| Literature DB >> 20459842 |
J Paul Seale1, Sylvia Shellenberger, Denice Crowe Clark.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This article, developed for the Betty Ford Institute Consensus Conference on Graduate Medical Education (December, 2008), presents a model curriculum for Family Medicine residency training in substance abuse.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20459842 PMCID: PMC2885404 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-10-33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Core Competencies in Substance Abuse for Family Medicine Residents (adapted from Project MAINSTREAM) [74]
| Residents will: | |
|---|---|
| 1 | Perform age, gender and culturally appropriate unhealthy substance use screening |
| 2 | Effectively assess patients with unhealthy substance use |
| 3 | Provide brief interventions to patients with unhealthy substance use |
| 4 | Demonstrate effective counseling methods to help prevent unhealthy substance use |
| 5 | Refer patients with substance use disorders to treatment settings that provide pharmacotherapy and/or psychosocial counseling for relapse prevention |
| 6 | Recognize, treat, or refer co-morbid medical and psychiatric conditions in patients with substance use conditions |
| 7 | Refer patients with substance use disorders to appropriate treatment and supportive services |
| 8 | Be aware of the ethical and legal issues around physician impairment from substance use and of resources for referring potential impaired colleagues, including employee assistance programs, hospital based committees, and state physician health programs and licensure boards |
| 9 | Identify the legal and ethical issues involved in the care of patients with unhealthy substance use |
| 10 | Provide pharmacologic withdrawal to patients with substance dependence |
| 11 | Provide or refer for treatment for relapse prevention in patients with substance use disorders, both pharmacotherapy and psychosocial counseling |
Figure 1Flowchart Providing Curriculum Overview, Teaching Strategies, & Online Materials Summary. Figure 1 - Teaching Strategies Legend: a - Training sessions to be conducted live. b - Lecture/slide presentation & web module. c - Video demonstration. d - Role play. e - Interview practice with role play & (where feasible) standardized patients &/or recovering patients. f - Case-based individual & group discussion. g - Feedback. h - Panel Discussion. i - AA meeting or treatment center visit &/or live family presentation/discussion/interview. j - Team-based learning conference with group discussion, team competitions & prizes. k - Collaboration with clinic or hospital systems on screening, intervention & documentation strategies. l - Optional skills practice. m - Case presentation. n - Recovering physician presentation with mini-lecture or fact sheet. o - Resident orientation lecture. Figure 1 - Online Material Legend (See also Table 3). Mercer University Modules A1-A10. Boston University ACT Modules B1-B2. Project MAINSTREAM Module C1-C3. Project CHOICES Module D1
Other Residency Topic Areas where Substance Abuse Concepts May Be Taught
| Family life cycle stages and challenges | Population medicine |
| Adolescent medicine | Interpreting the medical literature |
| Parent education | US Preventive Services Task Force |
| Family interviewing | guidelines |
| Motivational interviewing | Health disparities |
| Patient-centered interviewing | Culturally-sensitive care |
| Preventive medicine | Management of patients' chronic illnesses |
| Case-based discussions (Balint-type group discussions) | Mental health assessment |
| Practice management | |
| Community medicine | Family violence curriculum |
| Obstetrics | Geriatrics |
Curriculum Resources Available on the Internet Specific sections identified from these websites that are particularly relevant are listed below
| Modules 1, 2, 3, and 4 of Mercer's Initial training | |
| Mercer's Participant and trainer's guides covering modules 1-4 available at | |
| Mercer's SBI videos for Initial training. Videos 1-5 | |
| Mercer's lecture and cases related to "Evidence base for low-risk drinking guidelines" | |
| Mercer's lecture and cases related to "Medication use for treatment of alcohol abuse" | |
| Mercer's module on "Alcohol withdrawal and delirium tremens". | |
| Mercer's module on "Outpatient detoxification." | |
| Mercer's teaching module on "Guidelines for prescribing mood-altering drugs" | |
| Mercer's "Primary Care Implementation Plan Decision-Making Guide" | |
| Mercer's lecture on "Implementing alcohol SBI in your own practice" | |
| Boston University's core curriculum on "Helping patients who drink too much: A web-based curriculum for primary care physicians" | |
| Boston University's related curriculum materials on "Health Disparities and Cultural Competency", and "Pharmacotherapy". | |
| Project MAINSTREAM's lecture on "Alcohol and drug dependence: Comparisons to other chronic medical conditions. | |
| Project MAINSTREAM's lecture "Substance use disorders in physicians" | |
| Project's MAINSTREAM's lectures on pregnancy and SUD | |
| Project CHOICES for women at risk for alcohol-exposed pregnancies. | |