Winner of the 2011 APEX Award for Publication Excellence follow @IntMedNews
RSS Feeds
Find Us on Facebook

Addiction Medicine on the Road to Subspecialty Status

By: NASEEM S. MILLER, Internal Medicine News Digital Network

Dr. Daniel P. Alford stumbled into addiction medicine after he finished his residency in internal medicine more than a decade ago.

He hesitantly took a part-time position as the medical director for a city-run methadone maintenance program and ended up staying for 10 years. "I loved it the minute I got there," he said.

"I realized that there’s a whole other world out there in terms of addiction treatment that I wasn’t exposed to. Generalist disciplines ... get exposed to the most severe forms of the problem, but when I got to the methadone maintenance program, I met all these patients who were doing great. Their problem was being treated with medication and counseling," he said.

Today, he’s the director for the addiction medicine residency program at Boston University, which is 1 of 10 training programs in the country that have recently become accredited by the American Board of Addiction Medicine (ABAM). One of his goals now is to eliminate the stigma that addiction treatment is always a losing proposition.

There’s a big push to educate nonpsychiatrists about the progress of addiction treatment, and one way to do that is by gaining subspecialty recognition, explained Dr. Richard D. Blondell, ABAM’s chairman of the Residency Accreditation Review Committee. The goal is to get an additional 10-15 addiction medicine programs accredited by July 2012 to reach the target 20-25 programs that are required for subspecialty recognition by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS).

"We’re the largest group of physicians that doesn’t have a home," he said. Subspecialty accreditation is a "very important step. The goal is to bring the specialty of addiction medicine under the tent of organized medicine."

Although nonpsychiatrists have practiced addiction medicine for decades and thousands have been certified by ABAM and by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, none of the postresidency training programs has been accredited or recognized by the national bodies, ABMS, or the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME).

Dr. Blondell said that part of the reason that addiction medicine hasn’t become a recognized subspecialty is the fact that the field isn’t highly compensated. "So, there aren’t many resources to do all the paperwork. It’s taken us a bit longer, but we’ll get there."

Advocates say that having addiction medicine as a recognized subspecialty will open the door to physicians from various backgrounds to train in the field and will help increase patient access to addiction treatment. In addition, they say having more experts in the field will help educate the physician workforce, reduce the stigma among physicians, and help with existing reimbursement issues.

"In a sense no specialty wanted to claim addiction medicine," said Dr. Peter Friedmann, professor of medicine and community health at Brown University in Providence, R.I., and an ABAM-certified addiction medicine specialist. It really is a field that crosses disciplines, and "the establishment of residency really sets the wheels in motion to have specialists in medical centers and in communities recognized for this particular expertise. It also brings a level of legitimacy, and a certain body of knowledge that is important for all physicians to know and to integrate into their practices."

More Information
09/08/11  

Bookmark and Share


Submitting your vote...
Average rating: 5.0 of 5
Click the rating bar to rate this item.

More Information

Accredited Addiction Medicine Residency Training Programs

I would like to receive The IMpulse E-Newsletter each week.


Specialty Focus
Sponsored by


calendar
May 18 - 23
San Francisco, CA
American Thoracic Society (ATS): International Conference
May 19 - 24
Atlanta, GA
American Urological Association (AUA): Annual Meeting
May 19 - 23
Stockholm,
European Calcified Tissue Society (ECTS): Annual Congress
May 20 - 23
Brisbane,
Australasian College of Dermatologists: Annual Scientific Meeting
May 20 - 23
San Antonio, TX
American Pediatric Surgical Association (APSA): Annual Meeting
May 20 - 23
Washington, DC
American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP): Leadership & Advocacy Conference
May 21 - 23
Nice,
12th International Review of Bipolar Disorders (IRBD 12)
May 21 - 25
Sarasota, FL
American Medical Seminars: Cardiology Update in Primary Care
May 22 - 25
Lisbon,
21st European Stroke Conference
May 23 - 27
Philadelphia, PA
American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE): Annual Meeting and Clinical Congress
More Calendar »