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  1. Authors: Danica Knight, Steven Belenko, Angela Robertson, Tisha Wiley, Gail Wasserman, Carl Leukefeld, Ralph DiClemente, Gene Brody, Michael Dennis and Christy Scott
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2015 10(Suppl 1):A29

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 10 Supplement 1

  2. Fewer than one in 10 adolescents with substance use disorders (ASUDs) will receive specialty treatment, and even fewer will receive treatment designated as evidence-based practice (EBP). Traditional efforts to...

    Authors: Sara J Becker
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2015 10:4
  3. People with low education and/or income are more likely to smoke, less likely to quit, and experience disparately poor health outcomes compared to those with education and income advantage. Cost-effective stra...

    Authors: Mary F Brunette, William Gunn, Hilary Alvarez, Patricia C Finn, Pamela Geiger, Joelle C Ferron and Gregory J McHugo
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2015 10:3
  4. The United States has the highest rate of incarceration in the world (937 per 100,000 adults). Approximately one-third of heroin users pass through correctional facilities annually. Few receive medication assi...

    Authors: Aaron D Fox, Jeronimo Maradiaga, Linda Weiss, Jennifer Sanchez, Joanna L Starrels and Chinazo O Cunningham
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2015 10:2
  5. There is a considerable body of evidence supporting the effectiveness of personalized feedback interventions for hazardous alcohol use—whether delivered face-to-face, by postal mail, or over the Internet (prob...

    Authors: John A Cunningham, Michelle Murphy and Christian S Hendershot
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 10:1
  6. The North American Opiate Medication Initiative (NAOMI) clinical trial compared the effectiveness of injectable diacetylmorphine (DAM) or hydromorphone (HDM) to oral methadone maintenance treatment (MMT). This...

    Authors: Eugenia Oviedo-Joekes, Kirsten Marchand, Kurt Lock, Jill Chettiar, David C Marsh, Suzanne Brissette, Aslam H Anis and Martin T Schechter
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:21
  7. Despite advances in characterizing genetic influences on addiction liability and treatment response, clinical applications of these efforts have been slow to evolve. Although challenges to clinical translation...

    Authors: Christian S Hendershot
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:20
  8. Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) secondary to in-utero opioid exposure is an increasing problem. Variability in assessment and treatment of NAS has been attributed to the lack of high-quality evidence to gui...

    Authors: Sarah Mary Bagley, Elisha M Wachman, Erica Holland and Susan B Brogly
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:19
  9. Alcohol misuse among military service members from the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan is over two times higher compared to misuse in the civilian population. Unfortunately, in addition to experiencin...

    Authors: Karen Chan Osilla, Eric R Pedersen, Kristie Gore, Thomas Trail and Stefanie Stern Howard
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:18
  10. The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) is a 10-item alcohol screener that has been recommended for use in Aboriginal primary health care settings. The time it takes respondents to complete AUDIT...

    Authors: Bianca Calabria, Anton Clifford, Anthony P Shakeshaft, Katherine M Conigrave, Lynette Simpson, Donna Bliss and Julaine Allan
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:17
  11. When used in general medical practices, buprenorphine is an effective treatment for opioid dependence, yet little is known about how use of buprenorphine affects the utilization and cost of health care in comm...

    Authors: Frances L Lynch, Dennis McCarty, Jennifer Mertens, Nancy A Perrin, Carla A Green, Sujaya Parthasarathy, John F Dickerson, Bradley M Anderson and David Pating
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:16
  12. There is emerging evidence for the potential of computer-based psychological treatments (CBPT) as an add-on to usual clinical practice in the management of health problems.

    Authors: Frances J Kay-Lambkin, Aaron L Simpson, Jenny Bowman and Steven Childs
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:15
  13. One of the pressing concerns in health care today is the slow rate at which promising interventions, supported by research evidence, move into clinical practice. One potential way to speed this process is to c...

    Authors: Hildi J Hagedorn, Cheryl B Stetler, Ann Bangerter, Siamak Noorbaloochi, Maxine L Stitzer and Daniel Kivlahan
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:12
  14. Brief interventions via the internet have been shown to reduce university students’ alcohol intake. This study tested two smartphone applications (apps) targeting drinking choices on party occasions, with the ...

    Authors: Mikael Gajecki, Anne H Berman, Kristina Sinadinovic, Ingvar Rosendahl and Claes Andersson
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:11
  15. New Mexico has consistently high rates of drug-induced deaths, and opioid-related treatment admissions have been increasing over the last two decades. Youth in New Mexico are at particular risk: they report hi...

    Authors: Brenna L Greenfield, Mandy D Owens and David Ley
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:10
  16. Tobacco cessation medication adherence is one of the few factors shown to improve smoking cessation rates among methadone-maintained smokers, but interventions to improve adherence to smoking cessation medicat...

