ASAM Practice Pearls

Implementing Substance Use Care Across Care Settings: ED to Ongoing Care

27 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Implementing Substance Use Care Across Care Settings: ED to Ongoing Care cover

Beskrivelse

In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Stephen Taylor hosts Dr. Sarah Wakeman to discuss substance use care in the emergency department, sharing highlights from ASAM's new implementation guide for hospital and emergency department (ED) substance use disorder (SUD) care. Together, they explore the gap between evidence-based addiction treatment and current hospital/ED practice, how frontline non-specialist clinicians can provide effective SUD care, practical implementation models, and how to build seamless care transitions from the ED to ongoing treatment. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1fd6be0-7755-458f-b921-1f18b6b4084e?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-implementing-substance-use-care-across-care-settings-ed-to-ongoing-care/?referral=APP_Ep10] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Stephen M. Taylor, MD, MPH, DFAPA, DFASAM Dr. Stephen M. Taylor is ASAM's President and is board certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, and addiction medicine. With over 30 years of practice experience, Dr. Taylor is dedicated to helping adolescents and adults overcome addiction and co-occurring psychiatric disorders. He has served as the Medical Director of the NBA and NBPA Player Assistance and Anti-Drug Program for 16 years and is the Chief Medical Officer of Pathway Healthcare, which operates multiple outpatient addiction and mental health treatment offices across six states. Expert Sarah Wakeman, MD, FASAM Dr. Sarah Wakeman is the Senior Medical Director for Substance Use Disorder at Mass General Brigham, Director of the Mass General Brigham Program for Substance Use and Addiction Services, and an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She received her AB from Brown University and her MD from Brown Medical School. She completed residency training in internal medicine and served as Chief Medical Resident at Mass General Hospital. She is a diplomate of the American Board of Addiction Medicine and board certified in Addiction Medicine. Clinically, she provides specialty addiction and general medical care in the inpatient and outpatient setting at Mass General Hospital and the Mass General Charlestown Health Center. Her research focuses on the integration of addiction care into general medical settings and opioid use disorder treatment. 📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 02:57 - The Gap in ED and Hospital Addiction Care  * 05:50 - Setting Realistic Expectations for Frontline Clinicians * 08:19 - Critical Elements of Care for Non-specialists * 12:07 - Implementation Systems * 17:15 - Effective Transitions of Care * 21:48 - Closing the Feedback Loop: Sharing Success Stories * 24:37 - Practice Pearls * 26:23 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * Treat the underlying disorder, not just the acute presentation: While effective treatments for SUDs have existed for decades, many emergency departments and hospitals still don’t consistently deliver evidence-based addiction care during admission, often only treating the complications without addressing the underlying condition. * Addiction care should be the standard, not the exception: Initiating medications (e.g., buprenorphine, methadone, naltrexone), managing withdrawal, and linking patients to care should be an expectation for all frontline clinicians. * Consider the seven core competencies as your quality checklist for SUD care: Screening, withdrawal management, overdose response, medication initiation, co-occurring conditions, linkage to care, and risk reduction should all be addressed for every SUD patient. * Systems change can start small and scale: Even without large resources, hospitals can enhance care through clinical pathways, order sets, education, and peer champions, making best practices easier to implement in everyday workflows. Having a peer champion can help implement these practices by normalizing the behavior, providing real-time support, and making the change feel achievable. * Think of system change like motivational interviewing: Approaching the system and framing addiction care in terms the institution already cares about and is familiar with can help make change. * Provide warm handoffs and follow-up: The highest-risk period is the first week post-discharge. Effective models, like Bridge Clinics and low-barrier care connections, can ensure a timely, essential transition to ongoing treatment. * Bring success stories back to the ED: Community partners and clinicians should share success stories with ED clinicians to reinforce the impact of their interventions and motivate continued engagement. 🔗 Resources * Implementation Guide for Hospital and Emergency Department Substance Use Disorder Care [https://www.asam.org/quality-care/implementation-guidance/implementation-guide-hospital] * ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference Session: Implementing Hospital and ED SUD Care: Translating ASAM Guidance into Action  [https://elearning.asam.org/products/implementing-hospital-and-ed-sud-care-translating-asam-guidance-into-action#tab-product_tab_overview/?referral=APP_Ep10_1] 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

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episode Implementing Substance Use Care Across Care Settings: ED to Ongoing Care cover

