Substance Use Disorders: Clinical Application | October 25, 2022
Date of Presentation: October 25, 2022
Type: Past Presentation Training
Audience: Clinical
Program: Ending the Epidemics in Indian Country ECHO Program
Keywords: #fentanyl #harm reduction #medications for opioid use disorder #methamphetamine #MOUD #risk reduction #Screening #substance use disorder #SUD #SUD treatment
In this series of presentations we hear from Dr. Ben Smith, MD, Dr. Jonathan Robbins, MD, and Dr. Zeina Saliba, MD, as they provide a comprehensive overview of Substance Use Disorders, including Medications for Opioid Use Disorder, Methamphetamine Use Disorder, the rise of fentanyl, and share ways to effectively integrate evidence-based clinical strategies.
Recording:
Presented by:
Jonathan Robbins | Ben Smith | Zeina Saliba
Jonathan Leserman Robbins, MD, MS, is a general internist and primary care doctor at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, OR. He splits his time between outpatient primary care, the inpatient addiction consult service, and a pain and addiction consult clinic. He is an active educator and participates in several ECHOs on pain and addiction.
Benjamin Smith, MD is a Primary Care Physician and Addiction Specialist in Portland OR, at Central City Concern, an inner-city health and treatment center. He supervises Addiction Medicine Fellows in the Oregon Health and Sciences University Addiction Medicine Fellowship, and he serves as a consultant on the Substance Use Warmline, a consultation line based at University of California-San Francisco. He completed his medical education at Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health and trained in family medicine at Stanford-O’Connor Hospital Family Medicine Residency Program. Prior to medical school, Ben worked at a treatment center in Cody, Wyoming, which serves the Eastern Shoshone and Crow peoples.
Zeina Saliba, MD, is a board-certified psychiatrist and family medicine physician, as well as an assistant professor at the George Washington University. She is the inpatient medical director for psychiatric and behavioral health services at the George Washington University Hospital, overseeing the psychiatric unit and consultation services. She is dedicated to care for the underserved with work abroad, in rural FQHCs and current efforts devoted to the urban setting. Her global health experiences have included clinical service and expanding local workforce capacity through teaching and training programs. She is passionate about women’s health, decreasing stigma in mental health, and providing care for marginalized populations. She has studied at the University of Virginia, the Medical College of Virginia and the University of Pittsburgh.
Resources Provided:
Date added: October 11, 2022