Addiction, Emergency Care / 20.02.2026

[caption id="attachment_72523" align="aligncenter" width="500"]Medication-Assisted Treatment in Emergency Departments Freepix[/caption]

The Moment That Matters Most

Emergency departments see addiction up close. Patients arrive after overdoses. Some are scared. Some are angry. Some want help but do not know where to start. This moment is short. It may be the only time a patient is open to change. In the United States, opioid overdoses caused more than 80,000 deaths in 2023. Many of those people had contact with an emergency department in the months before they died. That makes the ER the most important starting line for recovery. Medication-Assisted Treatment, or MAT, works. It uses medicine like buprenorphine or methadone to reduce cravings and withdrawal. When started early, it lowers overdose risk and keeps patients in care. The key word is early. “After an overdose reversal, I’ve seen patients calm down within minutes,” says Gianluca Cerri MD, an emergency physician with decades of experience. “If you wait until discharge paperwork, you’ve already missed the window.”
Addiction, addiction-treatment, Author Interviews / 02.12.2025

[caption id="attachment_71636" align="aligncenter" width="500"]mat-addiction-treatment Pexels[/caption] MAT combines FDA-approved medications with counseling, behavioral therapy, and support services to treat substance use disorders (especially opioid and alcohol use disorders). The goal is to reduce cravings, ease withdrawal, prevent relapse, and help people build stability in recovery. In Rhode Island, MAT is offered at specialized clinics, community treatment centers, and designated opioid-treatment programs (OTPs), including those connected to statewide initiatives for opioid use support.

Methadone

Methadone is a long-acting opioid agonist that has been used for decades to treat opioid addiction safely and effectively. It attaches to the same brain receptors as other opioids but does so in a slow, controlled way that prevents withdrawal and reduces cravings without producing the intense high associated with opioid misuse. Methadone is dispensed through licensed opioid treatment programs (OTPs) where individuals receive medical monitoring, counseling, and structured support. This medication can be especially helpful for people with long-term or high-intensity opioid use who need daily stability to rebuild their lives.
Addiction, Author Interviews / 03.09.2025

[caption id="attachment_70512" align="aligncenter" width="500"]Medication-Assisted Treatment in Rural Emergency Departments Photo by Erik Mclean[/caption]

Why Medication-Assisted Treatment Matters

Opioid use disorder continues to harm communities across the United States. In 2023, more than 80,000 people died from opioid overdoses according to CDC data. Rural towns have been hit especially hard. Emergency departments in these areas are often the only place where patients can get immediate help. Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) is one of the most effective tools for treating opioid addiction. It combines medicines like buprenorphine or methadone with counseling. Studies show MAT reduces opioid use, lowers overdose risk, and improves long-term recovery rates. Patients who receive MAT are twice as likely to stay in treatment compared to those who do not. Emergency rooms see many patients in crisis. They are a critical access point for starting MAT. Yet, many rural hospitals still face major barriers when trying to use it.
Thank you for visiting MedicalResearch.com Senior Editor, Marie Benz MD. For more information please email: info@MedicalResearch.com

This website is certified by Health On the Net Foundation. Click to verify. This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information:
verify here.