What Dose of Methadone is Lethal?
Accident & Injury Wrongful Death Accident & Injury Medical Malpractice Accident & Injury Personal Injury
Summary: While each patient’s dose should be individualized for that patient, some high doses clearly have the potential to cause death. Any dose for a pain patient above 10 or 20 mg has the potential to cause death. Methadone can be safely dosed and need not cause an overdose death.
A dose of 20 mg of methadone may be
lethal for one patient and just right for another patient. How can this be? The line between the “right” or therapeutic
dose of methadone and a lethal or deadly dose of methadone depends on (1) why the
patient is using methadone, and (2) whether the patient has been using methadone
continuously every day for weeks or months before the dose is given, (3) the
health of the patient and (4) whether the dose of methadone is given in the
first few days of methadone therapy.
Generally speaking, the rule is “Start low and go slow” when dosing
methadone. While each patient’s dose
should be individualized for that patient, some high doses clearly have the
potential to cause death. Any dose for a
pain patient above 10 or 20 mg has the potential to cause death. The physician is the only one who can make a
decision about what dose is safe. A
doctor, however, should not be using a one-size fits all dosing strategy. For a patient who is admitted to an opiate
treatment program or methadone clinic, a starting dose of 25 or 30 may be
lethal, especially if the dose is repeated daily or increased. Only a physician can make the decision about
what dose is safe for a patient, but this decision should be individualized. No doctor should be giving the same dose to
all or most patients as a matter of routine.
For more information about the proper starting dose of methadone, go to www.methadonelaw.com or www.overdoselaw.com and click on
“Contact Us.” We can provide this
information free of charge, or consult with you about the proper starting dose,
or whether the dose your family member received was likely the cause of death
from a legal standpoint.