MGH Bridge Clinic 100 Blossom Street, Boston, MA 02114
About the Business
MGH Bridge Clinic, located at 100 Blossom Street in Boston, Massachusetts, is a leading health institution dedicated to providing expert care in the field of substance use and addiction services. The clinic offers a range of services, including addiction pharmacotherapy, peer support groups, treatment coordination, mental health care, and harm reduction education.
The clinic's mission is to bridge the treatment gap by offering compassionate care to patients at all stages of addiction. The multidisciplinary team at the clinic works to engage and stabilize high-risk patients before connecting them to long-term community-based care. The clinic also provides walk-in and appointment-based services to ensure access to evidence-based treatment.
In addition to the Bridge Clinic, Mass General offers a variety of other addiction treatment programs, including the West End Clinic for alcohol and drug addictions, the Addiction Recovery Management Service for teenagers and young adults, and the HOPE Clinic for pregnant individuals with substance use disorder.
For healthcare professionals looking to advance their careers in addiction medicine, Mass General offers a one-year clinical fellowship and an Integrated Substance Use Disorder Training Program. These programs aim to prepare physicians, nurse practitioners, psychologists, and social workers for clinical and academic careers in addiction medicine.
For more information about the services offered at MGH Bridge Clinic and other addiction treatment programs at Mass General, contact Elizabeth Powell, Administrative Director of the Program in Substance Use & Addiction Services, at [email protected] or 617-726-3557. Explore fellowship, residency, internship, and educational opportunities available at Mass General to further your career in addiction medicine.
Location & Phone number
100 Blossom St, Boston, MA 02114, United States
Reviews
"*****transgender warning**** I came here seeking substance abuse treatment. I first met with Dr. keho. She agreed it was terrible the way I had been treated at other places. She then got pages and returned the page in the begging of our meeting. She hung up and immediately called me by my dead name. I became infuriated but said nothing, I apologised and said I couldn't hear her I had to go. She said she was sorry but my new name was "in quotes". I said yes that means thats what you are supposed to say. I guess the Dr. Did not minor in English? I next met with a different Dr. Who prescribed Topamax. The list of common side effects for Topamax is worse than being drunk all the time. She then promised" Sophia" would contact me for in patient treatment. I departed bur, not before Dr. Keho came in to go sit and while speaking to the other Dr. called me "he". I didn't bother to complain. I got a VM from someone for a person named "Dan". I figured out a few days later that this was the placement person "Sophia" calling . I exchanged a bunch of texts with her where she tells me to go somewhere else to seek placement. Really. So after 2 + weeks getting called the wrong pronouns. wrong name , by doctors the secretary Hana? Left me a voicemail calling me "Mr. Carter".. After going thru all that and complaining to patient advocacy multiple times all I got was sent somewhere else and a script for Topamax a drug with a long lost of adverse common side effects. Somehow, I'm supposed to feel like none of this is because I wear women's clothing? Partners! Why do you hate transgender women so very much!?"
"Would recommend 10/10"
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