What this looks like in practice
What we do and what we don't.
These aren't just policies — they're commitments we make to every patient from day one.
We do
Individualize dose decisions for each patient — there is no one-size-fits-all approach
Increase accountability measures without stopping medication if treatment is disrupted
Offer and explain the rationale for psychosocial supports
Continue medication management for as long as it is clinically appropriate
Meet you where you are — via telehealth, from wherever you are
We don't
Mandate counseling as a condition of continued medication
Set arbitrary time limits on treatment
Require program compliance before prescribing
Push rapid taper protocols aimed at stopping medication
Discharge a patient for a positive drug test result
(888) 835-9995 · Call or text to get started
Call or textWhat recovery means here
Recovery is self-directed, not program-directed.
Once stable on medication, many patients choose to re-engage in normal life — work, family, relationships — rather than invest hours each week in structured programming. That is a valid and meaningful choice. Recovery looks different for everyone.
How we talk about this
Language reflects what we believe.
Opioid use disorder is a neurobiological condition — one that can be treated and managed. It is not a moral failing, a character flaw, or a lack of willpower.
Words matter in this space. We use language that reflects the science — and we expect that of everyone in our practice. You will not be judged here.
Why telehealth
Care that comes to you.
Telehealth removes barriers — no travel, no waiting rooms, care from wherever you are.
No transportation needed
Telehealth from wherever you are — home, work, anywhere private.
No time off work
Visits fit around your schedule, not the other way around.
No waiting rooms
Private, discreet care without public clinic environments.
Consistent care
Same physician every visit. Fewer barriers means fewer gaps in treatment.