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2007-2011
Introduction
AATODs Board of Directors approved a strategic organizational five-year
plan during October 2001. AATOD implemented this plan in conjunction
with Board Members, federal and state agencies, partnering policy
organizations, corporations, patient advocacy groups and foundation
support during the
course of the past five years.
This strategic plan led to the implementation of the Criminal Justice
Project, the development of a longitudinal study involving 75 OTPs,
the creation of a cutting edge website, the expansion of a rapid
and national communication network, the expansion of the AATOD Membership
Brochure, the development of new state association chapters and
the launching of an international initiative with our EUROPAD colleagues.
The Board felt that it was critical to go beyond the boundaries,
which restrict planning at the individual program and state level.
It was understood that bold and long-range initiatives were critically
important to guide the future of our treatment system, requiring
a focused effort in selecting the most critical initiatives, which
would have the most substantive impact in shaping national drug
policy, treatment programs and patient care. It was also understood
that time and money was finite and needed to be judiciously utilized
in managing our resources to the best possible advantage.

I. Supporting the Treatment System
The Board has anticipated the need to support the treatment system
in the United States through existing AATOD State Member chapters,
developing new statewide chapters and supporting individual treatment
programs whenever possible.
We have used our conferences as the most significant and public
means of training treatment providers throughout the United States
concerning new clinical practice initiatives in addition to sharing
the most current research findings to improve patient care. We have
also been training managers, medical staff and other clinical personnel
in understanding the most current issues affecting patient care.
We have continued to work with SAMHSA and the Center for Substance
Abuse Treatment in developing Treatment Improvement Protocols (TIPs)
to enhance such clinical treatment decision making at the program
level in addition to supporting accreditation regulations, continually
moving OTPs to higher levels of quality care within the treatment
system. We will continue to support such improvements in program
planning over the next five years in
working with all federal and state agencies, in addition to approved
accrediting organizations.

A. AATOD National Conferences
We have been using the AATOD conferences to showcase leading AATOD
initiatives through the Five Year Plan. The conference program has
also been evolving into a major training opportunity as we promote
evidence-based practices and patient-centered care. All of the components
in this section have been featured in these conferences.

B. Prescription Opioid Study
AATOD implemented a major and long-term research project (Opioid
Use Study) beginning in 2004 through an initial grant from Purdue
Pharma and subsequent and continued funding through the Denver Department
of Health. We have been working with our research partner (NDRI)
in developing this study and have already learned valuable information
about changing trends in patient characteristics.

C. Training OTP Personnel About HCV
AATOD also initiated a training component for OTP personnel during
2002-2006. This HCV training has been supported by the Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment and we have worked with a series of partners
in moving this forward. The Hepatitis-C Association has been the
leading partner in training and providing effective consultants
to work with OTPs in accessing the most current information about
treating patients with Hepatitis-C. AATOD has also used its national
conferences as a means of expanding the initiative so that the greatest
number of people would be able to access this information through
this training initiative. The key concept was using federal support
and working with the best and most informed training
partners in order to take the information directly to the program
to reach the greatest number of staff possible, minimizing disruption
to the treatment programs.

D. Opioid Maintenance Pharmacotherapy:
A Course for Clinicians
AATOD initiated a physician training program, which later expanded
to training all treatment providers, in 1994. We have been receiving
financial support from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
to continue these training programs through our national conferences.
We have also been able to provide regional and statewide training
programs, using the same format with different funding vehicles.
We will look to expand this initiative in the coming five years,
drawing upon support from other corporate/pharmaceutical entities
in addition to working with NIDA. We will also continue to partner
with national professional medical organizations as a means of expanding
training opportunities for medication-assisted treatment as well.

E. Training Management and Clinical Personnel
to Communicate with the Media
AATOD identified a new and critical area of training so that OTP
management and personnel would be able to communicate effectively
with media representatives. This became an increasingly important
issue as more mortalities were reported in media outlets related
to methadone prescribing through physician practice settings. The
initiative began in 2003 through financial support from VistaPharm
and has continued through 2006. We will work with AATODs Public
Relations committee in addition to media training specialists from
Executive Communications through continued support from VistaPharm
in refining these media messages through a series of regional training
events leading to a special session to convene during the National
Conference in 2007.
We also anticipate continuing and refining this message over the
course of the next five years. It is critically important that we
use this vehicle in educating the media and, therefore, educating
the United States and other nations about the value of this treatment
experience. Only through such media training mechanisms will we
be able to effectively influence public opinion, which continues
to provide qualified support for Medication Assisted Treatment.

