Opioid Addiction

Most people who develop opioid dependency were not looking for it. A prescription following surgery, a medication for chronic pain, a treatment for a condition that needed managing, these are the most common starting points. The medication addressed something real, and for a time it worked. The possibility of dependency was rarely discussed, and for many people it was not something they considered.

Opioid dependency has a way of establishing itself before it is recognised. By the time most people become aware that something has changed, that the medication has shifted from something they take to something they need, the physical dependency is already well established. Reducing or stopping produces withdrawal that feels unmanageable, and the shame of that discovery is often made worse by the knowledge that it started with a legitimate prescription from a doctor.

That shame is one of the most significant barriers to getting help, and it is one of the things Bayberry hears most often from people who contact us. Whatever the history, whether opioid use began with a prescription, through self-medication, or through recreational use that became something more, it is not relevant to the quality of care a person receives. What matters is what happens next.

Opioid pills on a bottle

What Is Opioid Addiction?

Opioid addiction is a medical condition in which the brain’s pain and reward systems become so dependent on external opioids that functioning without them feels impossible — a state that develops through the biology of the drugs themselves rather than through any personal weakness or failing.

Opioids are a class of drugs that act on opioid receptors in the brain and body to reduce pain and produce feelings of relaxation and wellbeing. This class includes prescription painkillers such as codeine, tramadol, morphine, oxycodone and fentanyl, as well as illicit substances including heroin.

When opioids are taken regularly over time, the opioid receptor system adapts. Receptor sensitivity decreases, tolerance builds, and progressively higher doses are needed to achieve the same effect. The brain’s natural endorphin production is suppressed because the body has come to rely on the external supply. When the medication is reduced or stopped, the resulting deficit produces withdrawal: a state of physical and psychological distress that is one of the most powerful barriers to stopping.

For people whose dependency developed through managing chronic pain, the situation is particularly complex. The original pain is often still present. Withdrawing from opioids means managing withdrawal symptoms alongside the return of the underlying condition. This dual challenge makes unassisted detox exceptionally difficult, and it is one of the central reasons why medically supported treatment can make such a meaningful difference.

What Are the Signs and Symptoms of Opioid Dependency?

Opioid dependency can be particularly difficult to recognise when it has developed from a legitimate prescription. The line between appropriate use and dependency is not always clear, and many people minimise what is happening for a significant period, often because the medication is still doing something useful, and the idea of stopping feels more frightening than continuing.

Common signs that opioid dependency may have developed include:

Taking opioids at higher doses than prescribed, or more frequently than directed.
When the original dose stops managing symptoms effectively and the need to take more becomes persistent, tolerance has established itself. The medication is no longer treating the original condition. It is maintaining a baseline the body now requires.
Running out of prescriptions ahead of schedule.
Using medication early and experiencing a gap before the next prescription is one of the most consistent early indicators that dependency has taken hold, and one that is frequently explained away rather than acknowledged.
Seeking opioids from multiple sources or outside a legitimate prescription.
When the prescribed supply is no longer sufficient and a person begins seeking additional medication elsewhere, the dependency has established a significant hold. This step is often accompanied by considerable shame.
Using opioids for purposes beyond the original prescription.
Using opioids to manage sleep, anxiety, emotional distress or low mood, rather than the physical pain they were prescribed for, indicates that the dependency has broadened beyond its original purpose.
Withdrawal symptoms when a dose is missed or delayed.
Muscle aches, sweating, nausea, anxiety, agitation and difficulty sleeping are evidence of how completely the body has adapted to the presence of opioids. These symptoms are among the most powerful drivers of continued use, because taking the medication is the fastest way to make them stop.
Increasing preoccupation with the next dose.
When significant mental energy is spent thinking about medication availability, timing the next dose or managing anxiety about running out, opioid use has begun to structure daily life in a way that goes well beyond therapeutic use.
Withdrawal from relationships, activities and responsibilities.
Isolation and secrecy commonly deepen as opioid dependency progresses. Things that were once important gradually fall away, often so slowly that neither the person nor those around them notice until the gap is significant.

If any of this feels familiar, whether in your own life or in someone you care about, it is worth having a confidential conversation. Opioid dependency is a medical condition, not a moral failing, and it responds to the right clinical support.

What Are the Risks of Opioid Abuse?

The risks associated with opioid use extend well beyond dependency itself, and they are not limited to people using illicitly. Many of the most serious consequences occur in people who began with a legitimate prescription and whose use has gradually moved outside clinical guidance.

