For Partners · Competition

The deserts are thin markets, not empty ones.

Several real providers already hold ground in or beside our priority counties. We are honest about that. But none of them does the one thing the region needs most: bring methadone-capable treatment, plus behavioral health, on wheels into the interior and far-south counties no one else reaches. That gap is where we win.

The honest framing

Southern and central Illinois have the state's highest overdose rates and its thinnest treatment coverage — the classic desert profile. But "thin" is not "empty." There is one strong incumbent, a public-health safety net stretched across thirty counties, a few solid clinics on the edges, telehealth available on paper statewide, and one national chain already downstate. The genuine white space is narrow and specific: mobile, methadone-capable treatment with integrated behavioral health, routed through the interior and far-south counties that every existing player leaves uncovered.

1
Methadone clinic in all of southern Illinois — Centerstone Marion, the one to beat
~30
Counties covered by the Egyptian Health Department's buprenorphine program — but no methadone
~3
Mobile methadone units in the entire state — and none of them in the south
0
National treatment chains operating in the deep-south desert today

1 · Illinois treatment providers

These are the providers actually delivering care in or near our priority counties. One of them is formidable. The rest hold the edges of the region or sit far to the north.

Centerstone the one to beat

The dominant treatment provider in the deep south and Metro-East, with sites in Marion, Carbondale, Carterville, West Frankfort, Anna and Alton. It covers Franklin, Williamson, Jackson and Union directly. Crucially, Centerstone Marion is the first and only methadone clinic in southern Illinois — methadone, buprenorphine, counseling, case management and a full continuum of care.

Where it is beatable: its methadone is a single, fixed location. A patient in Jefferson, Saline or Marion County still faces a long daily drive. It has no presence in those interior counties, and the far-southern tier below Anna is thin.

Gateway Foundation

Illinois' largest treatment nonprofit, concentrated in Chicago and along the central spine. Its one deep-south site is a methadone clinic in Carbondale, plus Metro-East sites near (but not in) the desert. Strong brand and full continuum, but a single southern foothold and no low-barrier presence in the interior counties.

Chestnut Health Systems

Central Illinois and Metro-East. Runs a methadone clinic in Belleville with an on-site pharmacy, and integrated treatment, mental health and primary care. Its footprint stops at Metro-East — it does not reach the interior or far-south deserts.

Rosecrance

Northern and central Illinois, with one desert foothold: Rosecrance Danville in Vermilion County. Danville is outpatient and behavioral, likely with in-clinic buprenorphine, but methadone is not confirmed there. So Vermilion is underserved rather than empty — a real gap for methadone-capable care still remains.

Haymarket Center

The largest treatment and mental-health provider in Chicago — detox, residential, medication treatment and a no-deny-for-inability-to-pay posture. Zero downstate presence. We treat it as a model for safety-net access, not a competitor for our counties.

Above and Beyond

A radically low-barrier, free outpatient program on Chicago's West Side — no appointment, insurance or ID required. It refers out for medication rather than prescribing it, and has no rural presence. An excellent design template for low-barrier intake in the deserts.

2 · The safety-net floor

Egyptian Health Department — the public-health backbone

A county health department running an overdose-prevention program across roughly 30 southern counties, including Saline, Franklin, Marion, Jefferson and the full southernmost tier. It delivers buprenorphine and naloxone but no methadone, and a thirty-county prevention mandate is far broader than its real clinical throughput — wide on paper, thin on the ground. This is the floor of access in the region, and a natural partner more than a rival. We add the methadone tier and clinical depth it cannot provide.

3 · Mobile methadone

Almost no one runs it — and no one runs it in the south

A federal rule change in 2021 lets a licensed methadone program add a mobile unit. Almost no one has. There are only about three mobile methadone units in all of Illinois, and the most active mobile operator concentrates its work in Chicago. None operates in the southern or central deserts. The model is operationally heavy — which is exactly why it is scarce, and why a deliberate rural build is defensible. This is the heart of our white space.

4 · Telehealth buprenorphine

Several telehealth providers serve Illinois — Bicycle Health, Workit and Eleanor — and the state runs a free, same-day buprenorphine line, MAR NOW, reachable through the Illinois Helpline. They are increasingly available statewide on paper, but they share three hard limits:

Can't dispense methadone

Telehealth can start and maintain buprenorphine, but methadone can only be dispensed by a licensed methadone program in person. The treatment the deep south most lacks is the one telehealth cannot provide.

Phone- and pharmacy-dependent

It relies on a smartphone, a connection and a nearby pharmacy to fill the prescription — all scarce in rural deserts. And the evidence shows telehealth mostly serves people who would have found care anyway, rather than reaching new, underserved populations.

A referral channel, not a rival

We treat telehealth and MAR NOW as a front door into our physical and mobile capacity, not as competition. They route patients; we provide the in-person methadone, behavioral health and on-the-ground reach they cannot.

