Medical Training for Addiction is Still Mostly Unchartered Territory
Medical Training for Addiction is Still Mostly Unchartered Territory
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, addiction is a disease that contributes to 632,000 deaths in the United States annually. However, comprehensive addiction training is still rare in medical school education. A report by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University detailed “the failure of the medical profession at every level — in medical school, residency training, continuing education and in practice” to adequately address and prevent the crisis.Dr. Timothy Brennan, who directs an addiction medicine fellowship at Mount Sinai Health System, said that combating the epidemic with practicing providers is “like trying to fight World War II with only the Coast Guard.” They haven’t been prepared to tackle it head-on.Now, however, after a decade-long push by doctors, medical students and patients to legitimize addiction medicine, slow but steady change is taking root. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) requested that the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine host a workshop, “Integrating Infectious Disease Considerations with Response to the Opioid Epidemic” on March 12 and 13, 2018, to address an urgent need to implement effective opioid use disorder treatment in health care settings and to address the intersecting epidemics of opioid misuse and its infectious disease (ID) consequences.
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Sources:
Most Doctors Are Ill-Equipped to Deal With the Opioid Epidemic. Few Medical Schools Teach Addiction.Integrating Treatment at the Intersection of Opioid Use Disorder and Infectious Disease Epidemics in Medical Settings: A Call for Action After a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Workshop
About Sara E. Teller
Sara is a credited freelance writer, editor, contributor, and essayist, as well as a novelist and poet with nearly twenty years of experience. A seasoned publishing professional, she's worked for newspapers, magazines and book publishers in content digitization, editorial, acquisitions and intellectual property. Sara has been an invited speaker at a Careers in Publishing & Authorship event at Michigan State University and a Reading and Writing Instructor at Sylvan Learning Center. She has an MBA degree with a concentration in Marketing and an MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, graduating with a 4.2/4.0 GPA. She is also a member of Chi Sigma Iota and a 2020 recipient of the Donald D. Davis scholarship recognizing social responsibility. Sara is certified in children's book writing, HTML coding and social media marketing. Her fifth book, PTSD: Healing from the Inside Out, was released in September 2019 and is available on Amazon. You can find her others books there, too, including Narcissistic Abuse: A Survival Guide, released in December 2017.