Implementing Substance Use Care Across Care Settings: ED to Ongoing Care

In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Stephen Taylor hosts Dr. Sarah Wakeman to discuss substance use care in the emergency department, sharing highlights from ASAM's new implementation guide for hospital and emergency department (ED) substance use disorder (SUD) care. Together, they explore the gap between evidence-based addiction treatment and current hospital/ED practice, how frontline non-specialist clinicians can provide effective SUD care, practical implementation models, and how to build seamless care transitions from the ED to ongoing treatment. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1fd6be0-7755-458f-b921-1f18b6b4084e?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-implementing-substance-use-care-across-care-settings-ed-to-ongoing-care/?referral=APP_Ep10] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Stephen M. Taylor, MD, MPH, DFAPA, DFASAM Dr. Stephen M. Taylor is ASAM's President and is board certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, and addiction medicine. With over 30 years of practice experience, Dr. Taylor is dedicated to helping adolescents and adults overcome addiction and co-occurring psychiatric disorders. He has served as the Medical Director of the NBA and NBPA Player Assistance and Anti-Drug Program for 16 years and is the Chief Medical Officer of Pathway Healthcare, which operates multiple outpatient addiction and mental health treatment offices across six states. Expert Sarah Wakeman, MD, FASAM Dr. Sarah Wakeman is the Senior Medical Director for Substance Use Disorder at Mass General Brigham, Director of the Mass General Brigham Program for Substance Use and Addiction Services, and an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She received her AB from Brown University and her MD from Brown Medical School. She completed residency training in internal medicine and served as Chief Medical Resident at Mass General Hospital. She is a diplomate of the American Board of Addiction Medicine and board certified in Addiction Medicine. Clinically, she provides specialty addiction and general medical care in the inpatient and outpatient setting at Mass General Hospital and the Mass General Charlestown Health Center. Her research focuses on the integration of addiction care into general medical settings and opioid use disorder treatment. 📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 02:57 - The Gap in ED and Hospital Addiction Care  * 05:50 - Setting Realistic Expectations for Frontline Clinicians * 08:19 - Critical Elements of Care for Non-specialists * 12:07 - Implementation Systems * 17:15 - Effective Transitions of Care * 21:48 - Closing the Feedback Loop: Sharing Success Stories * 24:37 - Practice Pearls * 26:23 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * Treat the underlying disorder, not just the acute presentation: While effective treatments for SUDs have existed for decades, many emergency departments and hospitals still don’t consistently deliver evidence-based addiction care during admission, often only treating the complications without addressing the underlying condition. * Addiction care should be the standard, not the exception: Initiating medications (e.g., buprenorphine, methadone, naltrexone), managing withdrawal, and linking patients to care should be an expectation for all frontline clinicians. * Consider the seven core competencies as your quality checklist for SUD care: Screening, withdrawal management, overdose response, medication initiation, co-occurring conditions, linkage to care, and risk reduction should all be addressed for every SUD patient. * Systems change can start small and scale: Even without large resources, hospitals can enhance care through clinical pathways, order sets, education, and peer champions, making best practices easier to implement in everyday workflows. Having a peer champion can help implement these practices by normalizing the behavior, providing real-time support, and making the change feel achievable. * Think of system change like motivational interviewing: Approaching the system and framing addiction care in terms the institution already cares about and is familiar with can help make change. * Provide warm handoffs and follow-up: The highest-risk period is the first week post-discharge. Effective models, like Bridge Clinics and low-barrier care connections, can ensure a timely, essential transition to ongoing treatment. * Bring success stories back to the ED: Community partners and clinicians should share success stories with ED clinicians to reinforce the impact of their interventions and motivate continued engagement. 🔗 Resources * Implementation Guide for Hospital and Emergency Department Substance Use Disorder Care [https://www.asam.org/quality-care/implementation-guidance/implementation-guide-hospital] * ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference Session: Implementing Hospital and ED SUD Care: Translating ASAM Guidance into Action  [https://elearning.asam.org/products/implementing-hospital-and-ed-sud-care-translating-asam-guidance-into-action#tab-product_tab_overview/?referral=APP_Ep10_1] 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

