Getting On Methadone, Suboxone, Subutex or Buprenorphine

 

Opioid dependence treatment (ODT – or – the Program), is one of the only options for people who are dependent on heroin or other opioid drugs. There are ODT programs in every state and territory. Each area and each service provides the Program in different ways. Deciding to start ODT can be a hard decision.

 

Finding a good prescriber and pharmacy and staying on the Program can also be difficult. You can’t always get access to all the possible options available in other states or services.

 

This information is written by people who have personal experience of the Program. We can’t tell you if the Program is right for you. We also can’t choose which medication you should use. But, we can give you more information to help you prepare.

 

Understanding how it works can help you make informed decisions that better suit you. The information we provide here aims to help you:

  • Decide if you’re ready for these medications.
  • Decide which medication to choose.
  • Know how to begin the program.
  • know where to find more information and support if needed.

 

You are the only person who can decide what is right for you. This information is to support you in starting this journey if it’s the path you choose.

First, the Language in this Guide 

 

We are using some language in this information that a lot of people don’t know. There are many reasons we are using these words and terms. For example:

  • Some words are inclusive. This means they include all people affected by something. They make sure everyone is included in the terms we use. 
  • Some of them are accurate. We try to use the right words. We avoid using words that do not describe what we mean. 
  • Some of them are official. When we use official terms, it is usually because there are many different ways to describe something. All the different ways are hard to understand and recognise.

The terms that will be most helpful to understand for this information are:

Opioids plus Created with Sketch.

Opioids describe all the drugs in the opioid family, meaning drugs that stimulate or excite the parts of our brains that feel these substances.  

  • The word includes drugs that come from the opium poppy, and the ones that are created from chemicals in labs.  
  • Opioid drugs include: heroin, methadone, oxycodone, fentanyl, morphine and nitazines. 

Opioid dependence plus Created with Sketch.

This is a term we use to refer to a dependence on opioid drugs.  

  • The word dependence is a medical or clinical term, but is thought to be less stigmatising than words like addiction.

People with an opioid dependence will have experienced some of these: 

  • Tolerance, meaning they need more opioids to feel the same effects.  
  • Withdrawal if they stop using opioids. 
  • Continued use of opioids even if they have problems that come from using them, or want to try to stop or reduce their use of opioids.  

Opioid dependence treatment (ODT) plus Created with Sketch.

This term is about the medications that are used to treat opioid dependence.

  • The medications are usually used long term and are sometimes known as maintenance, substitution, replacement or pharmacotherapy.  
  • the main role of these medications is to give people a chance to “stabilise” parts of their lives by using a cheaper, legal drug that will allow the person to avoid the effects of withdrawal.  
  • The medications used in ODT in Australia are – methadone and buprenorphine.  
  • There are a few different types and formulations of both methadone and buprenorphine. There is more information about the different medications in other sections.  

Opioid dependence treatment program (ODTP) plus Created with Sketch.

This term is about all the regulations and practices that make up how we are prescribed and dosed the ODT medications.

  • There are different names and terms that describe the ODTP.  
  • Most of the names and terms aren’t used by anyone who is on the medications.  
  • In this guide, we have tried to use the same terms as much as possible, and will refer to the Opioid dependence treatment program as ODTP or we call it ‘The Program’.  

Types of Medications used for Opioid Dependence Treatment

Type Administration method Dosing frequency Brand names 
Methadone Liquid – Taken as a drinkDaily Methadone Syrup® 
Biodone Forte Solution® 
Buprenorphine Sublingual – A tablet that dissolves under the tongueOnce every 1 to 3 days Subutex® 
Buprenorphine-naloxone Sublingual – A film that dissolves under the tongueOnce every 1 to 3 days Suboxone® 
Long-acting injectable buprenorphine (LAIB) A substance injected under the skinWeekly or monthly Buvidal® 
Sublocade® 

Why do people go on opioid dependence treatment?

 

There are as many reasons for going on ODTP as there are for using drugs in the first place. Some people start thinking about ODTP when they run out of money. Other people try it because people they love want them to stop using. Some people just want a break from heroin and other opiates, and others want something to keep them well on the days they aren’t going to use other drugs. The list goes on.

ODTP is basically a way of replacing the drugs a person is dependent on with another opioid that is legally prescribed for this purpose. Most often, the drug that is being “replaced” is heroin, but it can be other drugs like oxycodone, morphine and other illicit opiates. They work by keeping you from feeling the worst effects of opioid withdrawal. There are also other reasons they can make life a bit easier.

