addiction treatment providers to have.* 155
CASA Columbia’s survey also found that only
11.3 percent of program directors and 8.1
percent of staff providers believe that the
addiction treatment system “should be integrated
into the medical system such that addiction is
treated as a health condition by health care
professionals.”^ Two-thirds of directors (66.3
percent) and 60.3 percent of staff providers,
however, say that the addiction treatment system
“should be two-tiered with health care
professionals providing psychotherapeutic and
pharmacological interventions and individuals
with histories of addiction (in recovery)
providing recovery support services.” Fewer
directors (7.5 percent) but more staff providers
(21.3 percent) indicated that “the system should
revolve around a recovery support model with
self-help/mutual support programs as the main
intervention.” Fifteen percent of directors and
10.3 percent of staff providers think that nothing
about the system should change.^156
Despite this variability in perceptions regarding
what the treatment system should look like,
there is general agreement that the current
system is riddled with organizational and
structural problems that impede the delivery of
quality care, including inadequate financial
resources, high staff turnover and restricted
professional advancement.^157 While limited
education and training of most providers and a
treatment culture largely steeped in the self-help
model stand in the way of adopting new,
science-based practices,^158 organizational and
structural problems within the current treatment
system compound these limitations and further
prevent the delivery of evidence-based care.^159
CASA Columbia’s survey of treatment providers
in New York State found that respondents were
most likely to cite a high volume of paperwork
- Among program directors, 28.9 percent said
personal experience is slightly important, 25.3
percent said it is moderately important and 7.2
percent said it is very important. Among staff
providers, 36.0 percent said personal experience is
slightly important, 21.6 percent said it is moderately
important and 18.7 percent said it is very important.
(reporting requirements that take up too much
time and resources), insufficient salaries to
attract and retain high-quality staff, insufficient
program funding and insufficient insurance
coverage for patients as barriers that “very
much” stand in the way of providers’ ability to
provide effective services to people in need of
addiction treatment--reflecting both frustration
with organizational barriers to quality care and a
non-medical approach to treatment. An
insufficient number of trained medical-level
(MD/DO) professionals was least likely to be
named by providers as a barrier that “very
much” stands in the way of providing effective
treatment services.^160 (Table 10.1)
Table 10.1
New York State Addiction Treatment Providers’ Opinions
of Barriers that “Very Much” Stand in the Way of
Providing Effective Addiction Services
Program
Directors
Staff
Providers
High volume of paperwork/reporting
requirements
76.8
72.7
Insufficient salaries to attract and retain
high-quality staff
74.7 69.8
Insufficient program funding 62.2 63.3
Insufficient insurance coverage 60.2 61.6
Insufficient number of appropriately trained
staff with the qualifications necessary to
provide treatment for co-morbid conditions
56.1
37.4
Insufficient number of trained master’s-
level professionals
28.0 20.9
Insufficient number of appropriately trained
staff with the qualifications necessary to
provide pharmacological therapies
26.5
19.7
Limited motivation among staff members to
be knowledgeable about evidence-based
best practices
24.1
19.7
Insufficient professional standards related
to knowledge and clinical skills for
individuals providing addiction treatment
20.5
21.7
Insufficient federal- or state-level education
and training requirements for individuals
providing addiction treatment
18.1
23.2
Insufficient access to information about
best practices
13.3 15.9
Insufficient number of trained medical-level
(MD/DO) professionals
12.3 13.0
Source: CASA Columbia Survey of New York State Addiction
Treatment Providers, 2009.