Nevada Rehab for Suboxone

Buprenorphine or Suboxone is often used as a treatment for opioid addiction in Nevada. However, these medications can be addictive, and individuals may seek drug rehab to stop taking them. Drug Rehab Services has a comprehensive list of Nevada Suboxone treatment centers that can help someone recover from problematic Buprenorphine or Suboxone use.

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List of Rehab for Suboxone in Nevada

Below is a list of the different buprenorphine and Suboxone detox centers in Nevada. Each listing provides information on the types of services provided and the payment options available. You can also find accreditations and certifications to help you determine if the rehab center is trusted and has the expertise you are looking for. The list can be incomplete so please do not hesitate to contact a treatment specialist at 1-800-304-2219.

Address of the center

City of Pheonix, Arizona

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Address of the center

LegitScript Certified | Joint Commission Accredited

Rehab Settings

- Medical Detox
- Substance Abuse Treatment
- Drug and Alcohol Assessment
- Detox Center

People Served

- Treatment for Co-Occurring Disorders

1550 W Craig Road, Suite 310, North Las Vegas, NV

What's Next?

After completing a buprenorphine or Suboxone detox and/or rehab in Nevada, it is vital to arrange aftercare support. No one form of recovery support is the same for each person. Sober coaches, group meetings, outpatient programs, or sober living homes in Nevada all offer excellent recovery opportunities to consider. The goal is to maintain life-long sobriety.

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Buprenorphine is an opioid drug primarily developed to help people detox from other commonly abused opioids. It is the primary active compound in several medications, including Suboxone and Subutex. It produces less euphoria and has a longer duration of action than most other opioids, making it a candidate to help ease people off dangerous and less regulated opioids like heroin.

Buprenorphine exists in many forms but is commonly seen as a tablet or sublingual film. As a tablet, it may appear hexagonal and orange or oblong and white. As a film, it may appear translucent and rectangular. Buprenorphine may also be found as a lozenge dissolved under the tongue or a patch worn on the skin.

Buprenorphine can be found in detectable levels in the urine for up to six days after cessation of use. In cases where the drug isn’t used regularly or in high doses, this may take as few as three days.

Yes. Despite being used as a treatment for opioid addiction, buprenorphine is an addictive opioid drug that brings a potential for misuse and addiction. The drug’s role in substance abuse treatment has grown since its introduction, and it’s now frequently used for opioid maintenance therapy much in the way that methadone has been for decades. Individuals who desire to stop taking the drug may attend a treatment program to get off buprenorphine due to the withdrawal symptoms. Patients detoxing from buprenorphine often report experiencing extremely uncomfortable symptoms for weeks rather than days, followed by lingering symptoms like insomnia and anxiety, which can last for months.

Buprenorphine is most commonly taken orally or sublingually. It may also be taken transdermally via a patch worn on the arm or a similar body part. Sometimes buprenorphine may be dissolved and injected intravenously when misused, but this can be extremely dangerous.

The questions from Addicted.org’s “Ask a Professional” are answered by Michael Leach, CCMA. If you need further clarification on any of the questions above or have any other questions you can contact him directly at [email protected].

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CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ARTICLE

Marcel Gemme has been helping people struggling with addiction for over 19 years. He first started as an intake counselor for a drug rehabilitation center in 2000. During his 5 years as an intake counselor, he helped many addicts get the treatment they needed. He also dealt with the families and friends of those people; he saw first-hand how much strain addiction puts on a family and how it can tear relationships apart. With drug and alcohol problems constantly on the rise in the United States and Canada, he decided to use the Internet as a way to educate and help many more people in both those countries. This was 15 years ago. Since then, Marcel has built two of the largest websites in the U.S. and Canada which reach and help millions of people each year. He is an author and a leader in the field of drug and alcohol addiction. His main focus is threefold: education, prevention and rehabilitation. To this day, he still strives to be at the forefront of technology in order to help more and more people. He is a Licensed Drug and Alcohol Treatment Specialist graduate with Honours of Stratford Career Institute. Marcel has also received a certificate from Harvard for completing a course entitled The Opioid Crisis in America and a certificate from The University of Adelaide for completing a course entitled AddictionX: Managing Addiction: A Framework for Succesful Treatment.

Who Answers?

Calls to the website’s main number are answered by best treatment center LLC and Intervention, a call center that specializes in helping individuals and families find resources for substance use disorders.