Recovery NOW connects adults in Tennessee with suboxone doctors for opioid use disorder treatment. Our medical team evaluates your opioid use, withdrawal symptoms, mental health, and treatment history before care begins. Your treatment may include suboxone, follow-up visits, therapy, and ongoing, personalized recovery support.
Suboxone Doctors to Treat Opioid Use Disorder
When you visit our suboxone doctors, we start with a comprehensive medical evaluation, medication planning, and ongoing support. We work with you to understand your opioid use patterns, overdose risk, withdrawal symptoms, relapse history, and overall health. This collaborative approach helps us decide together whether medication-assisted treatment fits your needs.
During treatment, doctors monitor cravings, medication effects, side effects, and progress. Treatment may also include mental health screening, counseling referrals, and regular visits. Our goal is to reduce opioid use, ease withdrawal, and support lasting recovery.
CARF Accredited Suboxone Treatment at Recovery NOW
At Recovery NOW, we offer CARF-accredited suboxone treatment in Tennessee, helping you take positive steps as part of our medication-assisted services. Experience our confidential, respectful care in a professional setting, where suboxone is central to our opioid program, designed to support your recovery journey.
Your suboxone treatment can fit into a full range of outpatient options, including IOP, PHP, sober living, and outpatient psychiatry. Interested in a program that addresses both addiction and mental health? We offer flexible, comprehensive care for your specific needs.
Suboxone Doctors Near Me in Tennessee
Looking for a suboxone doctor near you in Tennessee? We proudly serve adults statewide and offer local access to medication-assisted treatment in Nashville, Hermitage, Goodlettsville, Clarksville, Ashland City, and Lebanon. Get started close to home with in-person visits or convenient telehealth, your recovery can begin today.
Contact Information: Phone: (615) 416-8010
Recovery NOW Nashville
4515 Harding Pike, Ste 327
Nashville, TN 37205
Recovery NOW East Nashville
4017 Central Pike
Hermitage, TN 37076
Recovery NOW Rivergate
206 Bluebird Drive
Goodlettsville, TN 37072
Recovery NOW Clarksville
1816 Memorial Circle
Clarksville, TN 37043
Recovery NOW Ashland City
202 North Main Street, Ste 5
Ashland City, TN 37015
Recovery NOW Lebanon
701 Park Avenue
Lebanon, TN 37087
What Is Suboxone?
Suboxone is a prescription medication used in the treatment of opioid use disorder. It helps reduce opioid cravings and eases withdrawal symptoms throughout recovery. It is utilized as part of medication-assisted treatment based on an individual’s opioid use pattern and clinical needs.
Physicians use Suboxone to support sustained recovery from opioid addiction over time. Recovery care with buprenorphine may also include counseling and additional support throughout treatment.
When Do You Need to See Suboxone Doctors?
Do you wonder if you should see a suboxone doctor? If ongoing opioid use keeps causing issues or you’ve struggled to stop on your own, it might be time to reach out. Our team can help evaluate your situation and see if medication-assisted treatment aligns with your goals. Let us help you explore the next steps on your recovery path.
- Repeated opioid use persists despite attempts to stop
- Significant physical sickness occurs when opioids wear off
- Strong urges increase relapse risk
- Return to use occurs after detox or rehabilitation
- Past overdose has been linked to opioid use
- Difficulty maintaining stability without medication
- Daily opioid use with escalating dependence
- Mental health symptoms emerge during opioid recovery
What Our Suboxone Doctors Help With?
At Recovery NOW, our suboxone doctors in Tennessee support you through every step of opioid treatment, helping you overcome dependence, withdrawal, and cravings. Our dedicated team works closely with you to guide your care throughout your recovery journey.
Opioid Addiction
Opioid addiction can affect brain function, behavior, and daily control over drug use.
An individual may continue using opioids even when use leads to health problems, family strain, work difficulties, or legal consequences.
Medical treatment focuses on the pattern of dependence, impact on daily life, and ongoing care requirements.