The medications prescribed on The Program are:

  • Legal. 
  • Cheaper than most illicit drugs.  
  • Able to hold you for longer periods of time.  
  • Pharmaceutical and safer than illicit opiates. 

ODT medications are not, the same as illicit drugs. There are differences between them and the drugs people are often dependent on, and there are also differences between the ODT medications.  

Many people try to stop using on their own, without other medications, and find it extremely physically and mentally painful and extremely difficult to maintain over long periods of time.

A lot of people who have a heroin or other opioid dependence try different ways of controlling, reducing or stopping their use of drugs. The Program is one of the only options available to people who are dependent on opiates like heroin. It has a lot of positives for most of us, but there are also some negatives.

How does it work? – Getting on ‘The Program’

 

To be on ODTP, you need a prescribing doctor or nurse practitioner and a place you can get the medication. There are two main ways to do this.

Find a prescriber and a place where you can get dosed. 

  • This may be a public or private ODTP clinic that has both the prescriber and dosing in the one place, or they may be separate community or private practices and community pharmacies.
  • Not all community doctors or pharmacies provide ODT medications.
  • Clinics, prescribers and pharmacies may be full and unable to take new patients, or may have another reason you can’t be provided the service at that time.
  • There are services in each state and territory that will try to help you find a clinic, prescriber and/or pharmacy that will take you as a patient.

Once you have a prescriber and a pharmacy willing to see you for this program, you will need to:

Have your first appointment with the prescriber.  

Get registered in your state or territory as being on ODTP 

  • Your prescriber fills out a form with your information, and information about the medication, the dose and where you will be dosed.
  • The form is sent to the state or territory Department of Health who give the doctor permission, that is, a licence, to prescribe the medication to you.
  • Getting the permission can take a couple of hours, and if your first appointment with the prescriber is in the afternoon or evening, you probably won’t be able to get your first dose until the following day.

When the prescriber has been given permission to prescribe the medication to you, the script is sent or taken to the place where you will get dosed, and you can start getting your ODT medications.

If you are at a clinic where both prescribing and dosing is provided, the process will probably be pretty easy and if you’re lucky, you will be told what to expect.

Opioid Dependence Treatment Services

 

Every state and territory in Australia has a different way of providing opioid dependence treatment, but they fit into a few different types of services.

Public clinics

  • Fully funded by government and often co-located at a hospital or other specialty health service.
  • Prescribers and dosing are usually at the same clinic.

Private clinics

  • Mainly funded with money from Medicare and service users paying for the service.
  • Prescribers and dosing are usually at the same place.
  • Most are now similar to community prescribers and dosing services except that their only service is ODTP, and the prescribers and dosers are usually located at the same clinic.

Community prescribers and dosing pharmacies

  • Community prescribers can be addiction medicine specialists, who are usually based at hospitals, GPs who work in private practice or community health services, or nurse practitioners who often work at community health services and
  • Dosing pharmacies are community pharmacies, which can also mean the pharmacies located in hospitals.

Before you start, it is important to know you have both a prescriber and dosing point that will take you:

  • That means, talking to someone who can help you find one of the clinics, or a prescriber and pharmacy who have room for a new patient and are willing to take you on.
  • Only some clinics, GPs and nurse practitioners prescribe ODT medications.
  • Only some pharmacies provide ODT dosing.
  • Any kind of private clinic, community clinic, hospital, prescriber or pharmacy who provide the Program have a right to refuse to provide the service to anyone they choose, regardless of that person’s need.

Frequently Asked Questions – Opioid Dependence Treatment Program (ODTP)

About the opioid dependence treatment program (ODTP)

What does it cost to access Methadone, Subutex, Suboxone or Buprenorphine? plus Created with Sketch.

Most people who are picking up methadone, Subutex or Suboxone, or getting long-acting injectable buprenorphine (LAIB), will pay a standard, one-off fee every 28 days.  

For most people, the cost every 28 days will be:   

  • $7.30 for concession or pension card holders
  • $30 for those without a concession card
  • This is called a PBS co-payment and is the same as for other medications on the PBS.

If you are getting two different strengths of Subutex or Suboxone, both the 8mg and 2mg strength, will be charged for both. This means:

  • You will be charged a 28-day fee for the 8mg and a 28-day fee for the 2mg strength
  • $14.60 for concession or pension card holders
  • $60 for those without a concession card.

If you are on a strength of Subutex or Suboxone that requires paying the double medication cost, it is worth knowing:

  • This requirement is because of the PBS system requirements with your pharmacist having to open two different boxes of medication.
  • These costs will all contribute to your PBS Safety Net tally, so that you are likely to reach the Safety Net earlier.

