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Erschienen in: Current Addiction Reports 4/2019

01.12.2019 | Opioids (J Donroe and D Fiellin, Section Editors)

Models of Resident Physician Training in Opioid Use Disorders

verfasst von: Ryan Graddy, Anthony J. Accurso, Deepa Rani Nandiwada, Marc Shalaby, Stephen R. Holt

Erschienen in: Current Addiction Reports | Ausgabe 4/2019

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Abstract

Purpose of Review

Medications for addiction treatment (MAT) are the standard of care for treating opioid use disorder (OUD) and reducing overdose deaths, yet demand for MAT providers has outstripped supply in the USA. Public policy and graduate medical education (GME) leaders have called for increased focus on addiction medicine training for resident physicians to mitigate this provider gap. We sought to characterize the current state of OUD training at the GME level by reviewing published literature on GME educational interventions designed to enhance the care of patients with OUD.

Recent Findings

We identified 31 articles describing 29 unique interventions. The majority of these articles detailed specific, reproducible interventions with outcomes, and tended to focus on training resident physicians in behavioral approaches to treat OUD, rather than MAT. Fewer than half of interventions involved direct patient care.

Summary

MAT training is under-represented within the current landscape of educational interventions, despite MAT being the standard of care for OUD.
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Metadaten
Titel
Models of Resident Physician Training in Opioid Use Disorders
verfasst von
Ryan Graddy
Anthony J. Accurso
Deepa Rani Nandiwada
Marc Shalaby
Stephen R. Holt
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2019
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Current Addiction Reports / Ausgabe 4/2019
Elektronische ISSN: 2196-2952
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40429-019-00271-1

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