Overdose is the most serious acute risk. Opioids suppress the central nervous system, slowing breathing and reducing heart rate. At high doses, or when tolerance is misjudged, this can progress to a point where the body cannot sustain adequate oxygen levels. The risk increases significantly when opioids are combined with alcohol, benzodiazepines, sleeping pills or other sedating substances, combinations that are more common than many people realise, particularly among those also managing anxiety, sleep difficulties or other prescribed conditions.

Over the longer term, regular opioid use impairs cognitive function, including concentration, memory and decision-making. The suppression of the body’s natural endorphin system affects mood regulation, emotional resilience and the capacity to experience pleasure without the medication, contributing to the persistent low mood, emotional flatness and depression that so many people with opioid dependency describe.

The physical risks vary depending on how opioids are being taken. For people using illicit intravenous opioids, the risks extend to infections, vein damage and blood-borne diseases. For those dependent on prescribed oral opioids, the consequences include hormonal disruption, immune suppression and, over time, opioid-induced hyperalgesia: a paradoxical condition in which long-term opioid use increases sensitivity to pain rather than reducing it.

The psychological consequences of long-term opioid dependency are equally significant, and they require as much attention in treatment as the physical dependency itself. Profound depression, anxiety and a pervasive loss of motivation are common, and they do not simply resolve when opioid use stops.

Worried you or a loved one are struggling with an opioid dependency?

Reach out today for a free, no obligation call and find out how Bayberry can help you.

What Does Opiate Withdrawal Feel Like?

Opioid withdrawal is among the most physically and psychologically demanding withdrawal processes associated with any substance. It is not life-threatening in the way that alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal can be, but it is severe enough that attempting it without medical support significantly increases the risk of relapse and unnecessary suffering. Anyone physically dependent on opioids should seek clinical advice before reducing or stopping. Opioid detox should always begin with a proper assessment.

The early phase is often described as an intense and unrelenting flu, but worse. Muscle aches and cramps, profuse sweating, chills, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea arrive alongside profound anxiety, agitation and an almost complete inability to sleep. The restlessness that characterises this phase, a persistent physical and psychological inability to find comfort, is one of the most distressing features and one of the most powerful drivers of relapse.

one to one therapy for Opioid addiction

The timeline and intensity of withdrawal depend on the specific opioid involved. Shorter-acting opioids such as heroin produce a faster and more acute onset. Longer-acting prescription opioids such as morphine or methadone typically produce a more drawn-out experience that unfolds over a longer period, sometimes weeks.

What follows the acute phase is, in some ways, harder to sustain. Post-acute withdrawal can persist for weeks or longer, characterised by persistent low mood, depleted energy, disrupted sleep and a blunted capacity to feel pleasure. Life without opioids can feel flat and unrewarding for an extended period, and this phase carries a significant and sustained relapse risk. Structured therapeutic support during opioid detox and the weeks that follow is not optional. It is one of the most important factors in whether recovery holds.

How to Take the Next Step

Bayberry’s admissions team is available seven days a week to talk through the situation, answer questions honestly and help work out whether residential treatment is the right fit. Conversations are completely confidential, and admission can often be arranged quickly when needed.

Whether you are calling for yourself or on behalf of someone you care about, the team will take the time to understand the situation properly and explain what treatment at Bayberry involves. There is no pressure and no obligation, just a straightforward conversation with people who understand addiction and know how to help.

Start your recovery from opioid dependency today.

You don’t have to let opioids dictate your future. Get in touch with us today and discover how to reclaim the life you deserve.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can prescription opioids really cause dependency?
Yes. Opioid medication, when prescribed and used appropriately, serves a legitimate clinical purpose. However, for a proportion of people who use opioids over an extended period, particularly at higher doses or for longer than originally intended, physical and psychological dependency can develop. This is a recognised clinical consequence of long-term opioid use, not a personal failing.
Is opioid detox dangerous?
Opioid withdrawal is not usually life-threatening in the way that alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal can be. However, it can be physically and psychologically severe, and for people with significant dependency, underlying health conditions, or complex clinical needs, medical supervision during detox is strongly recommended. Anyone physically dependent on opioids should seek medical advice before reducing or stopping, as medically assisted detox significantly improves safety and comfort.
What does opiate withdrawal feel like?
Opioid withdrawal symptoms typically include intense flu-like discomfort: muscle aches and cramps, sweating, chills, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, agitation, anxiety and profound insomnia. The severity depends on the specific opioid, the dose, the duration of use and the individual’s overall health. Medically assisted detox reduces the severity of these symptoms significantly.