Chapter X
The Evidence-Practice Gap
The prevention and reduction of the risky use of
addictive substances and the treatment of
addiction, in practice, bear little resemblance to
the significant body of evidence-based practices
that have been developed and tested;* indeed
only a small fraction of individuals receive
interventions or treatment consistent with
scientific knowledge about what works.^1
Providing quality care to identify and reduce
risky use and diagnose, treat and manage
addiction requires a critical shift to science-
based interventions and treatment by medical
professionals--both primary care providers and
specialists.
Significant barriers stand in the way of making
this critical shift, including an addiction
treatment workforce that is largely unqualified
to implement evidence-based practices; a health
professional that should be responsible for
providing addiction screening, interventions,
treatment and management but does not
implement evidence-based addiction care
practices; inadequate oversight and quality
assurance of treatment providers and
intervention practices; limited advances in the
development of pharmaceutical treatments; and
a lack of adequate insurance coverage.
Recent efforts by government agencies and
professional associations have begun to tackle
these challenges to closing the evidence-practice
gap, but are insufficient.
Current Approaches to Risky
Substance Use and Addiction Are
Inconsistent with the Science and
with Evidence-Based Care
Unlike other public health problems and
diseases that are met with qualified medical care
* See Chapters IV-VI.