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Creating
a World Class Facility for Clinical Care, Research and Teaching
The
MGH-Harvard Center for Addiction Medicine is
a program within the Outpatient Psychiatry Division and delivers
clinical evaluation, consultation, and study-related clinical
care in a multidisciplinary setting. Currently, the program
is engaged in multiple clinical trials studying pharmacological
and behavioral treatments of alcohol, nicotine, and cocaine
dependence. Studies include the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism’s collaborative study COMBINE, Bupropion
XL Pilot and fMRI Studies, the Cooperative Drug Discovery
Group for Treatment of Nicotine Dependence (UO1), a pilot
study of Memory Reconsolidation Blockade as a novel intervention
for Nicotine Dependence, National Institute on Drug Abuse-funded
studies of treatment strategies for smoking cessation and
smoking relapse prevention in people with schizophrenia, Adolescent
Treatment and 12-Step Mutual Help Involvement, and the Phenotype-Genotype
Project in Addictions and Mood Disorders. Please see our current
Research
Studies page for more information.
Fellowships
affiliated with Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General
Hospital offer exposure to a wide range of research and clinical
opportunities.
Center
for Addiction Medicine 
Massachusetts General Hospital
60 Staniford St
Boston, MA 02114
(tel) 617/ 726-2712; (fax) 617/643-1998
E-mail
Eden Evins, MD, MPH
Mission
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) proposes to establish
a Center for Addiction Medicine in order to improve the quality
of life of adults and adolescents with substance use disorders
and their families. Utilizing the assets of a major general
hospital and an academic institution, the new Center will
integrate clinical and research efforts in sustained and strategic
fashion. Patients with co-occurring substance use and mental
illness will be a special focus of the Center. While millions
of Americans have a co-occurring substance use disorder and
a psychiatric illness (e.g., alcoholism and depression), approaches
for their care are not yet well developed, and effective treatment
of individuals dually affected remains one of the greatest
challenges in psychiatry and medicine today.
A second focus will be medically ill patients who are undergoing
treatment in the hospital and who are found to have a substance
use disorder. Early recognition of substance use disorders
will help reduce the risk of complication in the treatment
of the medical condition, as well as provide an optimum environment
in which they can begin treatment.
By expanding and integrating the MGH's exceptional clinical,
research and teaching capabilities, the Center for Addiction
Medicine will expand the boundaries of addiction research.
Its expert multi-disciplinary team will translate scientific
findings and apply evidence-based clinical strategies to create
new models of care that will lead to more favorable outcomes
for this large, but inadequately served population.
Philanthropy will drive the implementation of various components
of the new MGH Center for Addiction Medicine. To request additional
information about the Center or to make a charitable contribution,
please contact Carol
Taylor, Director of Development for Psychiatry,
at 617-724-8799. |