15. juni 202627 min
episode Methadone: The Right Dose, Every Day cover

Methadone: The Right Dose, Every Day

EP 03 🎙 Special Series: ASAM's 57th Annual Conference This episode is part of a special three-part series spotlighting key sessions from ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference.   In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar is joined by Drs. Ruth Potee and Ari Kriegsman to explore highlights from their session, The Right Dose, Every Day. Together, they challenge the algorithmic, punitive approaches to methadone treatment, instead promoting individualized, patient-centered care. They share their clinical and philosophical approaches to methadone treatment, including split dosing, missed-dosing protocols, and expanded take-home medications, offering practical insights to help you advocate for your patients and collaborate across care settings. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1df2629-1e0b-4663-b5a4-5f0ef766531d?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-methadone-the-right-dose-every-day/?referral=APP_Ep9] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar, MD, MPH, FAAFP, FACPM, DFASAM Dr. Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar is a family medicine, public health and general preventive medicine, and addiction medicine physician. Her work focuses on expanding access to evidence-based addiction treatment and harm reduction services, and she has over 14 years of experience practicing in medically underserved settings. Dr. Salisbury-Afshar is a Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where she works clinically on an inpatient addiction consult team and is the Medical Director of a low-barrier walk-in clinic for people who use substances. Dr. Salisbury-Afshar is the Vice Chair of ASAM’s Medical Education Council and the Vice Chair of the Conference Program Planning Committee. Expert Ruth Potee, MD, DFASAM, FAAFP Dr. Ruth Potee is a board-certified Family Physician and Addiction Medicine physician who works across Massachusetts. She attended Wellesley College, Yale University School of Medicine, and did her residency at Boston University, where she remained an assistant professor of Family Medicine for eight years. She is currently the Medical Director for Behavioral Health Network and the Franklin County House of Corrections. She oversees 10 methadone clinics, including the first county jail-based methadone clinic in the United States. She was named Franklin County Doctor of the Year by the Massachusetts Medical Society in 2015 and has won multiple teaching awards from medical students and residents.  Expert Ari Kriegsman, MD, FASAM Dr. Ari Kreigsman is the Medical Director of the Carlson Recovery Center, an ASAM 3.7 Level Facility in Springfield, MA. He is also the Medical Director of the BHN Springfield OTP. He is board-certified in Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine. He is a graduate of Weill Cornell Medical College, and completed his residency in Social Internal Medicine at Montefiore/Albert Einstein College of Medicine.  📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 02:30 - Philosophy of Methadone Treatment  * 06:42 - Training Gaps & Need for Individualized Clinical Decision-Making * 08:29 - Caring for Patients with Unique Clinical Needs * 10:13 - Rethinking Missed Dose Protocols * 14:58 - Split Dosing Considerations * 17:04 - Take-Home Medications * 22:21 - Practice Pearls * 25:36 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * Patients choosing methadone choose life: Orient care around the patient's own goals, which is often staying alive and getting their life back. Clinical decisions should align with the patient’s goals and be tailored to each individual. * Promote individualized dosing over rigid protocols: Clinicians should feel empowered to use clinical judgment for methadone dosing. There is no single protocol, and each patient's history, comorbidities, pain, and life circumstances should guide the dosing plan. * Non-punitive missed dose approaches are safe and evidence-based: In most cases, patients who miss doses and continue using opioids can safely resume their previous (or nearly previous) methadone dose. Steep dose reductions can increase the patient's risk of overdose or worsen their substance use disorder. * Split dosing is underused and often essential: Pregnant patients, those with chronic pain, shift workers, and anyone experiencing side effects at peak dosing are strong candidates for split doses. * Take-home medications should be the default, not the reward: No other medication requires a patient to travel daily just to receive it. Methadone take-home medication should be treated as a right unless there's a specific safety concern that outweighs the benefits. * Break down the silos between OTPs and the broader healthcare system: All providers, including hospital and ER clinicians, should familiarize themselves with their local OTP medical directors, establish warm handoff relationships, and feel confident advocating for patients, including requesting that aggressive induction doses or split doses be continued upon transfer to an OTP. 🔗 Resources * The Right Dose Every Time Annual Conference Session: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/the-right-dose-every-day?packages%5B%5D=249456&in_package=249456&sort_by=package_order&form_type=in-package-filter&webinar_type=0&date%5Bstart%5D=&date%5Bend%5D=&keywords=methadone&ref=package&ref_id=249456/?referral=APP_9] * ASAM 55th Annual Conference Session: Clinicians Advocating for Methadone Reform: Community Engagement and Empowerment [https://elearning.asam.org/products/clinicians-advocating-for-methadone-reform-community-engagement-and-empowerment/?referral=APP_Ep9_1] * 8.12 Federal Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Standards [https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-42/chapter-I/subchapter-A/part-8/subpart-C/section-8.12]: 42 CFR 8.12 * Association Between Increased Dispensing of Opioid Agonist Therapy Take-Home Doses and Opioid Overdose and Treatment Interruption and Discontinuation [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35230394/] - Gomes T, Campbell TJ, Kitchen SA, et al. JAMA. 2022;327(9):846-855. doi:10.1001/jama.2022.1271 * Evaluation of a Novel Patient-Centered Methadone Restart Protocol [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40875233/] - Christine PJ, Blum J, Tillman AR, et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2025;8(8):e2529393. Published 2025 Aug 1. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.29393 * Individualizing Methadone Treatment with Split Dosing: An Underutilized Tool [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37301287/] - Braun HM, Potee RA. J Subst Use Addict Treat. 2023;152:209096. doi:10.1016/j.josat.2023.209096 * Treatment Retention, Return to Use, and Recovery Support Following COVID-19 Relaxation of Methadone Take-Home Dosing in Two Rural Opioid Treatment Programs: A Mixed Methods Analysis [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35589443/] - Hoffman KA, Foot C, Levander XA, et al. J Subst Abuse Treat. 2022;141:108801. doi:10.1016/j.jsat.2022.108801 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

