Treatment
Thousands of New Mexicans have gotten help for opioid addiction. You can too.
Opioid Treatment Just for You — Wherever You Are in New Mexico
Understanding Opioid Addiction (Opioid Use Disorder)
Anyone can become addicted to opioids—whether it’s prescription pain relievers, heroin, or fentanyl. In fact, 2 out of 3 of us know someone struggling right now.
Opioids are highly addictive. They change how your brain works, making it extremely difficult to stop using without help due to intense cravings and painful withdrawal symptoms.
What Is Opioid Addiction?
Opioids are strong drugs that can make you feel good for a short time but can quickly lead to addiction. That includes prescription pain pills, heroin, or fentanyl.
Opioids change how your brain works. When you stop, you may get sick or crave them badly. That’s why stopping can be hard without help.
What Is Treatment for Opioid Addiction?
Treatment for opioid addiction uses what is called medications for addiction treatment or MAT. This treatment is a proven way to help you take back control of your life.
Treatment medicine help:
- Reduce or stop cravings
- Feel better during withdrawal
- Avoid using again
These medications for opioid addiction work to help people:
- Stay alive
- Stay in recovery
- Find a job
- Rebuild relationships
- Feel like themselves again
Three Medicines that Work
These medications work to help stop cravings and helps your brain feel better without getting high. Your doctor or provider can help you choose what’s best:
- Buprenorphine
- Methadone
- Naltrexone
Work With Your Provider to Find the Right Medication for You
You Can Get Treatment Help Anywhere in New Mexico
Treatment Options – Available Wherever You Are
The Choice is Yours
There are many ways to get opioid addiction treatment based on what you need:
- Want care without traveling?
- Prefer phone calls or video talking over in-person visits?
- Need immediate help but can’t find a nearby provider?
- Looking for an in-person connection?
Want to Get Help at Home?
The New Mexico Health Care Authority is working to expand treatment options for all New Mexicans—no matter where you live: urban, rural, tribal, or frontier.
We partner with Renew Health, a New Mexico-based provider offering:
- Statewide opioid treatment telehealth services
- Mental health and behavioral care
- Support for people with more than one condition
Treatment is available regardless of your insurance status or ability to pay. Renew Health meets you where you are and supports your recovery every step of the way.
You can also search for other telehealth or in-person providers using the treatment map below.
Prefer to Go In-Person?
If you prefer to visit a provider in person, Renew Health has three locations in Roswell, Alamogordo and Clovis too. You can also use the treatment map below to find a place near you.
The Department of Health also offers help in person or by phone. They can help you apply for Medicaid and connect to care.
You can use the treatment map below to search for other in-person locations near you.
The New Mexico Department of Health also offers access to opioid addiction through its public health offices and telehealth. Staff can help you sign up for Medicaid and connect you to care and counseling options—regardless of your financial situation. Learn more through the Pathways Program.
Get Help Now. No Judgment. Just Support.
You don’t have to go through this alone. Recovery is possible—and help is here.
Providers are ready to support you with respect and compassion, no matter where you live or what your circumstances are.
Scroll down to use the treatment map and find care near you.
Recovery is Possible. The Chance to Change Your Life.
Recovery benefits everyone – families, friends, neighbors, and the person who gets into recovery. It is a reality for thousands of New Mexicans of all ages, ethnic backgrounds, and economic and social classes. We must accord dignity to people with opioid substance use and recognize that there is no one path to recovery.
“Recovery is for Everyone: Every Person, Every Family, Every Community.”
– Faces and Voices of Recovery
The key message at hand? People can and do recover.

To hear more inspirational recovery stories from New Mexicans, click here to watch the 2025 Behavioral Health Star Award Ceremony and Evening Celebration.

Connections Free Smartphone Apps
Provide Peer & Community Support for People in Recovery
Connections is a FREE app for individuals with substance use disorder and common co-occurring mental health conditions that provides anonymous 24/7 peer support, access to an online community, resources to promote coping skills, daily check-ins, and tools to help track and celebrate milestones! This free resource is made available by The New Mexico Behavioral Health Service Division.
Join us in embracing the journey to recovery with the Connections app, an evidenced-based smartphone app and comprehensive support tool made available for free through New Mexico Health Care Authority's Behavioral Health Services Division (BHSD).
The Connections app is designed to build healthy habits that reduce relapse and reduce isolation for individuals with substance use disorder and common co-occurring mental health conditions. It provides safe, confidential, and anonymous 24/7 access to peer support specialists, an online community, resources to promote coping skills, daily check-ins, and tools to help track and celebrate milestones.
