Futurity

‘Behind-the-counter’ meds could safely treat opioid addiction

"I am definitely less concerned about people with opioid addiction misusing buprenorphine compared with misusing...oxycodone, fentanyl, or heroin."
pharmacist reaching for pills (buprenorphine credit)

Making opioid use disorder medication more accessible as a behind-the-counter drug could save lives, researchers say.

As of now, the Food and Drug Administration has approved only three medications to treat opioid use disorder: Methadone, naltrexone, and buprenorphine.

But the opioid-based medications require a prescription for use, which can make them difficult to obtain for people who urgently need them to avoid relapse.

In a new editorial in JAMA, Boston University addiction experts Payel Roy and Michael Stein argue for making one of these three medications, buprenorphine, more accessible to patients as a behind-the-counter drug that pharmacists monitor and administer.

Here, they discuss why they think behind-the-counter buprenorphine could make a difference for people suffering from opioid withdrawal who don’t want to relapse to using drugs like heroin or fentanyl or painkillers like oxycodone.

The post ‘Behind-the-counter’ meds could safely treat opioid addiction appeared first on Futurity.

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