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Suboxone Treatment Providers in Portsmouth, Ohio

10 clinicians with active NPPES enumerations in Portsmouth list specialties that commonly prescribe buprenorphine for opioid use disorder. The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 removed the X-waiver requirement. Any DEA Schedule II to V prescriber may now legally prescribe Suboxone, Subutex, Sublocade, or Zubsolv. Whether they actively take new MOUD patients is a separate question. You have to ask on the phone.

Portsmouth, Ohio

10 providers in Portsmouth

How to use this list. Call before showing up. Ask three things: do you accept new buprenorphine patients, do you take my insurance, and what is your earliest induction appointment. Most clinics that move fast can induct within a week. If a clinic delays past two weeks, keep calling other listings.

Portsmouth at a glance

17,919
Residents
10.7 sq mi
Land area
37.1
Median age
$35,319
Median household income
5.2%
Uninsured (civilian)
32.2%
Families below poverty

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-year estimates (2023).

Overdose context for Scioto County

Scioto County reported a model-based drug poisoning death rate of 93 per 100,000 residents in 2021 (95% CI 86.2 to 100.2). That sits 226.6% above the national county mean of 28.5 per 100,000.

201962.2
202080.6
202193

Three-year change (62.2 to 93): +30.7 per 100,000.

County-level estimates are reported at the county level, not the city level. Source: NCHS Drug Poisoning Mortality by County (CDC dataset rpvx-m2md), 2019 to 2021 model-based estimates. NCHS urban/rural classification: Micropolitan.

Closest methadone clinic to Portsmouth

Nearest verified opioid treatment program in Ohio: Sunrise Treatment Center in West Union, about 32.9 miles (52.9 km) from Portsmouth by straight-line distance. Driving time will run longer.

What this means for accessing buprenorphine here

Scioto County ran a 2021 drug poisoning death rate of 93.0 per 100,000, well above the national county mean of 28.5. Quick access to office-based buprenorphine matters more here than in lower-rate counties. Uninsured rate is low here at 5.2%. Most prescribers bill commercial insurance directly. Sublocade injections, in particular, run several thousand dollars without coverage. Portsmouth has roughly 17,919 residents. The provider list below maps to that population, not to the broader county.

Suboxone vs methadone for opioid use disorder

Suboxone is buprenorphine plus naloxone. It binds tightly to opioid receptors but only partially activates them. That partial-agonist behavior is why it has a ceiling on respiratory depression and a much lower overdose risk than methadone. It is also why it is delivered through office visits and prescriptions instead of daily clinic dosing.

Methadone is a full agonist. It is more powerful for severe long-term opioid use disorder, especially fentanyl-driven cases. The trade-off is that methadone is only legally dispensed through SAMHSA-certified opioid treatment programs, which means daily dosing visits, at least at the start.

If you are in Portsmouth weighing the two, the decision usually comes down to severity, history of treatment, and your daily logistics. Buprenorphine is easier to access. Methadone is sometimes the better clinical fit. Closest verified methadone clinic is Sunrise Treatment Center in West Union, 32.9 miles from Portsmouth.

Need daily-dose methadone instead? See methadone clinics in Portsmouth.

Want a non-opioid alternative? See Ohio Vivitrol providers for monthly extended-release naltrexone.

State-level scoring, regulatory context, and full provider directory live on the Ohio Suboxone hub.