    Authors: Shadi Nahvi, Kate S Segal, Alain H Litwin and Julia H Arnsten
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:9
  17. Although screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) has shown promise for alcohol use, relatively little is known about its effectiveness for adult illicit drug use. This randomized contr...

    Authors: Susan I Woodruff, John D Clapp, Kimberly Eisenberg, Cameron McCabe, Melinda Hohman, Audrey M Shillington, C Beth Sise, Edward M Castillo, Theodore C Chan, Michael J Sise and Joey Gareri
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:8
  18. A person-centered substance use treatment component, the Natural Recovery Program, was developed. The Natural Recovery Program is comprised of small group therapy combined with pursuit of hobbies.

    Authors: Kathleen P Decker, Stephanie L Peglow and Carl R Samples
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:7
  19. This study describes early treatment drug use status and associated clinical characteristics in a diverse sample of patients entering outpatient substance abuse psychosocial counseling treatment. The goal is t...

    Authors: Gerald Cochran, Maxine Stitzer, Edward V Nunes, Mei-Chen Hu and Aimee Campbell
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:6
  20. Heavy drinking jeopardizes the health of patients in HIV primary care. In alcohol dependent patients in HIV primary care, a technological enhancement of brief intervention, HealthCall administered via interact...

    Authors: Deborah S Hasin, Efrat Aharonovich and Eliana Greenstein
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:5
  21. Few studies have designed and tested the use of continuous quality improvement approaches in community based substance use treatment settings. Little is known about the feasibility, costs, efficacy, and sustai...

    Authors: Sarah B Hunter, Allison J Ober, Susan M Paddock, Priscillia E Hunt and Deborah Levan
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:4
  22. The extent of damage in New York City following Hurricane Sandy in October 2012 was unprecedented. Bellevue Hospital Center (BHC), a tertiary public hospital, was evacuated and temporarily closed as a result o...

    Authors: Babak Tofighi, Ellie Grossman, Arthur R Williams, Rana Biary, John Rotrosen and Joshua D Lee
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:3
  23. The AUDIT-C is an extensively validated screen for unhealthy alcohol use (i.e. drinking above recommended limits or alcohol use disorder), which consists of three questions about alcohol consumption. AUDIT-C s...

    Authors: Kate E Delaney, Amy K Lee, Gwen T Lapham, Anna D Rubinsky, Laura J Chavez and Katharine A Bradley
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:2
  24. The US Public Health Service smoking cessation practice guideline specifically recommends that physicians and nurses strongly advise their patients who use tobacco to quit, but the best approach for attaining ...

    Authors: David A Katz, Monica W Paez, Heather S Reisinger, Meghan T Gillette, Mark W Vander Weg, Marita G Titler, Andrew S Nugent, Laurence J Baker, John E Holman and Sarah S Ono
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2014 9:1
  25. Antidepressants can increase the spontaneous risk of hypomania or mania when used for treatment in affective disorders. When prescribed as an antidepressant, bupropion is generally considered to have a lower r...

    Authors: Karine Giasson-Gariépy and Didier Jutras-Aswad
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:22
  26. Hepatitis C infection (HCV) among individuals aged 15–24 years has increased in Massachusetts, likely due to injection drug use. The prevalence of injection equipment sharing (sharing) and its association with...

    Authors: Katherine Tassiopoulos, Judith Bernstein and Edward Bernstein
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:20
  27. A major barrier to successful treatment in alcohol dependence is psychiatric comorbidity. During treatment, the time to relapse is shorter, the drop-out rate is increased, and long-term alcohol consumption is ...

    Authors: Kirsten C Morley, Andrew Baillie, Claudia Sannibale, Maree Teesson and Paul S Haber
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:19
  28. Increasingly, patients with unhealthy alcohol and other drug use are being seen in primary care and other non-specialty addiction settings. Primary care providers are well positioned to screen, assess, and tre...

    Authors: Adam J Gordon, Nicolas Bertholet, Jennifer McNeely, Joanna L Starrels, Jeanette M Tetrault and Alexander Y Walley
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:18
  29. This study describes the implementation and impact of Therapeutic Goal Management (TGM) in a Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)-sponsored demonstration project entitled Enhanced...

    Authors: Anna Davidson, Michael Jensen, Emilee Burgess, Angee Stevens, Lauren Hayes, Susan Sieweke, Karen Stough, Anne Wright, Robin McCarty, Lillian Eddleman, Young-il Kim, Jesse B Milby and Joseph E Schumacher
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:17
  30. Although screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) is an evidence-based technique that, in some health-care settings, has been shown to cost-effectively reduce alcohol and drug use, rese...

    Authors: Michael L Prendergast and Jerome J Cartier
    Citation: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice 2013 8:16

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Addiction Science & Clinical Practice was formerly published by NIDA and previous issues of the journal can be viewed here.