2025
Hospital-Based Methadone and Buprenorphine Initiation Practices by Addiction Consult Services
Cohen S, Straus E, Fiellin D, Pomeranz J, Suzuki J, Tetrault J, Weimer M, Edelman E, Joudrey P. Hospital-Based Methadone and Buprenorphine Initiation Practices by Addiction Consult Services. JAMA Network Open 2025, 8: e2526077. PMID: 40773194, PMCID: PMC12332638, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.26077.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBuprenorphineCross-Sectional StudiesDose-Response Relationship, DrugDrug Administration ScheduleFemaleFentanylHospitals, TeachingHumansMaleMethadoneMiddle AgedNarcotic AntagonistsOpiate Substitution TreatmentOpioid-Related DisordersPhysician ExecutivesPractice Guidelines as TopicReferral and ConsultationSurveys and QuestionnairesUnited StatesConceptsInitiation of methadoneAddiction consult servicesMethadone initiationBuprenorphine initiationOpioid use disorderHigh dosesLow dosesAddiction medicineLow-dose initiationFull-agonist opioidsUp-titrationCross-sectional survey studyInitiation regimenFentanyl usePrimary outcomeDay 1OpioidBuprenorphineHospital-based practiceUse disorderClinical casesClinical guidelinesMethadoneSynthetic opioidsDose
2024
Impact of a Web-Based Curriculum on Internal Medicine Resident Use of Stigmatizing Language for Substance Use Disorder
Samberg D, Spinella S, Rothenberger S, Tetrault J, Childers J. Impact of a Web-Based Curriculum on Internal Medicine Resident Use of Stigmatizing Language for Substance Use Disorder. Substance Abuse 2024, 46: 313-319. PMID: 39690470, DOI: 10.1177/29767342241298057.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInternal medicine residentsSubstance use disordersPre-curriculumMedicine residentsPost-curriculumClinical terminologyStigma associated with substance use disorderNon-stigmatizing languagePost-curriculum surveysNational medical organizationsUse disorderWeb-based curriculumStigma levelsStigmatizing terminologyImproved documentationPatient careOpioid use disorderConsiderable stigmaVideo encountersInteractive curriculumWell-receivedSimulated patientsStigmatizing languageResidents' useCase write-upsShared Medical Appointment: A Novel Model for Incorporating Group Visits Into Residency Training for Substance Use Disorders
Cavallo D, Salwan J, Doernberg M, Tetrault J, Holt S. Shared Medical Appointment: A Novel Model for Incorporating Group Visits Into Residency Training for Substance Use Disorders. Substance Abuse 2024, 45: 466-472. PMID: 38494709, DOI: 10.1177/29767342241233363.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchShared medical appointmentsPrimary care residentsSubstance use disordersCare residentsPre- and post-intervention scoresImplementation of shared medical appointmentsSubstance use disorder carePost-intervention scoresLikert scaleThird-year residentsUse disorderTreated patientsWeb-based surveyRelapse of SUDIllicit drug useInterdisciplinary providersPost-interventionMedicine rotationPhysician empathyTraining modalitiesTeaching clinicMedical appointmentsResidency trainingSUD treatmentCounseling patients
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply