While waiting for Eskapa to reply, I thought I'd share the following resources you can share with your nurse practitioner if you'd like.
Your nurse practitioner is wrong. I believe she is confusing naltrexone with suboxone -- a drug with vaguely similar properties used to treat opiate addiction. Special certification is required to prescribe suboxone. Not so of naltrexone. She easily can verify this.
The Project COMBINE study
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/ab ... 95/17/2003 -- the largest study ever done of alcoholism treatment -- showed naltrexone to be the most effective treatment with only basic medical management, not combined with any psychological counseling. This is the main reason so many family physicians (not addiction specialists) are willing to prescribe naltrexone for those on this board who choose to work with their doctor.
Here is a New York Times article by Jane Brody that several people here have brought to their doctor:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.h ... one&st=cse Here is a link to reprints of chapters from Eskapa's book; the one titled "For Medical Professionals" has been persuasive with the doctors of people here who printed it and brought it to the doctor. You may want to do that, or direct your nurse practitioner to the link.
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6If the expense of online ordering is your chief concern, you may want to consider the long-term risk/cost of having this in your medical history. Many of us order online for just that reason. Here's the experience of one member on this board:
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=1617&p=19616&sid=94b3a9bb09a7ed6fab215e043b06eaf4#p19616Hope this helps.
Edited to include omitted link!