5 · National chains

Already here — but not in the south

BayMark runs full methadone programs in central and downstate Illinois — Champaign, East Peoria, Normal and Springfield. It is established in the state, but none of its sites sit in the deep-south desert.

The most likely future entrant

Spero Health runs a rural, small-town, low-cost outpatient model across several border states. That model is the closest archetypal fit for southern Illinois, and the bordering states make Illinois its natural next step. The deep south is a real, contested-but- currently-empty expansion zone — first-mover advantage is genuine, but time-limited.

The competitive landscape at a glance

Click any column header to sort. The pattern is consistent: strong players hold the edges and the cities, but the interior and far-south counties — and methadone on wheels — go uncovered.

Competitor Category Footprint vs. our deserts Strength Gap
Centerstone IL provider In Franklin, Williamson, Jackson, Union Only southern-IL methadone clinic; full continuum Single fixed methadone site; no interior or far-south reach; no mobile
Gateway Foundation IL provider One deep-south site (Carbondale) Scale, brand, full continuum Stops at Carbondale; no interior-county access; no mobile
Chestnut Health Systems IL provider Metro-East only (Belleville) Methadone clinic + integrated primary care No deep-south or interior penetration
Rosecrance IL provider One foothold in Vermilion (Danville) Outpatient + behavioral presence in Vermilion No confirmed methadone; limited medication depth; no southern reach
Egyptian Health Department Safety net ~30 southern counties (Saline, Franklin, Marion, Jefferson) Broadest rural mandate; community trust Buprenorphine only — no methadone; thin throughput
Mobile methadone (statewide) Mobile ~3 units total; concentrated in Chicago Reaches outside clinic walls None in the southern or central deserts
Bicycle / Workit / Eleanor Telehealth Statewide on paper Fast, low-friction buprenorphine start No methadone; phone- and pharmacy-dependent; doesn't expand access
MAR NOW (state line) Telehealth Statewide, free, same-day Free buprenorphine backbone, no insurance needed No methadone; thin in-person and behavioral depth
BayMark National chain Central/downstate (Champaign, Springfield, Peoria, Normal) Full methadone programs; established in IL No deep-south sites
Spero Health National chain Not in IL yet (border states) Proven rural, low-cost outpatient model Not here today — the entrant to beat to the punch

Where the white space is

Put the five categories together and a single, specific opening emerges: mobile, methadone-capable treatment with integrated behavioral health, routed through the interior and far-south desert counties. No competitor does this. Centerstone has the only southern methadone clinic but it is fixed in place; the safety net has reach but no methadone; telehealth can't dispense methadone at all; and no national chain is in the deep south yet.

Jefferson County — Mt. Vernon

Only the Egyptian Health Department's broad mandate touches it. No confirmed methadone clinic. A strong, near-empty target.

Marion County — Salem & Centralia

Same thin coverage. (This is the county of Marion, distinct from the city of Marion, which sits in Williamson County.)

Saline County — Harrisburg

The Egyptian Health Department offers buprenorphine here, but there is no methadone and no large clinic. Adding methadone is a clear differentiator.

The far-southern tier

Alexander, Pulaski, Massac, Pope, Hardin and Johnson — only the safety-net mandate and a nearby Centerstone site touch this region. Extremely thin.

Vermilion County — Danville

Rosecrance is present with outpatient and likely buprenorphine care, but no confirmed methadone. Underserved rather than empty — a methadone-capable presence still fills a real gap.

Our differentiators

An already-licensed provider

We operate through Two Dreams, an existing Illinois-licensed treatment provider. That shortens time-to-launch dramatically — a national chain entering cold spends a year on what we already hold.

Integrated mobile + behavioral health

We pair on-the-ground mobile delivery with real, integrated behavioral health — the combination the telehealth players and the safety net both lack, and the one the evidence supports.

Dr. Barthwell's clinical authority

Our chief medical officer, Dr. Andrea Barthwell — past ASAM president and former deputy director of the White House drug-policy office — brings clinical and regulatory credibility no out-of-state entrant can match quickly.

Grant-funded, data-targeted siting

Opioid-settlement and state desert funds can underwrite the capital-heavy mobile build, and we site units on overdose and provider-gap data — a defensible, fundable narrative that also wins grants.

Said plainly: several counties are contested

We don't pretend the region is empty. Centerstone is genuinely strong across Franklin, Williamson and Jackson; the Egyptian Health Department reaches nearly every target county with buprenorphine; Gateway, Chestnut and BayMark hold real ground nearby; and Rosecrance is established in Vermilion. We don't fight incumbents where they are entrenched — we take the methadone-and-mobile gap they all leave, partner where partnering makes sense, and move before the next national chain crosses the border.