F. Risk Management Initiatives
An increasing number of liability claims against OTPs caused the
AATOD Board of Directors to conduct a professional liability insurance
survey through AATODs leading insurance policy consultant (David
Szerlip & Associates) in better understanding the impact that
such claims were having on treatment programs in addition to professional
liability insurance underwriters.
The most recent survey was conducted in 2004 and led to the development
of specialized risk management training initiatives, which premiered
during the 2004 AATOD conference in Orlando and continued during
the April 2006 conference in Atlanta.
We are working with David Szerlip & Associates, the Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment and the Legal Action Center in developing
the next training opportunity for the October 2007 conference in
San Diego. We have been steadily reaching a larger group of treatment
providers in preparing our field for methods of reducing risk to
the patient population and OTPs wherever possible.
G. Website Development and Communication
AATOD launched an expanded and highly navigable website
in 2005, which provided support to the OTPs in addition to the public.
We will continue to upgrade the organizational resource to respond
to the changing interests in the treatment system and as we expand
our work with our international partners.
AATOD has also significantly improved our ability to communicate
rapidly with the field through an expanded e-mail communication
system. We have also significantly improved all printed materials
under the AATOD branding.
We plan to implement an electronic newsletter in 2007, providing
quarterly updates to the field about our initiatives and policy
related matters.

II. Improving Financial Support for OTPs
in Addition to Improving Treatment Quality
The
AATOD Board has been consistent in working to improve the quality
of care in OTPs through several national initiatives, which have
already been cited in this five-year plan. Accreditation became
one of the leading mechanisms in supporting improved treatment decision-making
in addition to the development of federal Treatment Improvement
Protocols (TIPs).
A. AATOD has also identified the need to enhance Medicaid reimbursement
for opioid treatment within the OTP setting over the course of the
next five years. This represents a broad multi-year initiative to
increase the number of existing states, which provide Medicaid reimbursement
to OTPs.
We will work with all appropriate federal and state agencies in
this initiative and will develop reimbursement models for OTPs to
use within each state and developing working relationships with
the designated State Alcohol & drug Abuse Agencies and Medicaid
funding entities to meet such objectives.
It is critical that patients continue to access needed medical treatment
for their opioid addiction through such treatment programs with
public funding support. In this way, access to care will increase
and the ability of the patient to remain in treatment will increase
as sustained funding can be provided wherever needed.
It is also understood that Medicare needs to provide reimbursement
for the use of opioid treatment in the OTP setting, especially as
our patient population ages over the course of the next five years.
AATOD already initiated such dialogue with the appropriate federal
agencies during the AATOD National Conference of 2003 in Washington,
DC and in subsequent meetings with such representatives during quarterly
Board meetings. We will
continue this initiative over the course of the next five years.
B. AATODs Board of Directors has also supported the value of adding
buprenorphine to the list of federally approved medications in OTP
settings. There have been a number of impediments in using this
newly approved medication in the OTP setting, such as federal regulation,
which limited the ability of the OTP to dispense take-home medication.
Critical work in the past two (2) years (2005-2006) has led to anticipated
changes in this restriction, which should be published through the
federal government in 2007.
We will also be working with the current sole U.S. manufacturer
of
buprenorphine (Reckitt-Benckiser) in developing reimbursement models
through the states so that the medication can be purchased at the
most efficient pricing levels with support from state authorities.
We will also be working with the appropriate federal agencies to
change rules/regulations with regard to the prescribing of buprenorphine
products in the OTP setting.

III . Supporting Patient Advocacy
AATOD has identified the critical value of working with patient
advocacy groups throughout the United States by providing such advocates
an opportunity to train individuals through our national conferences,
which has been managed through the National Alliance of Methadone
Advocates (NAMA) since the premiere of this training opportunity
during the National Conference of 2003 in Washington, DC. Each subsequent
conference has offered such a training opportunity and we will continue
to do so during 2007 and into the future.
We have encouraged federal agencies to support funding such patient
advocacy initiatives in addition to giving patient advocacy organizations
a greater opportunity to shape the content of our national conferences
and to nominate a leading patient advocate to receive the Richard
Lane Patient Advocacy Award.
We will continue to support more intensive patient education at
the
individual program level, so that patients have a better understanding
of what Medication Assisted Treatment can offer in the OTP setting.
Ultimately, the patients will better understand the value of their
treatment and other therapeutic options.
We will also work with the Legal Action Center and its policy partners
in expanding a national patient advocacy initiative in breaking
through the social perceptions and stigmas that limit how our programs
operate and how patients are perceived in treatment.
AATOD has historically supported this kind of initiative when we
produced The Joy of Being Normal in 2000 with Danya International.
The video has been extremely effective in educating local community
groups and other organizations and constituencies throughout the
United States.
AATOD will continue to work with patient advocacy organizations
as a means of educating the public about the value of this treatment
system and, particularly, the value of having patients access and
remain in treatment as long as it is needed.

