Hello Erica
I am glad to hear that your boyfriend wants to stop his pill addiction. I was hooked on pain pills and it is, indeed, a road that can be difficult to stop following. However, there is no doubt it can be done! Many of us have gone before him and come around to testify to the truth that it can be done.
I gotta tell you, the biggest, the BIGGEST, step is to truly be forthright with a doctor. Oh, the relief that follows the tearful, heart-wrenching confession leaves us so ready to get clean.. Getting clean starts always with the truth. The story is so not new to doctors... they are in their professions to help... they don't care diddly what we were using, only want to work with us to restore oyr bodies, minRAB and lives. Please, please encourage your boyfriend to tell the whole truth and nothing but. It is only with full disclosure that a doctor can best help us. When we leave out important facts we leave the doctor in a position to not use all his knowledge to help us.
I do not want to mislead and say antidepressants will cure the pill problem overnight, but sure, they can be prescribed. I was on them as well as on opiates. The opiates eventually blocked the ability of the antidepressant to work, but as I tapered off the opiates, the antidepressant kicked in more and more.
In the meantime, I would sugest you start educating yourself with lots and lots of reading on this board about what withdrawal can entail. (would be great if Boyfriend would read also). It ois by learning as much as we can, about symptoms and ways to ease withdrawal that we have the most success.
There is a really good thread on this board (second one in the list?) that gives some great advice on things to take and do in withdrawal. Although the list seems to be written for an at-home do -it -yourselfer, it helped me as well as many, many others even when under professional care.
Hoping the best for you and yours ( and Erica, hope abounRAB in restoring ourselves)
reach