Thursday, September 24, 2009

JCAHO and Screeing Issues

Attached an important e-mail and message from our ASAM Regional Director.
We must make every effort to submit our comments.
Yours
Bernd


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Richard Soper wrote:
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> Richard Soper wrote:
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> Chapter Presidents and colleagues;
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> Last year, the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals (JCAHO) called for comments on whether it should create standards for tobacco, alcohol and drug screening and referral for all hospitals. Many of us then wrote to the Joint Commission with our comments. Our efforts were successful. JCAHO has now published a set of proposed standardsfor tobacco, alcohol and drug screening, brief intervention, referral and treatment.
> In my view, publication and adoption of these standards is a fundamentally important recognition that alcohol, tobacco and other drug problems should be identified and treated in all hospital patients as a routine part of care. If adopted, the tobacco, alcohol and drug reporting standards would be among those that hospitals can select for monitoring their own quality and performance.
> Hospital administrators, boards and staff will know what they should be doing about tobacco, alcohol and drugs to help their patients get better.
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> I am urging all of you to take personal action to achieve the final step in this long journey:
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> Getting the draft standards adopted.
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> Please do two important things now:
> 1. Submit Your Comments Online.The Commission has invited public comment until September 30, so you really need to do this NOW.
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> You will find an online survey formthat asks whether you believe the proposed standards will improve patient care, are clear enough to be implemented, and meet other JCAHO goals for its hospital standards. Your answers will have an impact on whether the standards are adopted. There is a link to full text of the standards on the first page of the survey, and you can also read Join Together's recent feature story summarizing the proposal.
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> 1. Send this Message To other ASAM members, a Colleague, friend. We need as many voices from the field as possible supporting SBI as the routine standard of care. Tell your colleagues about this major opportunity to affect the health care of millions of Americans.
> 2. WE can continue to make a difference and have impact of formation of policy with our combined efforts to guide this process.
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> Onward,
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> Rich Soper, JD, MD, FASAM

Friday, September 4, 2009

Updated Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Programs Now Available

*FOR RELEASE:* *Contact: SAMHSA Press Office (240) 276-2130* August 6, 2009 http://www.samhsa.gov



*Updated Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Programs Now Available*



A new, updated guide to finding local substance abuse treatment programs is now available from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). *"National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Programs 2009"* provides information on thousands of alcohol and drug treatment programs located in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and five U.S. territories.



The National Directory includes a nationwide inventory of public and private substance abuse and alcoholism treatment programs and facilities that are licensed, certified, or otherwise approved by substance abuse agencies in each state. The National Directory is organized in a state-by-state format for quick reference by health care providers, social workers, managed care organizations, and the general public and provides information on more than 11,000 community substance abuse treatment

programs.



The directory provides important information on levels of care and types of facilities, including those with programs for adolescents, persons with co-occurring substance abuse and mental disorders, individuals living with HIV/AIDS, and pregnant women. In addition, information is available on forms of payment accepted, special language services available with select providers, and whether methadone or buprenorphine therapy is offered.



The updated directory complements SAMHSA's internet-based *"Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Locator"* -- the online service, which is updated regularly and may contain more current information, provides searchable road maps to the nearest treatment facilities, complete addresses, phone numbers and specific information on services available. The electronic, searchable version of SAMHSA's updated *"National Directory of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Treatment Programs"* is available on the Web at

http://FindTreatment.samhsa.gov/



Hard copies of the National Directory may be obtained free of charge from SAMHSA's Health Information Network at 1-877-SAMHSA-7 (1-877-726-4727). Request inventory number