How care is organized
How is telehealth Suboxone treatment organized?
Telehealth treatment for opioid use disorder is organized in different ways.
Some providers use program-based models, where care may include counseling, medication management, and visits with more than one clinician.
Others organize care around an ongoing relationship with a physician, where visits are clinical encounters and care is managed over time by the same doctor.
Some models combine elements of both.
Both approaches are used in practice, and Suboxone treatment (buprenorphine treatment) is evidence-based across care settings, including telehealth.
What to consider
What should you look for in a telehealth Suboxone provider?
Who will you actually see for ongoing care?
How is counseling incorporated, and is it required?
How quickly can treatment begin?
Will you see the same provider at each visit?
How are prescriptions and adjustments managed?
Finding the right fit
Which type of Suboxone treatment is right for you?
Different approaches work for different patients.
Some patients want multiple services and providers involved in care. Others want a direct clinical relationship with one physician.
What matters is how care fits your situation and how decisions are made over time.
At MyStreetHealth
At MyStreetHealth — what is different?
Care is physician-led and continuous.
Physician-led Suboxone treatment is organized around direct medical oversight and continuity. You meet with the same physician each time, so decisions are guided by an understanding of your care history and how you are responding over time.
This allows for precision and personalization in how care is adjusted from one visit to the next.
Continuity matters in medicine. Research on long-term doctor–patient relationships has linked continuity with better outcomes and more consistent care over time.