1. juni 202626 min
episode Advanced Management of Alcohol Withdrawal cover

Advanced Management of Alcohol Withdrawal

EP 02 🎙 Special Series: ASAM's 57th Annual Conference This episode is part of a special three-part series spotlighting key sessions from ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference.   In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Stephen Taylor is joined by Drs. Tessa Steel and Melissa Weimer to discuss highlights from their Annual Conference session, Advanced Management of Alcohol Withdrawal: Case-Based, Evidence-Informed Solutions. Together, they explore the challenges of managing severe and resistant alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS), effective assessment tools, escalation strategies, and care considerations for high-risk or medically complex patients. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1c38776-829d-4fc3-8a74-dfdd697b9325?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-advanced-management-of-alcohol-withdrawal/?referral=APP_Ep8] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Stephen M. Taylor, MD, MPH, DFAPA, DFASAM Dr. Stephen M. Taylor is ASAM's President and is board-certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, and addiction medicine. With over 30 years of practice experience, Dr. Taylor is dedicated to helping adolescents and adults overcome addiction and co-occurring psychiatric disorders. He has served as the Medical Director of the NBA and NBPA Player Assistance and Anti-Drug Program for 16 years and is the Chief Medical Officer of Pathway Healthcare, which operates multiple outpatient addiction and mental health treatment offices across six states.  Expert Melissa Weimer, DO, MCR, DFASAM Dr. Melissa Weimer is board-certified in Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine, focusing on substance use disorders in hospital settings.  She is an Associate Professor of Medicine at Yale School of Medicine and currently the Medical Director of the Yale Addiction Medicine Consult Service (YAMCS) at Yale New Haven Hospital. Dr. Weimer has worked on local, state, and national levels to enhance access to evidence-based treatments for substance use disorders.  As an educator, she teaches healthcare students and professionals about substance use disorders and serves as the Associate Program Director of the Yale Addiction Medicine Fellowship program. She is also the Medical Director/Lead Trainer for the SAMHSA-funded Providers Clinical Support System-Medications for Alcohol Use Disorder. Expert Tessa Steel, MD, MPH Dr. Tessa Steel is an Assistant Professor, physician-scientist, and Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine doctor at Harborview Medical Center, a county safety-net hospital operated by the University of Washington in Seattle. She is board-certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Medicine, and Critical Care Medicine. Her clinical and research interests include improving hospital-based treatments for alcohol withdrawal syndrome and using hospitalizations to help people with addiction launch their process of recovery.  📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 01:39  - Prevalence and Risk * 02:54 - Assessment Tools and Common Pitfalls * 08:41 - Escalating Pharmacological Strategy * 17:02 - Intubation Decisions and ICU Considerations * 21:57 - Key Takeaways * 25:37 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * Use the right tools to assess alcohol withdrawal: There are several tools that can be used to monitor alcohol withdrawal symptoms and severity, including CIWA-Ar, mMINDS, and RASS; however, it's important to note that CIWA-Ar is not appropriate for patients with altered mental status or inability to self-report. Instead, use mMINDS, RASS, or other objective tools. * Treating alcohol withdrawal is about preventing brain injury, not just controlling agitation: Each withdrawal episode progressively upregulates NMDA receptors and worsens the risk of future brain hyperexcitation through a process called “kindling”. Inadequately treated brain hyperexcitation leads to neuron cell death, resulting in permanent brain damage. Therefore, effective management of alcohol withdrawal presents an opportunity to limit and prevent brain injury. * Match your pharmacology to the physiology and know what each drug is actually doing: Benzodiazepines give you GABA agonism only. Phenobarbital addresses the GABA agonism and glutamate antagonism and is much longer acting, hitting both sides of the main imbalance in the brain caused by alcohol. Dexmedetomidine helps control autonomic instability related to norepinephrine signaling but won't prevent seizures. Ketamine can directly antagonize NMDA-driven hyperexcitation when GABA-directed therapy isn't enough. Propofol gives you titratable cortical suppression once a patient requires intubation. * Front-load benzodiazepines early and monitor closely: When using benzodiazepines for severe alcohol withdrawal, give enough of the medication up-front. Falling behind is very hard to recover from; do not give a dose and walk away for hours without re-evaluation. * Always broaden your differential diagnosis: Severe alcohol withdrawal rarely occurs in isolation. Comorbid illnesses, such as infection, sepsis, trauma, or hepatitis, amplify the neurobiologic stress response and can make withdrawal look refractory when the real driver is something else. * Intubation is a high-stakes decision in this population: Intubation is a trade-off. In complex patients, such as those with advanced liver disease, active infection, or malnutrition, mechanical ventilation risks include secondary ventilator-associated pneumonia and prolonged sedation due to impaired drug clearance. The decision to ventilate should be deliberate, but once made, it should utilize titratable continuous sedation to reliably quiet brain excitation. * Hospitalization is an opportunity for engagement: AWS stabilization is not alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment, and getting a patient safely through withdrawal is necessary but not sufficient. Withdrawal management should be a bridge to longitudinal AUD care, including shared decision-making, addiction consultation, and medications for AUD. 