Although Suboxone isn’t for everyone, there are a number of clear benefits for those for whom it works.
Suboxone is similar to methadone in some ways. Use of methadone for addiction was an early attempt by the medical field to provide medication assisted treatment and it, too, saved many lives. However, some people in recovery soon found that although they were able to break free from their addiction to heroin or other opioids, they soon found that instead they became addicted to methadone.
Suboxone is much less habit-forming than methadone. It was created with a lower dependency risk in mind, because Suboxone was created specifically to help people fight addiction.
Further, people who received methadone treatment had to visit a clinic to receive it. Suboxone, on the other hand, is a prescription that patients can self-administer at home. Due to the naloxone, opioid-receptor blocking component, this is safe; it is difficult to abuse Suboxone, and it’s also difficult to overdose on Suboxone alone.