Addiction
Medicine
Only about 10 percent
of the 21 million Americans who meet the need for care for an alcohol or drug
use disorder receive any form of treatment, and much of the treatment available
does not meet standards for evidence-based care. There are many attitudinal and
systemic reasons for this treatment gap, including stigma against treating
people with addictions and institutional barriers to providing or funding
addiction treatment. Another obstacle is the fact that, until now, addiction
medicine has not been a recognized area in which physicians can specialize—a
fact that has had important implications for the quality and amount of
education that medical students receive and that new physicians are given in
their residency training for addressing patients with substance use disorders.
Addiction Medicine formally recognized as a medical subspecialty
A major milestone was
reached on March 14, 2016, when the American Board of Medical Specialties
(ABMS) formally announced recognition of the field of Addiction Medicine as a
medical subspecialty. This is a development with enormous symbolic and
practical implications for health care and for those affected by drug and
alcohol use disorders, including nicotine addiction. It signals the legitimacy
of Addiction Medicine as a field of specialized study and practice, and it will
enable the accreditation and expansion of Addiction Medicine training programs.
Being certified by an
ABMS-recognized medical specialty or subspecialty demonstrates a physician’s
expertise in that specialty area. "Board certification" is thus a
prized and necessary credential to work as a medical specialist, assuring that
a physician meets the highest standards in his or her particular field. The
emergence of this standard credential for Addiction Medicine considerably
raises the bar for the quality of care in this crucial medical domain, and it
will lead to major enhancement of the health care workforce.
Until now, the only
physicians able to gain certification as addiction specialists have been
psychiatrists. Addiction Psychiatry (ADP) has been a subspecialty of psychiatry
since 1992. ADP physicians are experts in substance use disorders and their
psychiatric comorbidities for patients seen in primarily psychiatric venues.
The new Addiction Medicine subspecialty will be open to physicians with any
primary medical specialty. Addiction Medicine physicians will be experts in
substance use disorders and their medical comorbidities for patients seen
mainly in primary care venues.
Until now, none of
the more than 9,500 accredited U.S. graduate medical education residency
programs have had training programs in Addiction Medicine, and programs that
cover addiction in their curriculum have few training or certification
requirements ensuring that students learn prevention and treatment curricula
that are up to date with current science. The new Addiction Medicine credential
will be a powerful force for ensuring that treatment of substance use disorders
in the United States is based on the current state of the evidence and
consistent with our understanding of addiction as a brain disorder.
Another result of
this new development is that it will facilitate insurance coverage for patients
seeking and receiving services from board-certified addiction specialists, as
well as facilitate reimbursement to physicians, clinics, hospitals, and health
systems that offer services in Addiction Medicine. This will create important
institutional incentives for health care to invest in prevention and early
intervention in order to reduce the costs of treating substance use disorders
once they have progressed to their severest forms.
Recognition of
Addiction Medicine by the ABMS was the result of years of concerted effort by
the American Board of Addiction Medicine (ABAM), the Addiction Medicine
Foundation, and the American Society of Addiction Medicine with the support of
NIDA and other federal partners such as the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism and the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.
In
a statement issued to mark this
milestone, ABAM President Robert J. Sokol summed up its significance:
"This landmark event, more than any other, recognizes addiction as a preventable
and treatable disease, helping to shed the stigma that has long plagued it. It
sends a strong message to the public that American medicine is committed to
providing expert care for this disease and services designed to prevent the
risky substance use that precedes it."
0 comments:
Post a Comment