🔗 Resources *  Advanced Management of Alcohol Withdrawal: Case-Based, Evidence-Informed Solutions Annual Conference Session: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/advanced-management-of-alcohol-withdrawal-case-based-evidence-informed-solutions?packages%5B%5D=249456&in_package=249456&sort_by=package_order&form_type=in-package-filter&webinar_type=0&date%5Bstart%5D=&date%5Bend%5D=&keywords=alcohol+withdrawal&ref=package&ref_id=249456/?referral=APP_8_1] * Handouts from session: * Yale New Haven Health System Phenobarbital Guidance [https://annualconference.asam.org/includes/tracking/assetClickTracking.asp?lfp=Zk1TM1B2Y0FOWklZQk5ISUNvVVhKWHNWOElvNHhYK2tUVDNsYzFMbXU4SnNWRGp0bDRjNGZrRzhERjZVcUhTQWdTc0lrT3AxcnRMbDYvYkExcHlSdGFpcjNibU8vZlc5UmQvYnhCSUZsU1ZZMzZEU2d5bzZ4VHJqNS80MzZXZWVQM0R2VVg1NHVwMGxTN2txTFhkUkRaSDBMSVlNSnJzak1yVXNlbHg4Q3g5a250Z090VC9UM3E4NmtvVWh3bWd0RGRkMmpqdXVXb0dabFAxTUdQUFcrUT09] * Supplemental Content from Wolpaw et al, 2025 [https://annualconference.asam.org/includes/tracking/assetClickTracking.asp?lfp=Zk1TM1B2Y0FOWklZQk5ISUNvVVhKZmNlWUY1bjdIOTVHTVFRNEdQdzVha2w1a2tjTXUvSWZVZVlod1h5QTFKV2I2amZ6RVhxQ1crRTNST25QVm81RStaOVYwWXk0bE95QVdxekYyK2M4RlJ6bjUvUmlpM2R4djVQU2NhZ0lET2lwR3V0Z2x0VWtIU0R2SnJwZHp4VEgrQkhSckt6OHc2dEVURDN5RkxBbE02UDNpRnpoMFdVTWFwYkhNSGVYRFduSkNtUGpjclhRWTU1dk1LbEpOT3dPdz09] * PCSS MAUD Education [https://asam-my.sharepoint.com/personal/lwood_asam_org/Documents/Podcast%20-%20ASAM%20Practice%20Pearls/Finalized%20Episodes/Season%202/Ep%208_AC%20Ep%202_Advanced%20Management%20of%20Alcohol%20Withdrawal/%E2%80%A2PCSS-MAUD%20Education:%20Free,%20comprehensive%20training,%20guidance,%20resources,%20and%20mentoring%20on%20the%20prevention,%20diagnosis,%20and%20treatment%20of%20AUD.%E2%80%AF%20%20%20oAssessment%20and%20Management%20of%20Alcohol%20Withdrawal%20%E2%80%93%20Online%20Course%20%20oAlcohol%20Withdrawal%20Syndrome%20in%20the%20Emergency%20Department%20%E2%80%93%20Mini%20Video]: Free, comprehensive training, guidance, resources, and mentoringon the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of AUD. * Assessment and Management of Alcohol Withdrawal – Online Course [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/products/assessment-and-management-of-alcohol-withdrawal] * Medication Matters: Selecting the Right MAUD and Optimizing Outpatient Medically Managed Withdrawal – Online Course [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/products/medication-matters-selecting-the-right-maud-and-optimizing-outpatient-medically-managed-withdrawal] * Who is at Risk of Alcohol Withdrawal? Management in Ambulatory Care – Online Course [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/products/who-is-at-risk-of-alcohol-withdrawal-management-in-ambulatory-care] * Medications for Alcohol Use Disorder: Considerations for Patients with Comorbid Conditions – Digital Resource [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/files/a134f12e-e890-4323-946c-01c595aa537f?ref_id=29210] * Outpatient Management of Alcohol Withdrawal – Digital Resource [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/files/9ce0599d-06b8-4961-9df4-a34f47cf203e] * Treatment of Severe and Complicated Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome – Digital Resource [https://learning.pcss-maud.org/files/a1528636-5d27-4508-b86a-d43272e7f2e3] * Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome in the Emergency Department – Mini Video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OzgzmmbJds&t=69s] * Hospital-wide Implementation, Clinical Outcomes, and Safety of Phenobarbital for Alcohol Withdrawal. [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40853658/] Wolpaw BJ, Oren HO, Quinnan-Hostein et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2025;8(8):e2528694. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.28694 2025 * Phenobarbital for Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome Dosing Guidelines [https://files-profile.medicine.yale.edu/documents/2bc157ba-221b-4ac9-92ca-73c3383c45ce] - Yale New Haven Health; 2020. Accessed April 28, 2026. PDF * The ASAM Clinical Practice Guideline on Alcohol Withdrawal Management [https://www.asam.org/quality-care/clinical-guidelines/alcohol-withdrawal-management-guideline] - American Society of Addiction Medicine. J Addict Med. 2020;14(3S Suppl 1):1-72. doi:10.1097/ADM.0000000000000668 * CIWA-Ar [https://umem.org/files/uploads/1104212257_CIWA-Ar.pdf] – The Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol-Revised (CIWA-Ar) is a validated, 10-question tool used to objectify the severity of alcohol withdrawal. * mMINDS [https://www.mdcalc.com/calc/10599/modified-minnesota-detoxification-scale] - The Modified Minnesota Detoxification Scale (mMINDS) is a 9-item tool to objectively score symptoms for patients with alcohol withdrawal. * RASS [https://www.mnhospitals.org/wp-content/uploads/Portals/Documents/ptsafety/LEAPT%20Delirium/RASS%20Sedation%20Assessment%20Tool.pdf] - The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) is a 10-point scale used to objectively assess agitation and sedation levels in patients who cannot communicate. 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

