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COVID-19 brought easier access to methadone but Ohio s ending it Expert is asking why?

COVID-19 brought easier access to methadone but Ohio s ending it. Expert is asking why? Terry DeMio, Cincinnati Enquirer © Enquirer photo A liquid dose of methadone is measured out at a Northern Kentucky clinic. Methadone is a medication used to stabilize patients with opioid use disorder and reduce their cravings. Go get your medication, bring it home and take it once daily. It’s what a lot of people in America do. But not with methadone for opioid use disorder. At least, not until the novel coronavirus pandemic emerged. In March 2020, federal officials relaxed methadone dosing restrictions, letting more people take home their methadone to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Ohio was among the first to come up with a plan.

Experts say methadone rules relaxed in pandemic should stay flexible

People Seeking Drug Treatment Weren t Ready for the Pandemic—Here s What It Taught Us About Relapse and Recovery

Image zoom Left: Credit: Caitlin-Marie Miner Ong Brown tried to get clean on her own multiple times to no avail, and so she checked into Foundations Recovery Center, a rehabilitation facility outside of Baltimore, in March 2020. But right around that time, as cases of COVID-19 began rising on the East Coast, states started issuing stay-at-home orders and shutdowns of all but essential businesses and organizations. Due to the isolation caused by the pandemic and the inability to socialize and connect to others at her recovery center Brown made it a little over 90 days in rehab before she relapsed again. The epidemic before the pandemic

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