CHARLESTON, W.Va. - For people grappling with substance abuse, basic health care can be fraught with worry: over-the-counter cough medicine can have relapse-triggering amounts of alcohol, and visits to the dentist are hazardous if they include narcotic painkillers.
A new outpatient clinic at the University of Charleston, likely the first of its kind in the state, hopes to make those anxious decisions easier when it opens later this month.
The vision for the free clinic is a one-stop information center for patients and practitioners, where issues like medication side effects and appropriate pain treatment for recovering addicts can be addressed.
The latter can be an especially hard question, with doctors worried about prescribing to addicts and patients resigning themselves to severe pain to avoid the chance of relapse. The abuse of opioid painkillers like oxycodone, hydrocodone and methadone, is a nationwide problem, but is particularly acute in Appalachia.
"It's actually unethical not to treat people appropriately, but the question is, what's the best treatment for someone with an addiction?" said Michael O'Neil, the pharmacy professor who will oversee the clinic and the chairman of the state Controlled Substance Advisory Board.
After being examined, patients will be given wallet-sized cards telling them what kind of medication or treatment is appropriate for certain types of pain, without putting them at risk of slipping back into addiction.
The clinic will also work with people frustrated by side effects of prescription medicine, and with those who want to know what types of drugs are safer for recovering addicts.
O'Neil also sees the clinic as a way to educate physicians, dentists and other prescribers on some of the best practices for providing routine medical care to people with addictions.
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