Suboxone: Take Back Your Life From Pain Medications Review


Suboxone is less than 10 percent as addictive as methadone and less than 30 percent as addictive as heroin. It is available from private practitioners, and can legally be prescribed, for 30 days at a time. In contrast, many methadone patients suffer long daily commutes, to undesirable neighborhoods, to obtain highly addictive methadone maintenance. They are often treated rudely and disrespectfully, at methadone clinics. Methadone was a factor in the deaths of 2,992 people in 2003, up from 790 in 1999, according to an analysis of death certificates conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics. Less than five percent of methadone patients are able to taper or withdraw from methadone’s “liquid handcuffs.” Calsyn D, Malcy J and Saxon A. Slow tapering from methadone maintenance in a program encouraging indefinite maintenance J Subst Abuse Treat. 2006 Mar;30(2):159-163.

Wider use of suboxone would reduce these alarming numbers. Physicians certified to administer buprenorphine have recently been allowed to treat 100 patients at a time, instead of 30. Buprenorphine and Suboxone treatment availabilty is rapidly expanding, while in some states, patients travel 3 hours each way to obtain methadone treatment. With competition from Suboxone certified physicians, methadone clinics hopefully will be forced to treat patients more considerately and offer more convenient hours of operation.

Suboxone is a readable and thorough discussion of how to use suboxone to treat pain and opiate dependency. I agree with Dr. Schaller that slower suboxone tapers are more effective than rapid tapers and decrease opiate relapse rates.

Suboxone explains that the adverse buprenorphine/benzodiazepine reactions reported in France, only occurred when intravenous administration occurred. Suboxone contains detailed lists of possible Cytochrome P450 3A4 detoxification interactions with other medications. Patients and Practitioners will both find these useful.

The discussion distinguishing genetically transmitted anxiety from an unwillingness to cope with normally occuring anxiety is especially needed, in a society which assumes all benzodiazepine patients are “pillheads” or addicts. Dr. Schaller observes that genetically anxious patients can maintain the same therapeutic daily dose for years, while true addicts, continue increasing daily maintainence doses, after the first year. Schaller distinguishes addiction from dependency – something the general public needs to comprehend. Considering Dr. Schallers impressive credentials and ability to detect neurotoxicity, nutritional and hormonal deficiencies and other less apparent anxiety causes, laymen and practitioners need to accept that some anxious patients will continue to require benzodiazepine medication, despite the most brilliant testing, diagnosis and treatment of other possible anxiety causes.

Read this book to learn how freedom from opiate dependency can be obtained. I agree with Dr. Schaller, that Suboxone is the best drug that almost no one has heard of. Suboxone will be available generically, in about two years and hopefully more widely used.

Steven Sponaugle
Research Director, Florida Detox

Suboxone: Take Back Your Life From Pain Medications Overview

Suboxone is a very special medication. It has the amazing ability to allow patients dependant on legal or illegal medications, to experience a fully painless detoxification. The mechanism of this medication is totally unique, and is successful when other treatments fail. Hardcover version available (ISBN 0-9772729-9-0). Suboxone does not require in-patient treatment. It can simply be called into a local pharmacy over the phone. In contrast to pain medications, Suboxone use is strongly supported by the DEA, FDA, the Justice Department and all major addiction societies. You can take Suboxone 30 days or 30 years. And if you have chronic pain, it may be strong enough to replace your current pain medication. In this one-of-a-kind book, Dr. Schaller offers patients and practitioners highly useful information in the practical use of Suboxone. Dr. Schaller has worked with pain medications and addicted individuals his entire career. He is the author of fifteen books, and has invented dozens of unique pain treatments. He holds a Diplomate from the American Society of Pain Management and is the inventor of an antidepressant with anti-arthritis properties. As long ago as the early 1980’s, he was working as the Director of Education at a residential drug rehabilitation facility. Since then, he has helped a wide-range of people from all walks of life, and has successfully treated individuals with both psychiatric and addiction problems. He has extensive experience with 12 Step programs and alternative medicine addiction treatments. His passion is healing the many physiological causes of addiction which are often missed. Dr. Schaller is currently researching the body’s own narcotic stimulators, which are usually low in individuals struggling to maintain sobriety. Dr. Schaller offers services to individuals throughout the United States.

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Customer Reviews

Definately not painless,atleast not for me. – John J. Neville – Utah
I’m about a month clean from opiates now and I think Suboxone is BS. First of all it has a 72 hour half-life, which makes it take 6 days to get out’ve your system at the minimum. I tapered down to literally one microscopic crumb of Suboxone a day and I’d feel fine the first couple days after quitting. Then I’d feel withdrawals that were so slow and drawn out I’d go nuts and seriously want to off myself. So what I did was get back onto a small dose of Oxycontin, which made me feel slightly human compared to Suboxone, then I went through the ‘Short n’ Hard’ withdrawals of Oxycontin. I’d take the Short n’ hard withdrawals any day over long, drawn out withdrawals that make you so depressed you wanna off yourself. But to each there own, I guess things work differently for every person.

Get off addicting drugs - – Jane Smith – Drexel Hill, PA
For anyone who is on heavy duty painkillers, street drugs, or just plain “addicted” and needs help, this book explains in easy to read language for any lay person why and how it works. This may be the one “medicine” that can help with pain that is not addictive, has minimal side effects, can be taken long term and the government is HAPPY for doctor’s to prescribe. However, education is key or it doesn’t work as well. I highly recommend this book to anyone even thinking of trying it, or who really needs to get off street drugs or pain meds. Dr. Schaller made it easy for even the most non scientific mind to be able to understand how it works. Great job.

Excellent Professional Data – Irv K – Naples, Florida
Another great and readable book by Dr. Schaller. This author makes reading both interesting and educational. Lookiing forward to more publications by this learned medical author.
*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jan 22, 2010 21:10:40

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