No extra charges for ‘consultations’, ‘administration’, ‘dosing’ or ‘dispensing’ or ‘new bottles’ can be charged at community pharmacies

Am I eligible? plus Created with Sketch.

You are eligible if you are on methadone, Suboxone, Subutex or buprenorphine injections and you also:  

  • Access your medications at a community or hospital pharmacy.  
  • Have a Medicare card or the ability to get one.  
  • Sign the privacy agreement allowing the pharmacy to register you in the PBS program:  
    • The privacy agreement gives your pharmacist permission to share your details with the PBS regulators.   
    • It has to be signed for you to be eligible for the PBS subsidy.  

What is the PBS safety net? plus Created with Sketch.

  • The PBS co-payment program is an Australian government program that aims to make many medications affordable by:
    • setting a maximum amount of money a person has to pay for PBS listed medications each year
    • paying the rest of the cost of the medication to the pharmacist or supplier.

 

  • The PBS safety net is a maximum amount of money or maximum number of PBS registered medication scripts you must pay for per year.

 

  • The yearly maximum you can pay for PBS medications is:
    • $262.80 or about 36 scripts for people who have a concession card
    • $1,563.50 or about 50 scripts for people who don’t have a concession card.

 

  • Once you have paid the maximum amount of money that you are required to pay, your medication costs will be reduced to:
    • No money for people who have a concession card
    • Up to $7.30 every 28 days for people who don’t have a concession card.

 

  • The year starts on 1 January and ends on 31 December, not when you first pay for a medication on the PBS.

 

  • Each person has to be registered in the PBS registry by a GP or registered health care practitioner and you also need to register using the Safety Net prescription form and the Safety Net Card found here: https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/pb240.

 

  • Every PBS medication you receive counts towards the PBS safety net, even if you are paying for two different dosages of Suboxone or Subutex, or you are receiving completely different medications that are funded through PBS co-payments.

 

  • If you access all your PBS medications at the same pharmacy, the pharmacy will need your Safety Net prescription form and Safety Net card the first time you fill a script at that pharmacy.

 

  •  If you go to multiple pharmacies to get your PBS medications, you will need to keep track of your medication costs by taking the form and card to each pharmacy and monitoring the costs over the year:
    • To keep track of your PBS spending, you need the Safety Net prescription form and a Safety Net card.
  • You can combine costs within your family and reach the safety net more quickly. Family can be:
    • Married or defacto partners
    • Dependent children who are younger than 16
    • Dependent children who are under 25 and who attend school, college or university full-time

More information including links to the list of PBS medications can be found here: https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/how-to-reach-threshold-sooner-family?context=22016d 

Can Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People use the Closing The Gap Program?   plus Created with Sketch.

Yes, Methadone, Subutex, Suboxone or buprenorphine injections are included in the Closing the Gap medications.

More information about the Closing The Gap PBS co-payment program can be found here: https://www.pbs.gov.au/info/publication/factsheets/closing-the-gap-pbs-co-payment-measure 

Is it different if I get the Buprenorphine Injection? plus Created with Sketch.

At Pharmacies 

If you have been receiving the injectable form of buprenorphine (Sublocade/Buvidal) at a pharmacy, with a script from your GP, you will be charged the same 28-day fee as people who are getting methadone, Subutex or Suboxone.  

  • That means, if you have a concession card you will pay $7.30 every 28 days, and without a concession card, you will pay $30 every 28 days.  
  • In some cases, particularly in the first month of getting the buprenorphine injection, you may need the injection more often than every 28 days.  
  • You will have to pay the 28-day concession or non-concession price for each new script.  
  • If you reach the PBS safety net threshold, you receive the medication for free (concession card holders) or for $7.30 (non-concession cardholders).  

 

How will my scripts work? plus Created with Sketch.

  • The PBS system regulates the number of scripts and the amount of medication a GP can normally prescribe.  
  • Under the PBS, there is a maximum number of scripts, the amount of time the scripts can be for, as well as a maximum dosage. For opioid treatment medications, the maximum is:  
    • Three 28-day scripts of any of the medications.  
    • A maximum dose of 150mg per day for methadone.  
    • A maximum dose of 32mg for buprenorphine, Subutex or Suboxone.  
  • Your GP will need to provide you with a PBS streamlined authorised script with specific information about your doses written on the script:  
    • Your GP should know how to do this.  
    • Information for GPs about how to write prescriptions in the new system is available on the PBS website: Information for Prescribers.  

What if I am on a high dose or have extra scripts? plus Created with Sketch.

