Heroin use disorder is a form of opioid use disorder that typically requires both careful medical management during withdrawal and a structured plan for long-term recovery. This page focuses on what to compare when researching inpatient programs, given the specific safety considerations involved.
Why Medical Detox Is Especially Important Here
Because heroin is a short-acting opioid, withdrawal often begins sooner and can feel more intense than withdrawal from longer-acting opioids, which is why medically supervised detox is particularly important. Programs equipped to manage this directly, rather than requiring a separate facility for detox, can offer a smoother, safer transition into residential treatment.
Medication-Assisted Treatment Options
Medications used in medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder can be particularly relevant for heroin-specific situations, given the well-documented relapse and overdose risks involved. Not every program offers MAT, so it’s worth asking directly whether this is available and how it’s integrated with counseling and behavioral therapy. See our Medication Assisted Treatment in Inpatient Rehab guide for more detail.
What to Compare When Choosing a Program
- Whether on-site medical detox is available with appropriate monitoring
- Whether medication-assisted treatment options are offered and how they’re structured
- Whether the program addresses co-occurring mental health conditions, which are common alongside heroin use
- What relapse prevention and naloxone access planning looks like as part of discharge
Insurance and Cost Considerations
Heroin use disorder treatment is generally covered under standard substance use treatment benefits. Given the elevated safety stakes involved, it’s especially worth confirming that medical detox and any MAT medications are included in your coverage before choosing a specific program.
Understanding Overdose Risk After Treatment
Tolerance decreases meaningfully during a period of abstinence, which means the risk of a fatal overdose can actually increase if a return to use occurs shortly after treatment ends. This is one of the most important reasons a strong discharge and relapse prevention plan matters, and why many programs specifically discuss naloxone access with patients and family members before discharge.
This page is for general education only and does not provide medical advice or specific withdrawal guidance. Please speak with a medical professional about detox and treatment needs for your specific situation.
Official source: substance use treatment options