ASAM Practice Pearls
In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Drs. Stephen Taylor and Sharon Stancliff explore the role of social determinants of health (SDoH) in addiction care. They discuss the biopsychosocial model of addiction and emphasize the importance of understanding social factors such as housing, transportation, and economic stability when providing effective care. They highlight the need for clinicians to engage with patients in their environments, advocate for policy changes, and address racial disparities in addiction treatment, offering practical strategies clinicians can use to support patients facing social challenges. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/files/a1443da8-56cb-4ff3-8e67-94373f027bdc?ref_id=23761] Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE [https://elearning.asam.org/products/asam-practice-pearls-social-determinants-of-health-making-an-impact-in-addiction-care/?referral=APP_Ep4] 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 Sharon Stancliff, MD Dr. Stancliff is Associate Medical Director for Harm Reduction in Health Care at the AIDS Institute, NYSDOH and sees patients at a shelter in New York City. Dr. Stancliff has been working with people who use drugs since 1990, including the provision of primary care, drug treatment, HIV care, and syringe access. She is currently focused on opioid overdose prevention through expanding access to naloxone and expanding access to buprenorphine in primary care and in less traditional settings, such as syringe exchange programs. Dr. Stancliff graduated from the School of Medicine at the University of California at Davis, did her Family Practice residency at the University of Arizona, and completed the AIDS Institute-sponsored Nicolas Rango HIV Clinical Scholars Program at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City. She is board-certified in Family Medicine and in Addiction Medicine. She served on the Public Policy Committee of ASAM. 📖 Show Segments * 00:05 - Introduction * 02:29 - The Role of SDoH in Addiction * 06:00 - Prioritizing Competing Social Needs * 08:57 - The Clinician’s Role in Addressing SDoH * 12:11 - Making Your Voice Heard * 14:09 - The Impact of Race on Addiction Treatment * 16:38 - Tailoring Treatment to Social Context * 19:31 - Navigating Social Networks and Environmental Challenges * 22:30 - Key Takeaways * 24:50 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity 📋 Key Takeaways * View addiction through a biopsychosocial lens: Addiction involves complex interactions among brain circuits, genetics, the environment, and an individual's life experiences. It doesn’t develop solely from biological factors, making it essential to address SDoH during treatment. * Prioritize patients’ social needs: Housing instability, poverty, transportation access, food insecurity, and other environmental factors significantly impact a patient’s ability to engage in treatment and are often overlooked. * Focus on safety, stability, and patient goals: Abstinence-only approaches are outdated. Treatment should prioritize whether patients are safer, more stable, and more engaged in care, even if they're still using substances. Focusing on harm reduction and incremental progress promotes patient-centered care and improves engagement. * Engage patients in the community and provide low-threshold care: Meet patients where they are, shelters, streets, and needle exchanges, to better understand their challenges and build trust with populations that might fear traditional healthcare settings. Offering low-threshold community care rather than requiring clinic visits reduces barriers to access and further supports relationship-building. * Tailor treatment to social realities: Adjust prescription lengths, visit frequency, and monitoring based on each patient’s circumstances (e.g., shorter prescriptions if someone can't safely store medications in a shelter, longer prescriptions to reduce transportation barriers). * Recognize how race and criminalization shape treatment access: The war on drugs disproportionately harms people of color, creating cycles of incarceration, overdose risk, and barriers to housing and employment. * Address loneliness and isolation: Many patients on buprenorphine often lack social support. Helping them identify healthy networks and community spaces can reduce loneliness and support recovery. * Advocate for system-level change: Clinicians should make their voices heard by engaging with legislators, health departments, and professional organizations like ASAM to help shape policies that support low-threshold, flexible, and equitable addiction treatment options. 🔗 Resources * ASAM’s DEI Online Education Series (FREE): * Taking Action to Minimize Inequalities in Addiction Medicine [https://elearning.asam.org/products/taking-action-to-eliminate-inequities-in-addiction-medicine/?referral=APP_Ep4_1] * Addressing Intersectionality within Addiction Medicine [https://elearning.asam.org/products/addressing-intersectionality-within-addiction-medicine/?referral=APP_Ep4_2] * Health Disparities in Substance Use Disorder [https://elearning.asam.org/products/health-disparities-in-substance-use-disorder-2/?referral=APP_Ep4_3] * Setting the Stage: Racism in the History of Substance Use and Addiction [https://elearning.asam.org/products/setting-the-stage-racism-in-the-history-of-substance-use-and-addiction-2/?referral=APP_Ep4_4] * Advancing Racial Justice and Health Equity In the Context of Addiction Medicine [https://www.asam.org/advocacy/public-policy-statements/justice]: ASAM’s public statement to recognize, understand, and counteract the adverse effects of America’s historical, pervasive, and continuing systemic racism, specifically with respect to addiction prevention, early intervention, diagnosis, treatment, and recovery. * Structural Competency Working Group [https://structcomp.org/]: An organization founded in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2014 that develops and shares curricula, workshops, and resources to help healthcare professionals recognize and address the social and structural determinants of health. * Structural Competency [https://structural-competency.com/]: provides training materials and resources designed to help healthcare professionals understand and address the social, political, and economic structures that shape health disparities, supporting the broader mission of the Structural Competency Working Group. * One Doctor’s Experience Shows the Battle for the Future of Addiction Medicine [https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2026/01/05/nx-s1-5660694/addiction-treatment-opioids-cocaine-abstinence]: Pattani A. NPR via Houston Public Media. January 5, 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.
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