  • The PBS has guidelines about how medications are prescribed, mainly things like how high a dose a person can receive of each medication.  
    • For methadone, the higher limit is 150mg per day  
    • For Suboxone and Subutex, the higher limit is 32mg per day.   
  • If your script fits within these ‘normal’ limits, your GP can easily write it with the addition of an ‘Authority’ identification:  
    • This is known as a streamlined  ‘Authority’ script and GPs do this with all PBS medications.   
  • If your script doesn’t fit within these limits, for example, you are on a higher dose or you are starting on the program and need to see your GP twice or more often for those on the 1 weekly buprenorphine injections, there are some differences including:  
    • Your GP may have to get a ‘PBS Authority’ script rather than a normal ‘streamlined’ Authority script by calling or contacting the committee to get permission.  
    • You may have to pay for more than 1 script in the 28-day time period.  
    • Anyone who has to pay for more than 1 script should not be required to do that on a regular basis without there being an extremely good reason.   

What can you do if you have problems with your community / hospital pharmacy or pharmacist? plus Created with Sketch.

  • Try to remain calm and polite or walk away and ask for support from someone who can negotiate on your behalf.  
  • This is especially important if you feel like you have had problems discussing issues with your pharmacist in the past.  

Most states and territories in Australia have services and support to help you:  

  • Learn about and change to the new system  
  • Advocate or report issues with your GP or pharmacy.   

What do I need to know about attending private clinics and non-PBS dosing sites? plus Created with Sketch.

Private ODT clinics are mainly available in NSW and Queensland. The main differences between them and public clinics, community pharmacies and hospital pharmacies are:

  • These are privately owned and operated and don’t receive government funding for people in who need free or enhanced access to opioid treatment.  
  • They usually have GPs, pharmacists and other staff on site and no access to medications other than opioid treatment medications.  
  • The money that funds their services comes from the people accessing opioid treatment medications; for example, client-paid dosing and administration fees, Medicare rebates from GP appointments GP and sometimes additional tests clients undertake that also incur Medicare rebates such as hepatitis testing and urine drug screen tests.  
  • Private clinics are not community pharmacies and are not eligible for funding through the PBS. 

What do I need to know about attending public clinics? plus Created with Sketch.

Public clinics are available in every state and territory of Australia except Victoria.  

  • Public clinics usually provide methadone, Subutex, Suboxone and buprenorphine free of charge.  
  • Most public clinics have a limited number of places available and prioritise who can attend them, so that you have to meet criteria to attend, such as being:  
    • New to the program.  
    • Pregnant.  
    • Recently released from prison.  
    • Not allowed to access other dosing points.  
    • In some other way difficult to place in a community pharmacy.  
  • Many of these public clinics are restrictive in other ways so that they may:  
    • Have limited opening hours.  
    • Not allow takeaway doses.  

How is dosing handled in prisons and other correctional settings? plus Created with Sketch.

  • Each state and territory has regulations relating to opioid treatment for people who are in prison.    
  • This means, if the prison or correctional centre allows it, opioid treatment medications are provided to people following the regulations of that state or territory.   

Most states and territories in Australia have services and support that can help you

State or TerritoryDrug User OrganisationState Regulators
Australian Capital TerritoryCanberra Alliance for Harm Minimisation and Advocacy (CAHMA): (02) 6253 3643Health Services Commissioner (02) 6205 2222
New South WalesNSW Users and AIDS Association (NUAA): (free call) 1800 644 413Health Care Complaints Commission (free call) 1800 043 159
Northern TerritoryNorthern Territory AIDS and Hepatitis Council (NTAHC): (08) 8944 7777Health and Community Services Complaints Commission (free call) 1800 004 474
QueenslandQuIVAA’s Queensland Pharmacotherapy Advice & Mediation Service (QPAMS): (free call) 1800 175 889Office of the Health Ombudsman 133 646
South AustraliaHepatitis SA Clean Needle Program Peer Projects: (free call) 1800 437 222 or (08) 83628443Health and Community Services Complaints Commissioner (free call) 1800 232 007 or (08) 71179313
TasmaniaHealth Complaints Commissioner (free call) 1800 001 170
VictoriaHarm Reduction Victoria (HRVic)/Pharmacotherapy Advocacy Mediation Service (PAMS): 1800 443 844Health Complaints Commissioner 1300 582 113
Western AustraliaPeer Based Harm Reduction Western Australian (PBHRWA): (08) 9325 8387 Community Program for Opioid Pharmacotherapy (CPOP): (08) 9219 1907Health and Disability Services Complaints Office (free call) 1800 813 583 or (08) 6551 7600

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