Every morning, Nick Voyles jumps in his car and hustles to a methadone clinic in a nearby strip mall. As he walks up to the glass partition that separates him from the nurseā€”and his daily dose of Americaā€™s most regulated drugā€”his mind starts racing: What if this takes forever and Iā€™m late for work? What if I canā€™t pee while Iā€™m being watched? ā€œIā€™m scared the entire time,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™m called to the window and Iā€™m just waiting to see what will happen.ā€

For Voyles, the executive director of the Indiana Recovery Alliance, a harm-reduction organization based in Bloomington, methadone has been a lifesaver and a stabilizer. ā€œI bought a house. I married the woman I love,ā€ Voyles told me on a rainy day as we sat on mismatched couches in the groupā€™s office. ā€œI raised a child. Iā€™ve got a career.ā€

Despite well-established benefitsā€”it reduces overdose deaths by as much as 59 percentā€”and low risks, methadone is the only prescription drug that doctors cannot call into a pharmacy and is solely available through segregated clinics. Unless theyā€™re granted the ā€œprivilegeā€ of take-home doses, people have to travel to the clinic every day or risk going into withdrawal. In the 30 years Voyles has been on methadone, heā€™s missed many Christmases with his family in Texas. Since he couldnā€™t get take-homes, he wasnā€™t at his motherā€™s bedside when she was diagnosed with cancer. Heā€™s driven to clinics an hour away and shown up two minutes after dosing hours have ended to be turned away at the door.