Withdrawal Symptoms
Withdrawal symptoms may begin after you reduce or stop opioid use when physically dependent. Our doctors address symptoms that impact your comfort, safety, and daily function during early treatment:
- Body aches
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Stomach cramps
- Shaking
- Anxiety
- Restlessness
- Runny nose
- Yawning
- Sleep problems
Cravings During Recovery
Cravings can persist during recovery even after opioid use has stopped. You may experience repeated thoughts about opioids, and stress can intensify these urges. Triggers may increase return-to-use risk.
Our doctors monitor craving intensity throughout treatment and use medication support when clinically indicated. Follow-up care and recovery planning can also help reduce this pressure.
Our Appointment Process for Suboxone Treatment in Tennessee
Your first appointment helps identify the next steps for treatment. We use this visit to collect key information to guide your plan.
We begin with a comprehensive review of your medical history, including past diagnoses, current health problems, allergies, hospitalizations, and previous addiction treatment. We also review any medications you are currently taking.
Our physician asks about the opioids you use, your use pattern, and how long you’ve had the problem. Our team may also evaluate fentanyl, heroin, prescription opioid, and other substance use.
Mental health symptoms can affect addiction treatment and recovery progress. We ask about anxiety, depression, trauma symptoms, mood changes, sleep problems, and past mental health care.
Following evaluation, we develop a treatment plan tailored to your condition. The plan may include medication visits, counseling, drug screening, and recovery support. We consider your routine, symptoms, and past treatment before finalizing decisions.
If suboxone is clinically appropriate for your condition, our doctors may initiate treatment after a thorough evaluation. We assess opioid use, withdrawal timing, and other medical factors before administering the first dose to minimize the risk of initiating medication at an inappropriate time.
Before concluding the visit, we scheduled follow-up care. These appointments allow our team to review symptoms, assess medication response, and make necessary adjustments. Regular follow-up also helps maintain active, organized treatment throughout recovery.
Level of Care Our Doctors Can Suggest During Suboxone Treatment
Our doctors may suggest different care levels during suboxone treatment based on your needs. The decision depends on use severity, relapse risk, mental health, and daily stability. Our goal is to align treatment with the right level of support and monitoring.
IOP
An intensive outpatient program may be appropriate for patients who need regular weekly treatment without requiring 24-hour care. IOP can support suboxone treatment through group sessions, clinical review, relapse prevention work, and additional recovery structures.
Our doctors may suggest IOP when you need more support than standard outpatient care while maintaining sufficient stability to live at home during treatment.
PHP
Partial Hospitalization Program may be utilized when a patient requires more intensive support during suboxone treatment. Our doctors may recommend PHP when opioid symptoms remain active; relapse risk stays elevated, or mental health symptoms affect recovery.
PHP provides increased treatment contact throughout the week while allowing closer clinical monitoring, medication care, and ongoing evaluation.
Therapy and Recovery Support with Suboxone Treatment
Suboxone treatment can be enhanced with additional support services, as therapy can address behavioral patterns and stress management, while recovery support can help manage relapse risk and reinforce treatment goals. Our team may incorporate these services to support opioid recovery alongside medication treatment.
Individual Counseling
Individual sessions provide dedicated time to discuss opioid use, recovery barriers, stress, mental health symptoms, and treatment progress with a therapist. This setting also allows you to work through triggers, setbacks, and personal goals during care.
Group Therapy
Group therapy provides valuable peer support, connecting you with others working on recovery. Sessions may cover triggers, coping skills, relapse prevention, and behavior change in a supportive setting.
Ongoing Recovery Planning
Recovery planning helps organize the next steps in treatment. Our team may review daily structure, follow-up needs, support systems, relapse concerns, and goals that affect long-term recovery.
Continued Support During MAT
Ongoing care helps you remain connected to MAT after treatment begins. This support may include follow-up visits, therapy, symptom review, and care adjustments based on progress and evolving recovery needs.
MAT Medications Our Suboxone Doctors May Use for Treatment
Medication-assisted treatment may incorporate more than one medication option, each serving a different role in opioid treatment. Some are used as daily medications, while others are administered as long-acting injections. Our doctors evaluate which option best fits your care plan and current recovery stage.
