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The Intake Appointment Final Part 3

You did the business in Part 1. Saw the Addiction Counselor in Part 2. Now the last part is seeing the nurse. It is usually the Nurse Manager, Charge RN or seasoned staff RN who interviews you in this last stretch of the Intake appointment. All this is in preparation to see the doctor for your first medication dose. If you have any prescription medications that ARE PRESCRIBED TO YOU then bring them in for the nurse to log into your chart. Don't bring old bottles from last year and don't dump the new prescription pills into an old prescription bottle to condense it. The nurse needs current prescriptions in the current bottles, if possible. Please don't try to deceive the nurse and bring only some of your medications. Believe me, a nurse just knows! If you doctor shopped, say so. A history of doctor shopping or fraudulent prescription writing will NOT get you rejected from being admitted into the program. This is why you are here, right? Honesty is needed. By the way, programs do NOT report you to the police for such crimes. Consider it in the past. Just don't continue such behavior since it is counterproductive to your recovery and sets a bad example to other patients who are doing their best. Criminal behavior might get you kicked out if you choose to continue and get arrested. It is all about choices. Back to the nurse: the nurse will take a medical history such as diseases, injuries and surgeries. Please be sure to report any heart or respiratory issues, concerns or problems. Detox medications are serious business and the doctor needs to know of any heart or lung problems before prescribing your suboxone or methadone. It is his doctor's license on the line and he deserves to be informed. Methadone in combination with certain medical conditions and medications needs to be given with caution. Methadone and suboxone can affect your breathing and oxygen level in your blood, especially when combined with other prescription medications and medical conditions. If you have a medical history and are followed by a specialist then you will be asked to sign a "release" for that specialist. The same goes for your Primary Medical Doctor, your Psychiatrist and your Pharmacy. Why? It is coordination of medical care. Methadone and suboxone are actual prescriptions and all prescribing doctors need to know what the other doctors are prescribing, for medical safety. You might think it is overboard until something happens, some interaction of medications and medical conditions that go awry, and harms the patient in some way, including death. Most treatment centers also ask you to sign a form saying that you will tell any provider you are on methadone and you agree to use only one pharmacy. That is standard practice. After the medical history the nurse will ask about your mental health history, including asking if  you are suicidal or homicidal. Again, be honest. They are just getting the details to better serve you in your recovery process. Next step is actually seeing the doctor for admission into the recovery program of an outpatient clinic. It could be the same day or most likely it will be a few days later at the next available appointment. Again, do not come in impaired, sedated, drunk or high on anything in any way. **you must be in withdrawal when you see the doctor for admission. Enough withdrawal to make it safe to give you a low dose of methadone (or total withdrawal for suboxone). If it is methadone treatment then be in mild to moderate withdrawals and do not use after 8 pm the night before! Seriously, you might not be medicated if you use too late in the evening the night before. If it is suboxone treatement then you have to be in total withdrawals and not have any opiate of any kind for 2+ days. Sounds terrible, I know, but it is the nature of suboxone. If you do not follow the instructions that the clinic tells you, then you will be putting yourself in the worse withdrawals ever on admission day when you take your first dose of suboxone. You will do it to yourself! It is all about choices.

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