Medication Assisted Treatment offered at DESC's 216 Clinical Services
216 James Street, Seattle, WA 98104
Located at 3rd & James in downtown Seattle's Pioneer Square neighborhood. Circulator Bus Stop 2. Call King County Metro at (206) 553-3000 or visit http://tripplanner.kingcounty.gov/ for public transit information.
Eligibility
No restrictions
Hours
9am to 5pm from Monday through Friday
(206) 464-6454
Voice
Application process
Clients may apply in person.
Fees
None.
Service area
King, WA
Other Information
Focus Population
- Polysubstance Users (Illicit)
- Suboxone Prescription Holder
- Homeless
- Polysubstance Users (Alcohol)
- Polysubstance User (Benzos)
Payment Options
- Free
Immediate MAT Openings. Program provides suboxone services in an outpatient clinic setting. Program is designed to provide a higher level of support, which includes outreach for people who are unable to come to the clinic for appointments and daily medication monitoring for clients who do not want to take their medications home. Priority is placed on highly vulnerable clients who have co-occurring mental illness, poly substance use and/or are experiencing homelessness. Same day induction is possible for highly motivated clients. Program goal is to provide the prescription same day, but that is subject to prescriber availability. If prescriber is unavailable then the assessment will be done that day and clients will return a few days later for their prescription. Same day induction currently works best for clients that have scheduled intake appointments. Drop in hours are available M-F 9am-noon. Max dosage is currently 24mg.
Data provided by
Washington 211
What's Here
Providing organization
DESC
Provides four major types of services: comprehensive outpatient mental health and substance use disorder clinical and medical services; behavioral health crisis and outreach services; enhanced homeless shelters/emergency housing; and permanent supportive housing. Specializes in serving adults living with serious behavioral health conditions, co-occurring disorders and polysubstance use, and longtime experiences of homelessness and trauma.