Suboxone Treatment

Online Suboxone care to reduce cravings and withdrawal, with private video visits and ongoing medical support.

What Suboxone does

Suboxone is an FDA-approved medication for opioid use disorder. It contains buprenorphine and naloxone. Buprenorphine helps reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings. Naloxone helps discourage misuse if injected. When taken as prescribed, most people feel stable, not sedated or high.

Unlike methadone, Suboxone can often be prescribed by a licensed provider and filled at a regular pharmacy without daily clinic visits.

Suboxone is not “trading one addiction for another.” It’s a medical treatment that helps steady your day so you can focus on life without opioids.

 

Who is this treatment for

Suboxone treatment may be right for you if you:

  • Use heroin, fentanyl, or prescription painkillers
  • Want to stop but worry about withdrawal
  • Have tried to quit but slipped back to using
  • Need care that fits around work or family
  • Prefer privacy and reminders at home

You don’t need to be in crisis to start. Many people begin because they are tired of the cycle and want something steadier.

 

How our program works

Care here is clear, straightforward, and paced for real life. You move from assessment to active treatment in clear, manageable steps:

Step 1: Quick Online Intake

Complete a brief questionnaire about your use, health history, and goals. This helps confirm if Suboxone is right for you.

Step 2: Schedule Your Visit

Pick a time that works for you. We offer same-day and next-day appointments in most cases.

Step 3: Meet Your Provider

Have a private video chat with a licensed psychiatric provider. You talk through your situation, ask questions, and decide next steps together.

Step 4: Start Treatment

If Suboxone is appropriate, your prescription is sent to your pharmacy. You begin care and schedule follow-ups with the same provider.

Step 5: Ongoing Check-Ins

Follow-up visits focus on how you are actually feeling. Doses can change, plans can shift, and care continues at your pace.

 

Insurance and cost

We verify benefits before your first visit and inform you of any out-of-pocket costs.

  • Washington: Most commercial plans. Medicaid coverage may be limited; contact us for the current status. Private pay is available.
  • Nevada: Most commercial plans. Medicaid and Medicare accepted. Private pay is available.
  • New Mexico: Most commercial plans. Medicaid and Medicare accepted. Private pay is available.
  • California: Private pay only. We do not bill insurance in California.

Frequently asked questions

We're here to answer all your questions

Clear answers about care, first steps, and what to expect. Simple, honest guidance from the start.

Yes. Federal and state rules allow qualified providers to prescribe Suboxone via telehealth. You’ll have a video visit with a licensed provider who will evaluate your situation and prescribe if appropriate.

Treatment begins after a video visit with a licensed provider. Most people stop short-acting opioids 12 to 24 hours beforehand. Long-acting opioids, such as methadone, may require 36 hours or more.

 

When mild to moderate withdrawal is present, your provider guides the first dose and next steps. We check in the same day to monitor how you feel and adjust safely.

When taken as prescribed, most people feel stable rather than high. Suboxone is a medical treatment and does not create the same cycle of intoxication as street opioids.

 

Physical dependence can occur, but this is expected and can be managed safely with medical guidance and tapering when appropriate.

Common side effects may include headache, nausea, constipation, sweating, or sleep changes. These often improve within the first few days.

 

Contact your provider right away if symptoms are severe, you feel very sedated, or you have trouble breathing.

Prescriptions are sent to your local pharmacy. Early visits are usually every one to two weeks. As you stabilize, visits often move to monthly. Your provider adjusts the plan based on how you are feeling and your recovery goals.

Yes. Your treatment information is protected by HIPAA and by federal law (42 CFR Part 2), which provides additional privacy protections for substance use treatment records.