Hospital-Based Addiction Medicine Healthcare Providers: High Demand, Short Supply
- PMID: 30633046
- PMCID: PMC6750948
- DOI: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000488
Hospital-Based Addiction Medicine Healthcare Providers: High Demand, Short Supply
Abstract
: Substance use disorders account for a significant burden of disease and place an enormous strain on the health care system in the United States and beyond. Despite death tolls climbing, a myriad of evidence-based medications exist to effectively treat many substance use disorders including nicotine, alcohol, and opioid use disorders. To date, hospitals have largely been overlooked as a setting ripe for the delivery of specialized addiction care. This occurs despite a high lifetime prevalence of a substance use disorder (50%) occurring among hospitalized individuals. A potential barrier to this is the lack of addiction medicine training that currently exists in undergraduate and graduate medical education. Consequently, a paucity of existing physicians report feeling competent to adequately screen for, diagnose or treat substance use disorders. Given the prevalence, cost and potentially lethal consequences of substance use disorders, a critical need exists to improve its identification and evidence-based management in hospital settings.
References
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- American Society of Addiction Medicine. Paths to certification. Available at: https://www.asam.org/membership/paths-to-certification. 2018. Accessed October 20, 2018.
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- Center for Health Information and Analysis. Behavioral health and readmissions in Massachusetts acute care hospitals. 2016. Available at: https://archives.lib.state.ma.us/bitstream/handle/2452/422938/ocn9565044.... Accessed October 20, 2018.
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