Medical treatment of heroin addiction with methadone and other pharmacotherapies has important benefits for individuals and
society. However, regulatory policies have separated this treatment from the medical care system, limiting access to care
and contributing to the social stigma of even effective addiction pharmacotherapy. Increasing problems caused by heroin addiction
have added urgency to the search for policies and programs that improve the access to and quality of opiate addiction treatment.
Recent initiatives aiming to reintegrate methadone maintenance and other addiction pharmacotherapies into medical practice
may promote both expanded treatment capacity and increased physician expertise in addiction medicine. These initiatives include
changes in federal oversight of the opiate addiction treatment system, the approval of physician office-based methadone maintenance
programs for stabilized patients, and federal legislation that could enable physicians to treat opiate addiction with new
medications in regular medical practice.
Key Words methadone - heroin addiction
This work was assisted by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Substance Abuse Policy Research Program.