IV. Working with the Criminal Justice System
AATOD began working with organizations and agencies in
the Criminal Justice system in 2001 in order to increase access
to Medication Assisted Treatment. We developed the Drug Court Practitioner
Fact Sheet on Methadone and Buprenorphine for the National Drug
Court Institute, which was published in 2002. It provided a basis
in educating Drug Courts throughout the United States.
We also developed a targeted approach in increasing access to methadone
and buprenorphine in jails and in prisons through a Robert Wood
Johnson Innovators Award with additional financial support from
Mallinckrodt, Inc. We were able to implement a concentrated initiative
in educating representatives within jails and prisons about the
value of this treatment opportunity and influenced decisions in
a number of key states, including Florida, Maryland, New Mexico
and Washington and in expanding opportunities for this program in
New York and Vermont.
We have been using funding from the aforementioned entities over
the course of 2005 and 2006 with anticipated funding to continue
through the third quarter of 2007. We have been working to develop
other funding opportunities, which will continue to support this
initiative over the course of the next five years as well.
We will continue to educate representatives in correctional facilities
through new funding sources, which may include federal and other
not-for-profit organizations. We have been working with the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation to identify other not-for-profit organizations
to provide such financial support in this area in addition to working
with representatives with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA) and the Center for Substance Abuse
Treatment (CSAT).
We also have been working with Probation Departments as a means
of educating their staff about the value of medication assisted
treatment for opioid addiction. This initiative commenced during
the latter part of 2006 in New York City through the cooperation
of the New York State Committee of Methadone Program Administrators,
the Legal Action Center and the New York City Department of Probation.
We will continue to evaluate the success of this early training
initiative for replication with other Probation
Departments in the United States.
We will continue the initiative of educating Drug Court Judges in
2007 by updating the Drug Court Practitioner Fact Sheet, presenting
the most current information about opioid treatment with the support
of the National Drug Court Institute. AATODs research partner, National
Development and Research Institutes, Inc. (NDRI), will develop the
Drug Court Survey, which will accompany the Drug Court Practitioner
Fact Sheet. AATOD will take responsibility for collecting and analyzing
such information with NDRI researchers. It will result in a publication,
providing guidance to members of the judiciary in addition to federal
and state agency representatives.
We will continue to work with the Legal Action Center (AATODs policy
partner) in this initiative and anticipate that the Legal Action
Center will craft a comprehensive report during the end of 2007,
which will provide guidance to increasing access to opioid treatment
through the judiciary, correctional facilities and in Probation
Departments throughout the country. This report will include a number
of far reaching recommendations, which will be shared with federal/state
agencies and criminal justice organizations.

V. Workforce Development
The AATOD Board of Directors has identified workforce development
as one of the most critical issues affecting the future of our treatment
system. At present, treatment programs have experienced considerable
and increasing difficulty in recruiting and retaining personnel
at all levels.
AATOD will work with federal agencies, other national professional
societies and policy partners in working to identify the best methods
of increasing recruitment of qualified medical and other professionals
to work within the OTP environment in addition to having a cadre
of the most trained personnel available to treat patients most effectively.

VI. Organizing OTPs within the United States
and Internationally
AATOD
developed a strategy in 1984 to organize treatment programs in different
states. We worked with OTPs in the Northeastern Corridor to form
the Northeast Regional Methadone Treatment Coalition and to organize
treatment programs into statewide chapters. This has been a major
organizing initiative, which has led to the 22 current state members
of AATOD, representing more than 750 programs. We will continue
to work with our treatment associates in different states to increase
the development of such statewide professional organizations to
eventually become members of AATOD.
We will also continue to work to encourage individual treatment
programs and professional working members of those programs to join
AATOD through its different membership levels. We will intensify
such outreach initiatives during 2007-2011.
We have also been working with our international associates in Europe
and in the North American sphere to support collective initiatives
in increasing access to this treatment by educating governments
and policymakers about the value of this treatment system. Our long-term
and closest international partner (EUROPAD) has been working with
AATOD through our national conferences and EUROPADs international
conferences since 1989. This has led to the most recent initiative
in educating representatives of the Russian government and its professional
medical societies about the value of introducing this lifesaving
treatment to their citizens. It represented the first formal collaboration
between AATOD and EUROPAD with funding support from Mallinckrodt
and other government entities in the Russian Federation. It is anticipated
that we will continue to work with EUROPAD in this initiative and
lay the foundation for a worldwide federation of opioid treatment
programs over the course of the next five years.
We will also work with our associates in the North American sphere,
including Mexico and Canada, to identify and assist in organizing
opioid treatment programs into regional and national entities to
work in affiliation with AATOD to improve communication between
our countries.

Summary
The AATOD Board will continue to work with all of the appropriate
partners in refining the strategic objectives of this five-year
plan in addition to supporting evidence-based principles and practices
within the treatment programs, both in the United States and abroad.
AATOD will continue to work with patient advocates in creating patient-centered
care and creating linkages to enhance access to care in different
regions of the United States. We will continue to expand our organizing
initiatives among OTPs and implement a strategic plan of increasing
program membership throughout the United States as a means of creating
new state chapters. The Criminal Justice Initiatives will continue
through new funding sources and our research activities will continue
to evolve as well.
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