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Cocaine, Opioid, and Stimulant Treatment for Professionals

Substance use isn't limited to alcohol. Many executives and professionals struggle with cocaine, prescription opioids, and stimulants, often hidden behind successful careers until the consequences become unavoidable.

Cocaine and Stimulant Treatment

Cocaine use among professionals often follows predictable patterns: it starts socially, becomes tied to work events or travel, and gradually becomes a regular part of managing stress and maintaining energy.

Prescription pill bottles with spilled capsules — opioid and stimulant treatment for professionals

Social/Event-Based Use

Cocaine at client dinners, networking events, bachelor parties. "I only use when I'm out" gradually becomes "I'm out more than I should be."

Performance Enhancement

Stimulants to power through deadlines, maintain energy during brutal schedules, or stay sharp in high-pressure situations.

Combined with Alcohol

Many professionals use cocaine to "sober up" after drinking, creating a dangerous cycle of stimulants and depressants.

Financial and Legal Risk

Beyond health consequences, cocaine carries criminal liability and career-ending potential that alcohol doesn't.

Prescription Opioid Treatment

Many professionals become dependent on opioids through legitimate prescriptions: a surgery, a sports injury, chronic back pain. The transition from prescribed use to dependence is gradual and often unrecognized.

Signs of Opioid Dependence

  • Taking more than prescribed or running out early
  • Doctor shopping or finding other sources
  • Needing opioids to feel "normal," not just for pain
  • Withdrawal symptoms when you miss a dose
  • Hiding your use from family, colleagues, or doctors

Medication-Assisted Treatment

For opioid dependence, medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is often the most effective approach.

Buprenorphine (Suboxone)

Reduces cravings and withdrawal without the high. Can be prescribed by certified physicians and taken at home.

Naltrexone (Vivitrol)

Blocks opioid effects. Available as daily pill or monthly injection. Also used for alcohol treatment.

Medically Supervised Tapering

For those who want to discontinue opioids entirely, a gradual reduction under medical supervision is safer than stopping cold turkey.

How Treatment Works

Comprehensive Assessment

We evaluate your substance use pattern, physical health, mental health, and professional situation. This determines whether outpatient treatment is appropriate or if you need a higher level of care first.

Medical Coordination

For opioids, we coordinate with physicians for medication-assisted treatment if needed. For cocaine/stimulants, we address withdrawal symptoms and cravings through behavioral strategies.

Trigger Management

Identifying and managing the situations, people, and emotional states that lead to use. For professionals, this often includes work travel, client entertainment, and stress cycles.

Relapse Prevention

Building skills to maintain recovery long-term, including handling high-risk situations and recovering from slips without full relapse.

Dr. Arnold Washton, Expert in cocaine and opioid treatment

Dr. Arnold Washton

Clinical Psychologist | Author

Dr. Washton literally wrote the book on cocaine addiction. His book has been a clinical reference for decades. He has treated thousands of professionals struggling with stimulants, opioids, and polysubstance use.

His approach addresses the professional context: cocaine at client dinners, opioids that started with a legitimate prescription, stimulants used to maintain impossible workloads. Treatment is confidential and designed around your schedule.

Confidential Help for Drug Use

Cocaine and opioid problems are treatable. Dr. Washton provides discreet, professional treatment that protects your career and privacy.

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