18. maj 202626 min
episode Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Addiction Medicine cover

Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Addiction Medicine

EP 01 🎙 Special Series: ASAM's 57th Annual Conference This episode is part of a special three-part series spotlighting key sessions from ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference.   In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar is joined by Drs. Sara Polley and Daniel Kaufman to explore highlights from their Annual Conference session, Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Addiction Medicine. Together, they discuss how artificial intelligence is reshaping addiction medicine, including the many ways AI is already being used in clinical care. The conversation focuses on informed consent, maintaining clinical judgment, and ethical considerations. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1ab10a8-6e6c-484b-8bb9-33039c5a1872?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-artificial-intelligence-and-the-future-of-addiction-medicine/?referral=APP_Ep7] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar, MD, MPH, FAAFP, FACPM, DFASAM Dr. Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar is a family medicine, public health and general preventive medicine, and addiction medicine physician. Her work focuses on expanding access to evidence-based addiction treatment and harm reduction services, and she has over 14 years of experience practicing in medically underserved settings. Dr. Salisbury-Afshar is a Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where she works clinically on an inpatient addiction consult team and is the Medical Director of a low-barrier walk-in clinic for people who use substances. Dr. Salisbury-Afshar is the Vice Chair of ASAM’s Medical Education Council and the Vice Chair of the Conference Program Planning Committee. Expert Sara Polley, MD, FAPA, FASAM Dr. Polley is a triple board-certified psychiatrist in adult, child, and adolescent psychiatry and addiction medicine. She provides integrated psychiatric care for youth and families at Vantage Mental Health, a nonprofit clinic serving both Minnesota and Wisconsin. In addition to her clinical work, Dr. Polley is a national consultant, speaker, and educator with the University of Minnesota Medical School. She serves on Minnesota’s Cannabis Advisory Council and holds committee appointments with the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) and the American Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP). Dr. Polley is a passionate advocate for outpatient trauma-informed, developmentally appropriate, and family-centered co-occurring care, drawing on both her clinical experience and personal story as the child of a parent lost to addiction.  Expert Daniel Kaufmann, PhD, LPC, LMHC Dr. Kaufmann is an Associate Professor at Grand Canyon University as well as the Director of Gaming Services at Kindbridge Behavioral Health. He is the author of The Gamer’s Journey (2024), a book focused on explaining the presence of video games in society as a form of mythological storytelling and how these characters and settings can be used therapeutically for every gamer to complete each phase of the hero’s journey in their own lives. Dr. Kaufmann is currently serving as the co-chair of the APA research task force on video game issues and is working on several nationwide training programs to help mental health professionals understand video games in innovative ways. Dr. Kaufmann's publications cover the areas of video games, personality theory, online education, and counselor development. He offers supervision to an international list of clinicians to help bridge the gap in learning about technological impact on society and specific insights related to effective treatment for clients experiencing games-related issues.  📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 01:19 - Expert Introduction and Initial Start with AI  * 04:40 - The Landscape of AI in Addiction Care * 06:41 - AI Assists Clinicians Might Not Realize They Are Using * 08:13 - AI for Search Tools and Scribes * 09:29 - Informed Consent for AI Tools * 14:02 - Patient's Reception of AI in Care Conversations * 15:41 - AI for Progress Notes and Documentation * 19:49 - AI for Patient Advocacy Letters * 22:04  - Guidance for Adopting AI Tools * 25:35 - Advice for Early-Career Health Care Providers * 26:21 - Approaching AI with Curiosity * 29:00 - Words of Advice * 32:50 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * AI is already embedded throughout addiction care: Clinicians are integrating AI into their daily practice, including ambient scribes, literature search tools, helping write progress notes, billing systems, and EMR-driven risk alerts. * Informed consent for AI use requires careful consideration: Clinicians should consider the risk to the patient and the potential impact if the tool were to fail to help determine the appropriate level of AI-informed consent. Consider the risks of the tool failing, the likelihood of catching errors, and whether the patient has the ability to opt out before deciding whether to notify, obtain consent, or determine if consent is even