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SUBOXONE Film: What Patients Are Saying

Listen to patients share, in their own words, how treatment with SUBOXONE Film has helped them work to manage their disease.

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Talking with your doctor

An experienced doctor who is certified to treat opioid dependence will understand what you're going through. You might begin the conversation by telling your doctor how you've been feeling lately. Explain that you're concerned about your use of opioids and think you may have become dependent.

It's important that you are open and honest so your doctor can give you the best care. Be specific. Tell your doctor:

  • When you began misusing opioids, what you take, how much, and how often
  • If you got prescriptions from several doctors
  • If you crushed the tablets to take them in another form, such as snorting or injecting
  • If you've tried to stop using opioids and felt ill (you may have experienced withdrawal symptoms)
  • If you have found yourself using illicit drugs, including heroin
  • Anything else that might help your doctor understand what you've been experiencing

Get all of your questions answered

Create a list of questions to ask the doctor, and bring them along so you don't forget anything. You might be wondering:

  • Do I need treatment?
  • Can medication-assisted treatment help me?
  • Will I experience withdrawal?
  • How long does treatment typically last?
  • How will counseling help me?
  • What is my role in treatment? What are my responsibilities?

Questions your doctor may ask you

In order to understand the exact nature of your medical condition and recommend the best treatment, your doctor will have questions. Here are some you might hear:

  • Do you still have a medical reason to use prescription pain medication, such as a need for pain relief?
  • Do you take the medicine the way it was prescribed—the right number of tablets and at the right times during the day?
  • Have you ever used anyone else's prescription?
  • Have you ever sought pain medicine from several doctors at the same time?
  • Have you ever felt the need to cut down on your use of prescription opioid pain medication?
  • Have you ever given up activities to use prescription opioid pain medications?
  • Are you spending more time on activities to get prescription opioid pain medications?
  • Do you feel sick if you can't get enough drugs, and only feel normal when you do get them?
  • Do you use prescription opioid pain medication despite negative consequences?
  • Do you use any illicit drugs (for example, heroin)?

Feel free to speak frankly and honestly. Remember, what you tell your doctor is private and will not be shared without your explicit permission.

Remember, opioid dependence is a serious, long-term medical condition that needs care as much as any other chronic disease. Fortunately, it can be treated. That's why talking with your doctor is so important.

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Still looking for the right doctor? Let us help you make your first appointment with a doctor certified to treat opioid dependence in the privacy of his or her office: call 866-973-HERE (4373).

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SUBOXONE® and Here to Help® are registered trademarks of Reckitt Benckiser Healthcare (UK) Ltd.
SUBOXONE Film is manufactured for Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals Inc.,
Richmond, VA 23235 by MonoSol Rx LLC, Warren, NJ 07059.
Copyright © 2012 Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Important Safety Information

SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine and naloxone) Sublingual Film (CIII) is indicated for maintenance treatment of opioid dependence as part of a complete treatment plan to include counseling and psychosocial support. Treatment should be initiated under the direction of physicians qualified under the Drug Addiction Treatment Act.

SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine HCl/naloxone HCl dihydrate sublingual tablets) (CIII) is indicated for the treatment of opioid dependence.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets should not be used by patients hypersensitive to buprenorphine or naloxone.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can be abused in a manner similar to other opioids, legal or illicit. Clinical monitoring appropriate to the patient’s level of stability is essential.

Chronic use of buprenorphine can cause physical dependence. A sudden or rapid decrease in dose may result in an opioid withdrawal syndrome that is typically milder than seen with full agonists and may be delayed in onset.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can cause serious life-threatening respiratory depression and death, particularly when taken by the intravenous (IV) route in combination with benzodiazepines or other central nervous system (CNS) depressants (ie, sedatives, tranquilizers, or alcohol). It is extremely dangerous to self-administer nonprescribed benzodiazepines or other CNS depressants while taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets. Dose reduction of CNS depressants, SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets, or both when both are being taken should be considered.

Liver function should be monitored before and during treatment.

Death has been reported in nontolerant, nondependent individuals, especially in the presence of CNS depressants.

Children who take SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can have severe, possibly fatal, respiratory depression. Emergency medical care is critical. Keep SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets out of the sight and reach of children.

Intravenous misuse or taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets before the effects of full-agonist opioids (eg, heroin, hydrocodone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone) have subsided is highly likely to cause opioid withdrawal symptoms.

Neonatal withdrawal has been reported. Use of SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets in pregnant women or during breast-feeding should only be considered if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk. Caution should be exercised when driving vehicles or operating hazardous machinery, especially during dose adjustment.

Adverse events commonly observed during clinical trials and postmarketing experience for SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets are headache, nausea, vomiting, sweating, constipation, signs and symptoms of withdrawal, insomnia, pain, and swelling of the limbs.

Adverse events commonly observed with the sublingual administration of SUBOXONE Sublingual Film are numb mouth, sore tongue, redness of the mouth, headache, nausea, vomiting, sweating, constipation, signs and symptoms of withdrawal, insomnia, pain, swelling of the limbs, disturbance of attention, palpitations, and blurred vision.

Cytolytic hepatitis, jaundice, and allergic reactions, including anaphylactic shock, have been reported.

This is not a complete list of potential adverse events associated with SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets. Please see full Product Information for a complete list.

To report an adverse event associated with taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets, please call 1-877-782-6966. You are encouraged to report adverse events of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

 

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