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Friday, September 27, 2024

EMORY UNIVERSITY: Sparks Foundation supports collaboration integrating addiction services into primary care

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Emory University issued the following announcement on Apr. 7. 

With support from a $350,000 grant from the John and Polly Sparks Foundation, the Addiction Alliance of Georgia — a partnership of Emory Healthcare and the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation — will work with the Grady Health System and other community partners to integrate additional substance use disorder services into Grady’s primary care clinics.

“The addiction crisis in Atlanta and across Georgia and the nation has grown worse amid the pandemic, increasing the urgency to identify and help people who are struggling with substance use in every possible setting, including primary care clinics,” said Justine Welsh, MD, medical director of the Addiction Alliance of Georgia and assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Emory University School of Medicine. “All of us at The Addition Alliance of Georgia are very excited to work with Grady to intensify our collective response to the public health problem of addiction.”

The Sparks Foundation previously funded the launch of an Integrated Care Program for Behavioral Health in the Grady Health System, which includes a large hospital and several neighborhood health clinics serving a diverse socioeconomic population in Atlanta. The new grant will build on that program by integrating peer recovery coaches from the Georgia Council on Substance Abuse into Grady’s primary care teams, expanding medication for addiction treatment services throughout the Grady system, and educating all involved on best practices for effective collaboration.

“This generous grant and our work with the Addiction Alliance of Georgia will allow us to accelerate our efforts to reach even more patients and community members to address the growing problem of addiction in our region and beyond,” said Grayson Norquist, MD, chief of psychiatry service, Grady Health System and professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Emory University School of Medicine.

“We are deeply grateful to the Sparks Foundation for empowering this project and helping the Addiction Alliance of Georgia fulfill in its commitment to reaching racially and economically diverse communities, including Atlanta’s unsheltered population, which Grady serves,” added Welsh.

Working with experts from the Addiction Alliance of Georgia, primary care providers and peer recovery coaches at Grady will receive extensive training in motivational interviewing; trauma, mental health and substance use disorders; stigma and bias; medications for opioid use disorder; and more. Professional learning communities for peer coaches and other members of the care team will meet regularly for problem-solving and discussion to build upon and sustain the recovery knowledge developed.

“A lot of primary care patients are reluctant to seek help for addiction and mental health issues, which often are at the root of whatever brought them to the hospital or clinic in the first place. They distrust the healthcare system when it comes to such issues and fear stigma, while also fearing the unknown of what help and recovery might look like,” said Stephen Delisi, MD, medical director for Hazelden Betty Ford’s professional education continuum solutions division. “Our goal with this grant is to not only bring additional services and capacity to Grady’s system but to instill comfort and confidence in the primary care teams that will ultimately translate into compassionate conversations that lead to more hope, healing and help for patients.”

In addition to funding for the Addiction Alliance of Georgia, the Sparks Foundation also recently gave a gift to the Emory Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences to support its infant mental health program and training for child and adolescent psychiatrists. 

For more information on the Addiction Alliance of Georgia, please visit AddictionAllianceOfGeorgia.org.

Original source can be found here.

Source: Emory University

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