needed. * AI scribes can free up significant time: Using ambient scribes can allow clinicians to focus more on the patient and the therapeutic relationship and less on documentation; however, clinicians must still review all AI-generated content carefully, never treating it as a finished, accurate product. * AI should support, not replace, clinical judgment: AI can be used as a resource to aid clinical administrative work, but it is not a substitute for diagnosis, treatment planning, or medical decision-making. The clinician remains responsible for all care decisions. * Early-career clinicians face a unique risk: Relying on AI before developing foundational clinical skills could lead to long-term competency gaps. Instead, use AI-generated content as a learning tool to develop necessary skills rather than as a shortcut. * Data privacy and HIPAA compliance are non-negotiable: Before adopting any AI tool, clinicians must verify where patient data is sent, who has access, and whether it is protected from being fed into wider internet systems. * Approach AI with curiosity and keep an open mind: AI isn’t going away. Learn how to work with it to help enhance your clinical practice. Educate yourself and use your own judgment on what may or may not be relevant for your own practice. 🔗 Resources * Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Addiction Medicine Annual Conference Session: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/artificial-intelligence-and-the-future-of-addiction-medicine?packages%5B%5D=249456&in_package=249456&sort_by=package_order&form_type=in-package-filter&webinar_type=0&date%5Bstart%5D=&date%5Bend%5D=&keywords=AI&ref=package&ref_id=249456/?referral=APP_7_1] * 2 in 3 physicians are using health AI-up 78% from 2023 [https://www.ama-assn.org/practice-management/digital-health/2-3-physicians-are-using-health-ai-78-2023] - Henry TA. American Medical Association. February 26, 2025. Accessed April 25, 2026 * 77% of Americans Embrace AI in Behavioral Health, but Only with Transparency and Strong Safeguards [https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/02/18/3240313/0/en/77-of-Americans-Embrace-AI-in-Behavioral-Health-But-Only-with-Transparency-and-Strong-Safeguards.html] - GlobeNewswire Qualifacts. February 18, 2026. Accessed April 25, 2026 * A Scoping Review of AI-Driven Digital Interventions in Mental Health Care: Mapping Applications Across Screening, Support, Monitoring, Prevention, and Clinical Education [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40428041/] - Ni Y, Jia F. Healthcare (Basel). 2025;13(10):1205. Published 2025 May 21. doi:10.3390/healthcare13101205 * Clinician Experiences With Ambient Scribe Technology to Assist With Documentation Burden and Efficiency [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39969880/] - Duggan MJ, Gervase J, Schoenbaum A, et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2025;8(2):e2460637. Published 2025 Feb 3. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.60637 * Commercial Products Using Generative Artificial Intelligence Include Ambient Scribes, Automated Documentation and Scheduling, Revenue Cycle Management, Patient Engagement and Education, and Prior Authorization Platforms [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40419172/] - Kunze KN, Bepple J, Bedi A, Ramkumar PN, Pean CA. Arthroscopy. 2025;41(11):4950-4955. doi:10.1016/j.arthro.2025.05.021 * Ethical Considerations for Clinical Adoption of Ambient Digital Scribe Technology [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41453133/] - Anderson TN, Mohan V, Gold JA. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2026;33(3):770-775. doi:10.1093/jamia/ocaf227 * Ethical Obligations to Inform Patients About Use of AI Tools [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40690211/] - Mello MM, Char D, Xu SH. JAMA. 2025;334(9):767-770. doi:10.1001/jama.2025.11417 * New Doc on the Block: Scoping Review of AI Systems Delivering Motivational Interviewing for Health Behavior Change [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40957014/] - Karve Z, Calpey J, Machado C, Knecht M, Mejia MC. J Med Internet Res. 2025;27:e78417. Published 2025 Sep 16. doi:10.2196/78417 * Patient Attitudes Toward Ambient Artificial Intelligence Scribes in Clinical Care: Insights From a Cross-Sectional Study [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41350107/] - Chandrasekaran R, Moustakas E. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2026;33(2):263-272. doi:10.1093/jamia/ocaf218 * Role of the States in the Future of AI Regulation [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40965873/] - Mello MM, Childs PB, Roberts JL. JAMA Health Forum. 2025;6(9):e255020. Published 2025 Sep 5. doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.5020 * Teen and Young Adult Perspectives on Generative AI: Patterns of Use, Excitements, and Concerns [https://digitalthriving.gse.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Teen-and-Young-Adult-Perspectives-on-Generative-AI.pdf] - Hopelab, Common Sense Media, Center for Digital Thriving at Harvard Graduate School of Education. Published 2024. Accessed February 2026 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

