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Journal article

A Collaborative Approach to Teaching Medical Students how to Screen, Intervene, and Treat Substance Use Disorders

Abstract

Few medical schools require a stand-alone course to develop knowledge and skills relevant to substance use disorders (SUDs). The authors successfully initiated a new course for second-year medical students that used screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) as the course foundation. The 15-hour course (39 faculty teaching hours) arose from collaboration between faculty in Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry and included 5 hours of direct patient interaction during clinical demonstrations and in small-group skills development. Pre- and post-exam results suggest that the course had a significant impact on knowledge about SUDs. The authors' experience demonstrates that collaboration between 2 clinical departments can produce a successful second-year medical student course based in SBIRT principles.

Authors

Neufeld KJ; Alvanzo A; King VL; Feldman L; Hsu JH; Rastegar DA; Colbert JM; MacKinnon DF

Journal

Substance Use & Addiction Journal, Vol. 33, No. 3, pp. 286–291

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

July 1, 2012

DOI

10.1080/08897077.2011.640090

ISSN

2976-7342

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