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Heroin Rehab in Philadelphia, PA

The heroin sold on Philadelphia streets has been almost entirely replaced by illicit fentanyl — which is 50–100 times more potent and dramatically increases the risk of fatal overdose. Source: DEA Philadelphia.

Is There Still 'Heroin' in Philadelphia?

In practical terms, no. What is sold as heroin in Philadelphia is almost always illicit fentanyl — either pure fentanyl or fentanyl combined with xylazine, medetomidine, or other adulterants. This shift happened gradually through the 2010s and was essentially complete by 2020. The implications for people seeking treatment are significant: fentanyl has a shorter half-life than heroin (causing faster-onset, more intense withdrawal), is dramatically more potent (increasing overdose risk if relapse occurs), and is now mixed with non-opioid adulterants that require their own treatment protocols.

What Is Heroin / Opioid Rehab?

Opioid use disorder treatment — whether the primary substance is heroin, fentanyl, or prescription opioids — follows the same general framework: medical detox to manage withdrawal, followed by residential or intensive outpatient treatment, often with medication-assisted treatment (buprenorphine or methadone) as the pharmacological backbone. Inpatient programs offer the highest level of structure and support, which is particularly important during early recovery when the risk of relapse and fatal overdose is highest.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between heroin rehab and fentanyl rehab?

In Philadelphia today, there is essentially no functional difference — the street drug supply has been almost entirely replaced by fentanyl. Both require opioid-focused detox and residential treatment, typically with MAT. The specific clinical protocols may differ slightly based on adulterant presence (xylazine, medetomidine), but the treatment framework is the same.

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