YES? –  

July 21, 2024 – Methadone has been used for decades to treat opioid addiction. It is also difficult to come by, a problem health providers hope to ease with a new fleet of vans that can provide the drug. Mr. Parisi goes every weekday morning to an R.V.-size white van parked at a Days Inn. “This definitely works, I’m living proof,” Mr. Parisi said on a recent Tuesday outside the van, where he was waiting with about a dozen other men from his residential drug treatment program. He is only 30 years old, but has been in and out of treatment programs since age 15, after starting to abuse pain pills on Staten Island.

“My mother sent me a picture of me and 12 friends, and I’m the only one left alive,” he said.

Mr. Parisi is one of an estimated 450,000 Americans who take methadone, a powerful weapon in the fight against the fentanyl overdose crisis hiding in plain sight. Methadone, itself a potent opioid, has been used for decades to treat people addicted to drugs like heroin. But it can also be hard to come by, because of government rules that have kept its distribution tightly controlled. 

CONTINUE@NYTimes