexone does next to nothing for cravings when it comes to opioids. Alcohol may be another story, but not opioids. It is probably the least effective form of MAT to use for opioid use disorder, far and away from "the best" option.

Fucking media (hey what's new...). Then again, Utah has an absolute shit record when it comes to substance use disorder treatments.
 
lol naltrexone does next to nothing for cravings when it comes to opioids. Alcohol may be another story, but not opioids. It is probably the least effective form of MAT to use for opioid use disorder, far and away from "the best" option.

Fucking media (hey what's new...). Then again, Utah has an absolute shit record when it comes to substance use disorder treatments.
It's such a scary lie.
 
And have you been on Naltrexone for an extensive period of time?
 
And have you been on Naltrexone for an extensive period of time?
Nope and I don't plan too either. I've read enough horror stories on here and other forms to not need to see for myself.
 
Naltrexone is terrible. If you're depressed, as a large percentage of opiate addicts are, it makes you feel insanely miserable, and does nothing for actual cravings. One of my custies before I quit was on vivitrol and he could still get high for a few days at the end of the month. I was on the tablet for and it absolutely did not help me. Buprenorphine has been a miracle for me and many others. I would rather stay on maintenance for life than be off opioids and have to deal with cravings and everything.
 
Oh my God,asyou all know it blocks endogenous opies too,those poor guys just taking it to get out earlier.
No Doc will ever put that in me!
Anyone consider that as a waY out?
 
I mean, I'd do pretty much anything to get a criminal sentence reduced. But I won't be using this treatment for my recovery. It's about as much a breakthrough treatment as nine month long inpatient rehab programs are...
 
I mean, I'd do pretty much anything to get a criminal sentence reduced. But I won't be using this treatment for my recovery. It's about as much a breakthrough treatment as nine month long inpatient rehab programs are...
I would do anything to stay out of prison but I would draw the line at this stuff. This shit will never ever enter my body. Full stop
 
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