Teen Connections App
There is also Connections for Teens, which offers the same peer and community support and recovery management tools but is available for teens in recovery only.
Spanish Conexiones App
A Spanish version of the app is available as well. Conexiones offers dedicated support for the Latinx communities who face additional challenges accessing recovery resources. The new Conexiones app is designed with these communities in mind and includes culturally appropriate content written by native Spanish speakers and personalized attention through in-language peer support.
Companion Connections App
Also available is the Companion app, which provides a supportive online community and valuable resources but is tailored for family members, friends, and caregivers of people in recovery.
New Mexicans can enroll for free by downloading the app. Share the Connections promotional fliers attached below with your agencies, patients, community members, and loved ones so they can benefit from all that Connections has to offer.
OPRE – Office of Peer Recovery and Engagement
The NM Behavioral Health Services Division’s Office of Peer Recovery and Engagement (OPRE) provides training, certification, and support to Certified Peer Support Workers (CPSW) in New Mexico. CPSWs are important and influential members of treatment teams, to include judicial settings, medical settings, and treatment settings. For more information on becoming a CPSW please visit The Behavioral Health Services Division’s nmrecovery.org or reach out to OPRE.BHSD@HCA.NM.GOV
To become a Certified Peer Support Worker (CPSW), you must:
- Be 18 years of age or older
- Have a High School Diploma or GED
- Have minimum of 3 years in recovery
- Complete 40 hours of supervised hours of volunteer or paid work with direct client contact in a behavioral health agency. Click HERE for current approved behavioral health organizations where the prerequisite hours can be completed.
- Complete an application online
- Agree to abide by the New Mexico CPSW Code of Ethics
- Successfully complete the Peer Support Worker training offered through the Office of Peer Recovery and Engagement by State Approved Trainers
- Complete the certification examination provided through the New Mexico Credentialing Board
Stop the Stigma - Let’s change the conversation.
Anyone can become dependent on drugs and struggle with opioid use disorder. No one likes to feel judged or devalued. 2 out of 3 of us know someone struggling right now. We must reduce the stigma to encourage people to ask for help and get into recovery. Every community is touched by opioids—rural, urban, tribal, large or small.
Blaming, shaming, ignoring and rejecting someone won’t break the opioid cycle, but opioid treatment medication and support will.
Family, friends, and the public often have negative feelings about drug use or behavior. Blaming, shaming, ignoring and rejecting someone struggling with an opioid use disorder creates stigma and it can keep a person from wanting to seek treatment or get healthcare.
Opioid substance use is not a moral failing, and we need to remember that we can all change the conversation and decrease the stigma around drug use and opioid substance use. People with a substance use disorder have a chronic disease of the brain that can be successfully treated, but stigma negatively impacts a person’s willingness to get treatment or health care and can cause significant self-esteem and mental health issue.
What can we do?
- Offer compassionate support.
- Display kindness to people in vulnerable situations.
- Listen while withholding judgment.
- See a person for who they are, not what drugs they use.
- Learn about how drug dependency works.
- Treat people with drug dependency with dignity and respect.
- Avoid hurtful labels.
- Replace negative attitudes with evidence-based facts.
- Speak up when you see someone mistreated because of their drug use.
We are not our disease. We have a name. We have a history. We have a personality.
We come from families and communities. We have a story to tell.
How to Use the MAT Map
- Filter by county or city. (If your location isn’t listed, check telehealth options.)
- Choose the type of treatment:
- MAT for pregnancy
- MAT for outpatient care
- MAT for inpatient care
- MAT for detox
- Click a red box for in-person centers or a blue box for telehealth providers.
- To reset the map, click the circular arrow icon.
MAT Provider Contact Form
If you want to add or update your information, please fill out the form.
More Help: 988 New Mexico Lifeline
Call or Text 988
Anyone. Anytime. Any Issue.
Free, private, and confidential support 24/7 by phone, text, or chat.
If you’re overwhelmed, struggling with substance use, or just need someone to talk to, call or text 988. You’ll be connected with a caring, judgment-free counselor who can help you through the moment—and connect you to resources.
Need Medicaid?
New Mexico Medicaid (Turquoise Care) covers all three FDA-approved opioid addiction medicines and treatments:
- Methadone
- Buprenorphine
- Naltrexone
To apply for Medicaid, visit YES.NM.GOV or call 1-800-283-4465.
What can we do?
- Be kind and supportive
- Don’t judge people who are struggling
- Listen and show respect
- Learn the facts about addiction
- Speak up when you see unfair treatment
People with addiction are more than their struggle. They are family, friends, and neighbors. They deserve care and respect.