MyStreetHealth provides telehealth care for opioid use disorder — and, off-label and on a case-by-case basis, for kratom or concentrated 7-OH dependence — for patients across North Carolina. Visits are with a licensed physician. Same-day visits often available. MyStreetHealth is LegitScript verified, self-pay, and physician-led; prescriptions are sent to licensed pharmacies when treatment is clinically appropriate.
Same-day visits often available, subject to appointment availability and clinical appropriateness. Schedule a private telehealth visit from anywhere in North Carolina.
Book onlineWhy North Carolina needs better access
North Carolina has had a significant opioid and fentanyl overdose burden, including in some rural and western counties. Even with Medicaid expansion and major academic medical systems, in-person buprenorphine access can remain uneven in parts of the state.
MyStreetHealth is licensed in North Carolina and provides care by telehealth statewide, subject to clinical appropriateness and applicable law.
What MyStreetHealth provides in North Carolina
The care model:
- Real medical visits with a licensed physician
- Self-pay (insurance not required); HSA/FSA accepted
- Same-day visits often available, subject to appointment availability and clinical appropriateness
- Prescription sent to your local North Carolina pharmacy when clinically appropriate
- Buprenorphine for opioid use disorder; buprenorphine has been used off-label in selected patients with kratom or 7-OH dependence based on published case reports and case series — the decision is individualized by a clinician
Kratom & 7-OH
North Carolina kratom and 7-OH withdrawal treatment.
MyStreetHealth provides telehealth care for kratom withdrawal, kratom dependence, kratom use disorder, and concentrated 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) withdrawal and dependence for North Carolina patients. If you are looking for help getting off kratom or 7-OH and want a real clinical plan, we treat patients across North Carolina by online visits. Same physician every visit. No insurance required.
What North Carolina kratom and 7-OH treatment may include
Depending on what you are using (kratom leaf, kratom extracts, kratom capsules, or concentrated 7-OH tablets, shots, gummies, or drink mixes), how much, how often, how long, and your medical history, a North Carolina kratom withdrawal treatment plan may include a structured kratom taper, supportive care during withdrawal symptoms, or buprenorphine (Suboxone) when medication treatment is clinically appropriate. Buprenorphine has been reported in published case reports and case series as a treatment option for kratom and 7-OH withdrawal in selected patients; the decision is individualized by a clinician. Concentrated 7-OH products often require a different treatment approach than natural kratom leaf because the withdrawal may be more opioid-like.
Help getting off kratom or 7-OH in North Carolina
The right approach depends on the product, the dose, your history, and what else is going on. A telehealth visit lets us match the plan to your situation — whether that means a gradual kratom taper, supportive care during withdrawal, help managing 7-OH withdrawal, or medication treatment when clinically appropriate. We do not push every patient toward the same answer.
Common questions North Carolina patients ask
- How to quit kratom — see the kratom withdrawal and tapering guide.
- How to get off 7-OH — 7-OH withdrawal: symptoms, timeline, and treatment.
- Does Suboxone block kratom? — the clinical answer.
- Does Suboxone block 7-OH? — timing, blocking, and precipitated withdrawal.
- How long does kratom stay in your system? — detection windows by test type.
- Kratom side effects and liver concerns — side effects · kratom and the liver.
- Can you overdose on kratom? — what the case literature shows.
Major North Carolina metros we serve
- Charlotte / Mecklenburg County
- Raleigh / Wake County
- Greensboro / Guilford County
- Winston-Salem / Forsyth County
- Durham / Durham County
- Fayetteville
- Cary
- Wilmington
- High Point
- Asheville (Western NC mountains)
- Greenville (ECU region)
- Hickory
The model is statewide telehealth: patients physically located in North Carolina at the time of the visit may be evaluated by telehealth, subject to clinical appropriateness, pharmacy access, and applicable law.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get Suboxone in western NC (Asheville area)?
Yes. MyStreetHealth is licensed in North Carolina and conducts a real telehealth medical visit. If Suboxone is clinically appropriate, the prescription is often sent electronically to your local NC pharmacy the same day, subject to clinical and pharmacy factors. Telehealth Schedule III prescribing is supported under current DEA/HHS flexibilities when federal and state requirements are met.
Will you serve the Outer Banks and rural eastern NC?
Yes. The model is statewide telehealth — including the Sandhills, eastern coastal plain, Outer Banks, and Western NC mountains. If you are physically located in North Carolina during the visit and telehealth is clinically appropriate, MyStreetHealth may be able to evaluate you by video visit.
How will pricing work in NC?
MyStreetHealth charges a flat self-pay fee for the first visit; ongoing visit fees depend on your plan. Insurance is not required for the visit. Generic buprenorphine/naloxone is commonly available at local NC pharmacies and is often less expensive than brand-name Suboxone.