Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice

(lu) #1

All Medical Schools and Residency


Training Programs Should Educate and


Train Physicians to Address Risky


Substance Use and Addiction


All physicians should be educated and trained in
the origins of risky substance use and addiction;
prevention, intervention, treatment and
management options; co-occurring conditions;
and special population and specialty-care needs,
including:


 What constitutes risky substance use, the
harms of such use to health and safety and
the importance of reducing risky use;


 How to screen for risky substance use and
conduct brief interventions when indicated;


 The causes and correlates of addiction;


 How to diagnose addiction; evaluate disease
stage, severity, co-occurring disorders and
needs of special populations; and develop a
treatment and disease management plan
including appropriate support services;


 How to collaborate with and manage a
multidisciplinary team of providers;


 How to provide or supervise psychosocial
and pharmaceutical treatments for addiction
and disease management;


 How to arrange for and connect patients
with auxiliary support services; and


 How to determine the need for specialty care
and connect patients with such care.


These core clinical competencies should be
required components of all medical school
curricula, medical residency training programs,
medical licensing exams, board certification
exams and continuing medical education (CME)
requirements, including maintenance of
certification programs.


Require Non-Physician Health


Professionals to be Educated and Trained


to Address Risky Substance Use and


Addiction


Develop core clinical competencies in
addressing risky substance use and preventing
and treating addiction for each type of non-
physician health professional including
physician assistants, nurses and nurse
practitioners, dentists, pharmacists and graduate-
level clinical mental health professionals
(psychologists, social workers, counselors).
These competencies should include:

 What constitutes risky substance use, the
harms of such use to health and safety and
the importance of reducing risky use;

 How to screen for risky substance use and
conduct brief interventions when indicated;

 The causes and correlates of addiction;

 Available psychosocial and pharmaceutical
treatments for addiction and disease
management;

 How to arrange for and connect patients
with auxiliary support services; and

 How to determine the need for specialty care
and connect patients with such care.

Assure that these core clinical competencies and
specialized training are required components of
all professional health care program curricula,
graduate fellowship training programs,
professional licensing exams and continuing
education (CE) requirements.

For non-physician health professionals involved
in the provision of addiction care, core
competencies also should include how to work
in concert with a patient’s physician and other
health care providers to screen for risky
substance use; provide brief interventions;
diagnose addiction; evaluate disease stage,
severity and co-occurring disorders; and develop
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