Your healthcare provider will begin the process by
- Verifying your insurance benefits (if applicable)
- Discussing the VIVITROL Co-pay Savings Program with you
- Completing the Specialty Pharmacy Form and submitting it to the appropriate pharmacy
You must stop taking opioids before you start receiving VIVITROL. To be effective, VIVITROL must be used with other alcohol or drug recovery programs such as counseling.
VIVITROL may not work for everyone. It is not known if VIVITROL is safe and effective in children.
Here is some information about what happens after you are prescribed VIVITROL leading up to your injection appointment.
99% of people with insurance are covered for VIVITROL.1
Fill out a few brief forms to see if your insurance can help cover the cost of VIVITROL.
get startedIf you have questions about how to get started and what is necessary during VIVITROL treatment, Vivitrol2gether can help.
learn moreVIVITROL is not right for everyone. There are significant risks from VIVITROL treatment, including risk of opioid overdose, severe reactions at the injection site, sudden opioid withdrawal, liver damage or hepatitis.
Talk to your healthcare provider about naloxone, a medicine that is available to patients for the emergency treatment of an opioid overdose.
Call 911 or get emergency medical help right away in all cases of known or suspected opioid overdose, even if naloxone is administered.
If you are being treated for alcohol dependence but also use or are addicted to opioid-containing medicines or opioid street drugs, it is important that you tell your healthcare provider before starting VIVITROL to avoid having sudden opioid withdrawal symptoms when you start VIVITROL treatment.
See Important Safety Information.
See Prescribing Information and Medication Guide.