Suboxone
Suboxone combines buprenorphine and naloxone for opioid use disorder treatment. It is used to reduce opioid cravings and withdrawal symptoms throughout treatment, administered as a sublingual medication within a comprehensive recovery plan.
Subutex
Subutex contains buprenorphine without naloxone and is also used in medication treatment for opioid use disorder. Physicians may consider it in specific clinical situations when buprenorphine treatment is needed in an alternative form. Recovery NOW includes Subutex in its MAT medication options.
Zubsolv
Zubsolv is another buprenorphine and naloxone medication used to treat opioid use disorder. It is taken orally to reduce withdrawal symptoms and opioid cravings during recovery care. We may include Zubsolv among the medications used in our opioid treatment services.
Sublocade
Sublocade is an extended-release buprenorphine injection administered once monthly for moderate to severe opioid use disorder. It is used after treatment has been initiated with a buprenorphine medication and can support patients who benefit from long-acting medication with ongoing clinical follow-up.
Vivitrol
Vivitrol is an extended-release naltrexone injection used in opioid use disorder treatment after a patient is opioid-free. Its mechanism of action differs from buprenorphine-based medications. Physicians may pair it with recovery support and ongoing clinical monitoring.
Recovery NOW Is In-Network with All Major Insurers
Why Choose Recovery Now for Suboxone Treatment?
Recovery NOW provides multiple types of opioid treatment support within an integrated care system. You can begin treatment with a team offering suboxone therapy, telehealth access, and comprehensive outpatient services across Tennessee. Our program includes structured treatment options to support you at different stages of recovery.
- CARF-Accredited Care: We provide CARF-accredited addiction treatment services in a professional treatment environment
- Multiple Tennessee Locations: Access care through locations in Nashville, East Nashville, Goodlettsville, Clarksville, Ashland City, and Lebanon
- Telehealth MAT Access: We offer MAT via HIPAA-compliant telehealth on phone, laptop, or tablet devices
- IOP and PHP Support: Our outpatient program includes IOP and PHP when higher levels of care are clinically indicated
- Therapy with MAT: Treatment plans can incorporate counseling sessions, group therapy, and medication management
- ASAM-Based IOP Structure: Our IOP program includes ASAM level 2.1 and level 1.0 treatment hours
- Immediate Access to Care: Patients can access MAT treatment support promptly through our coordinated intake process
Patient Stories
Get Help with Suboxone Doctors in Tennessee
Seek help from Recovery NOW when opioid use begins affecting your health, safety, and daily life. Our team provides suboxone treatment in Tennessee with medical care, follow-up, and recovery support tailored to your needs. Call us at (615) 416-8010 to schedule your appointment for treatment support.
Areas We Serve
We serve patients across Tennessee, with locations in Nashville, Hermitage, Goodlettsville, Clarksville, Ashland City, Columbia, and Lebanon. Our service areas also include Antioch, Bristol, Chattanooga, Cookeville, Crossville, Dickson, Dyersburg, Franklin, Gallatin, Jackson, Jefferson City, Johnson City, Kingsport, Knoxville, Madison, Maryville, Memphis, Mt. Juliet, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, Springfield, Hendersonville, and Pleasant View.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. A relapse can indicate a need for additional medical support. Suboxone treatment may help reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings, allowing you to return to care with improved stability.
Not necessarily. Many patients continue working while receiving suboxone treatment, maintaining work, home, and family responsibilities. The appropriate level of care depends on your symptoms, stability, and treatment needs.
Yes. Counseling may be incorporated alongside medication as part of comprehensive treatment. Some patients benefit from individual therapy, group sessions, or additional recovery support while working on opioid recovery.
Treatment duration varies among individuals. Some patients require longer medication support based on opioid history, relapse risk, symptom control, and recovery progress. A physician evaluates treatment response over time before recommending changes.
Yes. Recovery NOW offers MAT telehealth for eligible patients in Tennessee. Telehealth can help patients remain connected to treatment when remote care aligns with their clinical needs and follow-up plans.
Bring your photo ID, insurance card, current medication list, and any available medical records. It is also helpful to be prepared to discuss your opioid use, past treatment experiences, current symptoms, and any mental health concerns.