TREATME Unit 2: Recognition - How Do We Find Youth?
TREATME Unit 2: Recognition – How Do We Find Youth?
This module is intended to increase the knowledge primary care practitioners have about prevalence, risks, comorbidities, and management of problematic substance use and Substance Use Disorder (SUD) in the adolescent population.
Module Structure:
This module is self-paced and available to any user who registers with the Maine Medical Association, Center for Quality Improvement Learning Lab. The module consists of multiple units and the time to complete each unit varies between 1.5 to 3.5 hours. The CME credits awarded upon the completion of each unit are commensurate with the anticipated time it takes to complete.
Table of Contents:
Unit 1: Foundational – Prepping You and Those Around You (2.5 CME credits, 1 opioid credit)
Unit 2: Recognition – How Do We Find Youth? (1.75 CME credits, 1 opioid credit)
Unit 3: Recognition – How Do We Identify Youth with Substance Disorders and Use Available Laboratory Tools to Manage Substance Misuse in Teens? (1.5 CME credits)
Unit 4: Treatment – Beginning to Explore the Many Facets of Treatment (1.5 CME credits)
Unit 5: Treatment – Taking Care of Multiple Needs Beyond the SUD (1.5 CME credits)
Unit 6: Treatment – Treatment Planning (1.25 CME credits)
Unit 7: Treatment – Treatment Planning and Motivating Engagement (3.25 CME credits)
Unit 8: Treatment – Focus on Specific Disorders (1.5 CME credits)
Unit 9: Treatment – Inhalants and Alcohol Use (1.5 CME credits)
Unit 10: Treatment – Use of Multiple Substances and Cannabis Use Disorder (1.5 CME credits, 0.5 opioid credits)
Unit 11: Treatment – Stimulants & OUD (1.5 CME credits, 1 opioid credit)
Unit 12: Treatment – Planning for Recovery: Wrap Up Onward (2.25 CME credits)
To Obtain a CME Certificate or a CME Certificate of Participation:
- Complete an entire unit within the module.
- Complete the pre-test, the post-test, and the Survey Monkey evaluation at the end of the module.
- Earn a score of 75% or higher on the post-test in order to receive a certificate. Upon completion of the evaluation in Survey Monkey, including the required demographic information, a CME Certificate will be emailed to M.D.s and D.O.s and a CME Certificate of Participation will be emailed to all other learners. These certificates will be emailed within 10 business days of completing the evaluation.
Assessment and Grading:
The units begin with a pre-test that will test your knowledge and allow you to gauge your baseline understanding of the topics to be covered. Your pre-test score will not count toward your overall grade. At the end of the unit, there is a post-test that will determine your final grade. A comparison of your pre-test score and post-test score will help to assess how much knowledge you’ve gained. You will have three attempts to complete the post-test. Your score must be 75% or better in order to receive the AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Please complete the evaluation survey at the conclusion of each unit within the learning module.
Duration & Fee: FREE for Maine Clinicians
Hardware/Software Requirements:
- Computer with Internet connection
- Current version of Chrome, Firefox or Safari browser. You must have JavaScript enabled.
- The quiz tool within the online module is not fully compatible with smartphones or tablets. To avoid issues, such as answers not being recorded, we recommend using a computer to complete the pre- and post-tests.
Disclosures:
Marc Fishman, MD is a consultant for Alkermes. All relevant financial relationships have been mitigated.
None of the planners or the other presenters for this activity have relevant financial relationships to disclose.
Dee Kerry
Executive Director
American Academy of Pediatrics, Maine Chapter
Emily Belanger, RN
Education & Membership Manager
American Academy of Pediatrics, Maine Chapter
Amy Carter, BSHA-M
Director
Maine Medical Association, Center for Quality Improvement
Deborah Hagler, MD, MPH, FAAP
Pediatrics
Mid Coast Medical Group
Andrew B. MacLean, J.D.
Chief Executive Officer
Maine Medical Association
Shannon Mountain-Ray, LCSW
Director of Integrated Treatment, Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program (ASAP)
Boston Children’s Hospital
Sarah Bagley, MD, MSc
Associate Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics
Boston University School of Medicine/Boston Medical Center
Ariel Botta, PhD, MSW, LICSW
Coordinator of Group Therapy, Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program
Boston Children’s Hospital
Deepa Camenga, MD, MHS, FAAP
Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine
Yale School of Medicine/Yale New Haven Hospital
Amy Yule, MD
Director of Adolescent Addiction Psychiatry
Boston Medical Center
Elizabeth Samuels, MD, MPH, MHS
Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
Brown Emergency Medicine
Richard L. Brown, MD, MPH
Professor of Family Medicine
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health
Miriam Schizer, MD, MPH
Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program
Boston Children’s Hospital
Omar Shah, BCH
Addiction medicine fellow
Harvard Medical School/Boston Children’s Hospital
Kevin M. Simon, MD
Attending Psychiatrist & Addiction Medicine Specialist
Adolescent Substance Use & Addiction Program, Boston Children’s Hospital
Adrienne Carmack, MD
Medical Director
Office of Child and Family Services
Emily Nields, DO
Pediatric Addiction Medicine
Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program of Boston Children’s Hospital
Haner Hernández, Ph.D., CPS, CADCII, LADCI
Senior Consultant
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Marc Fishman, MD
Medical Director
Maryland Treatment Centers
Leslie Green, LICSW, MSW
Clinical Social Worker, Adolescent Substance Use & Addiction Program (ASAP)
Boston Children’s Hospital
Jesse Hinckley, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor
University of Colorado School of Medicine
Jason Reynolds, MD, PhD
Primary Care
Wareham Pediatrics
Fred Muench, PhD
President
Partnership to End Addiction
Susanne E Tanski, MD, MPH
Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Section Chief and Vice Chair of General Pediatrics
Dartmouth Health Children’s
Camille A. Broussard Robinson, MD, MPH
Adolescent Medicine Physician
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Thomas E. Freese, Ph.D.
Director
UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs
Modar “Mo” Sukkarieh, MD
Boston Children’s Substance Use and Addiction Program (ASAP)
Boston Children’s Hospital
This work was made possible with generous funding from the Maine Health Access Foundation.
The Maine Medical Education Trust designates this enduring material for a maximum of 21.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
This activity qualifies for 3.5 credits of the 3 CME credit requirement for opioid medication education found in P.L. 2015, Chapter 488, Maine’s legislation to address the opioid drug crisis.
This activity qualifies for 8 hours of the 8 hours of training on opioid or other substance use disorders and the appropriate treatment of pain required by the MATE Act.
This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint providership of the Maine Medical Education Trust and Maine Medical Association, Center for Quality Improvement. The Maine Medical Education Trust is accredited by the Maine Medical Association Committee on Continuing Medical Education and Accreditation to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
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