4. maj 202633 min
episode Navigating Cannabis and Cannabinoid Use in Today’s Clinical Practice cover

Navigating Cannabis and Cannabinoid Use in Today’s Clinical Practice

In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Drs. Stephen Taylor and Takeo Toyoshima address the misconception that cannabis is not addictive. They discuss how clinicians can better understand the cannabis products their patients are using, navigate the changing legal landscape, and assess for cannabis use disorder using the “Three Cs” framework. The conversation highlights treatment strategies like motivational interviewing and harm reduction, managing cannabis withdrawal, the risk of psychosis from high-potency products, and emerging pharmacotherapy options. Throughout the episode, they offer practical strategies for keeping patients engaged in care.   ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a18aab67-52e9-442b-842d-b585a06d2165?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-navigating-cannabis-and-cannabinoid-use-in-todays-clinical-practice/?referral=APP_Ep6] Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at education@asam.org [education@asam.org]. Host Stephen M. Taylor, MD, MPH, DFAPA, DFASAM Dr. Stephen M. Taylor is ASAM's President and is board-certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, and addiction medicine. With over 30 years of practice experience, Dr. Taylor is dedicated to helping adolescents and adults overcome addiction and co-occurring psychiatric disorders. He has served as the Medical Director of the NBA and NBPA Player Assistance and Anti-Drug Program for 16 years and is the Chief Medical Officer of Pathway Healthcare, which operates multiple outpatient addiction and mental health treatment offices across six states. Expert Takeo Toyoshima, MD Dr. Takeo Toyoshima is the interim program director for the UCSF Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship. He completed medical school at UCLA, then psychiatry residency, addiction psychiatry fellowship, and forensic psychiatry fellowship at UCSF. His main clinical duties are at the San Francisco VA Health Care System, both in the Addiction Recovery Treatment Services' outpatient and intensive outpatient programs and in the Veterans Justice Outreach Clinic, which treats patients who are criminal justice-involved. In these settings, Dr. Toyoshima supervises UCSF medical students, psychiatry residents, addiction psychiatry fellows, and forensic psychiatry fellows, in addition to other allied health profession trainees. He concurrently serves as the VA site director for the UCSF Psychiatry and the Law Program. Outside of UCSF, Dr. Toyoshima also works in clinical and forensic private practice and serves in various roles in organized medicine (American Psychiatric Association, Northern California Psychiatric Society, California Society of Addiction Medicine, American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry, etc.). His clinical interests are in the intersection of psychiatry, addiction, and forensic matters.  📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction  * 01:13 - How to Approach the Conversation with Patients  * 03:51 - Clarifying Terms and Product Use with Patients * 05:52 - Legal and Regional Differences * 08:45 - Addressing Patient’s Perceived Pros and Cons of Cannabis * 11:19 - Assessing for Cannabis Use Disorder * 13:53 - What if a Patient Doesn’t Want to Stop? * 15:49 - Approaching Drug Testing with Patients * 17:43 - Recommended Treatment Options * 20:02  - Cannabis Withdrawal Symptoms * 22:08 - Considerations for Adolescents * 23:21 - The Risk of Psychosis * 24:46 - Harm Reduction * 27:22 - Signs of Cannabis Toxicity  * 31:46 - Key Takeaways * 33:20 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity  📋 Key Takeaways * Cannabis addiction is real and common: Around 10% of people who start using become addicted, and around 30% of current users meet criteria for cannabis use disorder (CUD).  * Ask about products, routes, and potency: Flower, concentrates, edibles, and vapes carry very different risk profiles. Higher potency can lead to faster tolerance and withdrawal.   * Work collaboratively with your patients: Let patients educate you about their use, be curious, and use motivational interviewing techniques in conversation.  * Use the three Cs to assess CUD: Screen for issues with Control, Consequences, and Cravings, then map findings to the DSM-5 criteria together with the patient.  * Recognize cannabis withdrawal: Withdrawal symptoms affect 20–50% of daily users and can include both psychiatric and physical symptoms, such as appetite changes, nausea and vomiting, mild tremors, temperature dysregulation, irritability, anxiety, and mood changes. Sometimes, what patients attribute to anxiety or poor appetite may actually be withdrawal.  * Psychosis is a serious risk: Studies show around a 40% conversion to a schizophrenia diagnosis after a cannabis-induced psychotic episode, especially with high-potency products.  * No FDA-approved medications exist: Gabapentin and N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) are off-label pharmacotherapy options that show evidence for treating CUD, but treating co-occurring psychiatric disorders is equally important.  * Harm reduction is a valid goal: Reducing potency, spacing out use, switching routes, and building in breaks are practical steps when a patient isn't ready for abstinence.  * Keep patients coming back: The therapeutic relationship is the most powerful tool, so focus on patient goals and follow-up.   * Know your legal landscape and testing limitations: Laws vary by state. Standard urine screens will not detect synthetic cannabinoids, and THC metabolites can persist for weeks.  🔗 Resources * ASAM’s 57th Annual Conference [https://annualconference.asam.org/]: Register HERE [https://the-asam-57th-annual-conference.events.asam.org/] * Focus Session: High Risk at Every Stage: Cannabis Exposure During Critical Periods of Development    * ASAM 2025 Review Course: Psychiatric Co-morbidities: Complexities of Diagnosis and Care: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/cannabis-use-disorder-science-trends-and-clinical-implications-2025/?referral=APP_Ep6_1]   * ASAM 56th Annual Conference:  * Cannabinoids and Pregnancy: ASAM Members, Patients and the Public - A Vital Discourse/Debate: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/cannabinoids-and-pregnancy-asam-members-patients-and-the-public-a-vital-discoursedebate/?referral=APP_Ep6_2]  * Anyone Can Treat!: Master Youth Cannabis Use Treatment for Your Practice Setting: Register HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/anyone-can-treat-master-youth-cannabis-use-treatment-for-your-practice-setting/?referral=APP_Ep6_3]  * A Simple Guide to Pot, THC and How Much is Too Much [https://www.latimes.com/projects/la-me-weed-101-thc-calculator/]: Ramos Barreda A, De Leon K, Urmas S. Los Angeles Times. April 20, 2018. Accessed March 24, 2026.   * Cannabis/Marijuana Use Disorder [https://www.yalemedicine.org/conditions/marijuana-use-disorder]: Yale Medicine. July 24, 2024. Accessed March 30, 2026.   * Rates and Predictors of Conversion to Schizophrenia or Bipolar Disorder Following Substance-Induced Psychosis [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29179576/]: Starzer MSK, Nordentoft M, Hjorthøj C. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175(4):343-350. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17020223 * The Health Effects of Cannabis and Cannabinoids: The Current State of Evidence and Recommendations for Research [https://www.nationalacademies.org/publications/24625]: National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2017. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. * Transition From Substance-Induced Psychosis to Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorder or Bipolar Disorder [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37132221/]: Rognli EB, Heiberg IH, Jacobsen BK, Høye A, Bramness JG. Am J Psychiatry. 2023;180(6):437-444. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.22010076 * Understanding Your Risk for Cannabis Use Disorder [https://www.cdc.gov/cannabis/health-effects/cannabis-use-disorder.html]: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. December 5, 2024. Accessed March 30, 2026.  📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! https://www.linkedin.com/company/american-society-of-addiction-medicine/posts/?feedView=allhttps://www.facebook.com/addictionmedicine/https://x.com/asamorg?mx=2https://www.instagram.com/asamorg/https://www.youtube.com/@asamengagement In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

20. apr. 202634 min