OBJECTIVE: This study examined interventions for substance use disorders within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) psychiatric and primary care settings. METHODS: National random samples of 83 VA psychiatry program directors and 102 primary care practitioners were surveyed by telephone. The survey assessed screening practices to detect substance use disorders, protocols for treating patients with substance use disorders, and available treatments for substance use disorders. RESULTS: Respondents reported extensive contact with patients with substance use problems. However, a majority reported being ill equipped to treat substance use disorders themselves; they usually referred such patients to specialty substance use disorder treatment programs. CONCLUSIONS: Offering fewer specialty substance use disorder services within the VA may be problematic: providers can refer patients to specialty programs only if such programs exist. Caring for veterans with substance use disorders may require increasing the capacity of and establishing new specialty programs or expanding the ability of psychiatric programs and primary care practitioners to provide such care.
OBJECTIVE: This study examined interventions for substance use disorders within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) psychiatric and primary care settings. METHODS: National random samples of 83 VA psychiatry program directors and 102 primary care practitioners were surveyed by telephone. The survey assessed screening practices to detect substance use disorders, protocols for treating patients with substance use disorders, and available treatments for substance use disorders. RESULTS: Respondents reported extensive contact with patients with substance use problems. However, a majority reported being ill equipped to treat substance use disorders themselves; they usually referred such patients to specialty substance use disorder treatment programs. CONCLUSIONS: Offering fewer specialty substance use disorder services within the VA may be problematic: providers can refer patients to specialty programs only if such programs exist. Caring for veterans with substance use disorders may require increasing the capacity of and establishing new specialty programs or expanding the ability of psychiatric programs and primary care practitioners to provide such care.
Authors: Andrea K Finlay; Laura S Ellerbe; Jessie J Wong; Christine Timko; Anna D Rubinsky; Shalini Gupta; Thomas R Bowe; Jennifer L Burden; Alex H S Harris Journal: J Subst Abuse Treat Date: 2017-03-10
Authors: Andrea K Finlay; Matthew Stimmel; Jessica Blue-Howells; Joel Rosenthal; Jim McGuire; Ingrid Binswanger; David Smelson; Alex H S Harris; Susan M Frayne; Tom Bowe; Christine Timko Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health Date: 2017-03
Authors: Andrea K Finlay; Alex H S Harris; Joel Rosenthal; Jessica Blue-Howells; Sean Clark; Bessie Flatley; Christine Timko Journal: Rural Ment Health Date: 2018-01
Authors: Lauren Matukaitis Broyles; Keri L Rodriguez; Kevin L Kraemer; Mary Ann Sevick; Patrice A Price; Adam J Gordon Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract Date: 2012-05-02
Authors: Marie-Louise Mares; David H Gustafson; Joseph E Glass; Andrew Quanbeck; Helene McDowell; Fiona McTavish; Amy K Atwood; Lisa A Marsch; Chantelle Thomas; Dhavan Shah; Randall Brown; Andrew Isham; Mary Jane Nealon; Victoria Ward Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Date: 2016-09-29 Impact factor: 2.796