Painkiller addiction affects hundreds of thousands of UK adults — both to prescribed opioids (codeine, tramadol, oxycodone, morphine) and over-the-counter products containing codeine (co-codamol, Nurofen Plus, Solpadeine). Physical dependency can develop within weeks of regular painkiller use. Free NHS treatment for painkiller addiction in Tynemouth is available without a referral. Call Frank on 0300 123 6600 (free, 24/7) — there is no shame in asking for help.
Showing 5 CQC-registered centres from Gateshead (13 km away) — these centres may accept referrals.
Painkiller addiction often begins with a legitimate prescription or OTC purchase for genuine pain. Tolerance develops rapidly — you need more to get the same relief. Physical dependency follows — stopping causes withdrawal symptoms (sweating, cramps, nausea, insomnia, anxiety) that feel like severe flu. Many people continue taking painkillers to avoid withdrawal rather than for pain, and may not recognise this as addiction.
NHS treatment for painkiller addiction in Tynemouth is free, confidential, and available without a GP referral. Treatment includes medication-assisted tapering (a supervised reducing dose of codeine or buprenorphine), one-to-one counselling, management of any underlying chronic pain, and relapse prevention. Call Frank (0300 123 6600) to self-refer to opioid treatment services in Tynemouth. There is no need to be buying drugs on the street — people dependent on prescribed or OTC medications are just as deserving of help.
Source: ONS Drug misuse deaths 2023 release. Data covers South East England — the NHS region serving Tynemouth. Drug-related deaths are defined as deaths related to drug poisoning, drug misuse and dependence.