The Marshall Project

Treatment for Opioid Addiction, With No Strings Attached

Some doctors are abandoning the long-held belief that treating addiction is impossible without talk therapy.

By the time Ron Clark walked into Dr. Erin Zerbo’s Newark, New Jersey, addiction clinic, he had already been kicked out of two other treatment programs.

One prescribed methadone, the other buprenorphine. The meds are intended to quiet the compulsive cravings and stave off the withdrawal symptoms that keep people in the grips of opioid addiction. For Clark, they worked. But there were so many mandatory appointments: nurses, therapists, groups. Clark, 60, worked as a laborer, and when jobs came up, he would miss his appointments and the clinics refused to give him refills, he said. Without his meds, he returned to using heroin.

Traditional treatment programs tie medications to a long list of requirements: support groups, individual counseling, negative drug screens. In clinics like Zerbo’s—advocates call them “low-threshold”—those

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Marshall Project

The Marshall Project5 min readAmerican Government
Biden Will Try to Unmake Trump's Immigration Agenda. It Won't Be Easy
In one beating, the woman from El Salvador told the immigration judge, her boyfriend’s punches disfigured her jaw and knocked out two front teeth. After raping her, he forced her to have his name tattooed in jagged letters on her back, boasting that
The Marshall Project6 min readCrime & Violence
Think Private Prison Companies Are Going Away Under Biden? They Have Other Plans
CoreCivic and GEO Group have been shifting away from prisons toward other government contracts, like office space and immigration detention.
The Marshall Project5 min readCrime & Violence
After Years Behind Bars, These Folks Are #FreeToVote
This United States is still a long way from granting incarcerated people the right to vote, and polls show the idea is unpopular. But the thinking on who deserves these rights is starting to change. Earlier this year, the District of Columbia grante

Related Books & Audiobooks