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The
Association has been working with the American Society of Addiction
Medicine (ASAM) since 1994 to produce symposia for medical practitioners/clinicians
in methadone treatment programs. Such courses have been offered
as pre-conference sessions during our National Methadone Conferences.
The
Association’s Board of Directors authorized an expansion of this
opportunity so that we could site such training events in different
regions of the United States. The first regional opportunity convened
in Atlanta on September 22, 1999 titled “Opiate Maintenance Pharmacotherapy:
Focus on Methadone/LAAM – A Course for Clinicians”. This event marked
the first training independent from our National Methadone Conferences
and we were joined by a new cosponsor, the American Academy of Addiction
Psychiatry (AAAP).
The
event was attended by more than 100 individuals, the majority of
whom were physicians, nurses and clinicians. It also marked an expansion
of the effort, begun by Drs. Thomas Payte, Peter DeMaria, Susan
Neshin, and Andrea Barthwell during the 1994 National Methadone
Conference, since additional physicians were involved in the Atlanta
presentation. They provided information about opioid pharmacology,
take home medication, dosing practices, pregnancy and prenatal considerations,
pain management, toxicology drug screenings and the development
of new pharmacotherapies.
The
faculty included Dr. Trusandra Taylor, Associate Medical Director
of Community Behavioral Health in Philadelphia, PA, Dr. Thomas Payte,
Medical Director of Drug Dependence Associates in San Antonio, TX
and Dr. Michael Scimeca, Director, Department of Addiction Medicine
at the St. Barnabas Hospital in New York City.
Once
again, the evaluations were extremely favorable and our Association
has been encouraged to replicate this training in other parts of
the country. We were fortunate to receive support through an educational
grant from the Frontier Insurance Company in cooperation with David
Szerlip and Associates to produce this symposium. We will be offering
this training opportunity once again on Sunday, April 9, 2000 as
a pre-conference session during the next National Methadone Conference.
We will expand our sponsorship opportunity at this Conference event
to include the American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine.
The
expansion of this training initiative is another method of preparing
physicians both within and outside the methadone treatment field
for the opportunities to treat stabilized methadone maintained patients
in private medical practice settings through medical maintenance
treatment. In this way, we are fulfilling the recommendations of
the NIH Consensus panel of November 1997, which included “improving
the training that physicians and other healthcare professionals
receive in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with heroin addiction”.
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