ATM

WE CAN HELP YOU GET OVER IT SO YOU CAN GET BACK TO WHAT MATTERS IN LIFE.

The Allied Health Clinic was organized by Victor Torosyan, a successful businessman who came to the United States 17 years ago with, he says, “$365 in my pocket.” Torosyan was motivated to become involved with treatment for addiction after the overdose deaths of two close friends who had been successful professionals before they became addicts. He also was concerned at the rapid growth of opioid addiction in Massachusetts. “It’s destroying lives, destroying families, and destroying communities,” Torosyan said. Torosyan is trained in physics, mathematics, and computer engineering, and also has a bachelor’s degree in economics. Before he got involved in the clinic, he researched addiction treatment and suboxone for one and a half years. Then he hired three professional consulting firms to help plan and organize the clinic. In less than a year, the Allied Health Clinic in Quincy has had enough success in helping its clients get “clean,” to move forward with expanded medical services. The clinic plans to open a primary physician and counseling office next door to the current facility at 21 School Street.

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