Katherine E. Calver, Jeffrey H. Samet, Emily C. Williams
{"title":"Addiction Science & Clinical Practice: a new partnership with the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center to usher in our next phase","authors":"Katherine E. Calver, Jeffrey H. Samet, Emily C. Williams","doi":"10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In 2022, we announced [1] that our masthead was growing, with Dr Emily Williams stepping into the role of <i>Addiction Science & Clinical Practice</i>’s co-Editor-in-Chief (EIC), leading alongside co-EIC Dr Jeffrey Samet. We are now pleased to announce that <i>ASCP</i> enters this next phase with a new partner: the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center. As the joint owner of the journal (together with our publisher, Springer Nature/BMC), the Grayken Center for Addiction will ensure the longevity of <i>ASCP</i>, while preserving its editorial independence.</p><p>Since its transition from a National Institute on Drug Abuse journal in 2011 to its current form as an open access publication of Springer Nature/BMC, <i>ASCP</i> has enjoyed over a decade of continuous growth. We believe that the journal’s longevity is rooted in the importance of its core mission: to publish research that seeks to address the quality of care for people with unhealthy substance use across a spectrum of clinical settings. In 2012, introducing the rebranded journal in an editorial, “Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use,” then-co-EICs Drs Richard Saitz and Samet wrote: “In the health-care sector, attention to unhealthy substance use cannot be limited to highly specialized care settings; most patients with these conditions appear in general health settings where such problems are all too often ignored.” [2]. The editorial called for an increase in the quality and effectiveness of screening and treatment for people in primary care and other non-specialty settings, and for greater scrutiny of the effects of unhealthy substance use below the highest thresholds. More than ten years on, we remain dedicated to this mission while also building on it to advance equity in identification and evidence-based treatment of addictions and address structures that produce inequity [1].</p><p>We could not have hoped for a better partner than the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center to shepherd this work forward. Founded in 2017, the Grayken Center for Addiction is a national resource for substance use disorder treatment and education, research, advocacy, and thought leadership. As part of Boston Medical Center, the region’s safety net hospital, the Grayken Center for Addiction is driving innovation in substance use treatment, offering patients with varying identities and unique lived experiences low-barrier, patient-centered programs to address unhealthy substance use across a variety of settings, and provide harm-reduction initiatives and wrap-around care.</p><p>Under the leadership of Medical Director Dr Miriam Komaromy, the Grayken Center for Addiction’s treatment programming is focused on addressing known gaps in substance use care with evidence-based approaches. The program’s Rapid ACCESS Recovery Coaching program, and Faster Paths medication bridge clinic provide swift evaluation, support, and referral to a number of low-barrier substance use treatment options within Boston Medical Center and the community. Likewise, Project ASSERT provides screening, brief intervention, and counseling to patients in the Emergency Department, ensuring that this critical touchpoint with the healthcare system is supportive to people who may benefit from substance use treatment or harm-reduction services.</p><p>The Grayken Center for Addiction also specializes in substance use treatment for special populations, often those most vulnerable to the harms of substance use. A variety of specialized substance use disorder programs serve adolescents and young adults, pregnant people, parents of infants, and people who are unhoused.</p><p>The best-known program under the Grayken umbrella is the Office-Based Addiction Treatment (OBAT) program, led by Colleen Labelle MSN, RN-BC, CARN, who also leads the Grayken Center’s Training and Technical Assistance (TTA) Program. BMC’s OBAT program is the largest program providing pharmacotherapy for opioid and alcohol use disorders in New England, serving over 800 patients. OBAT providers integrate substance use treatment into primary care, ensuring that patients’ medical needs are addressed and care coordinated by a single team. The OBAT program is a nationally recognized leader upon which similar programs in outpatient settings across the country have been modeled, and the OBAT model has been replicated in a wide variety of healthcare institutions.</p><p>As the Grayken Center for Addiction leads the way in innovative substance use treatment programs and research, it also serves as a center for advocacy and education. Its substance use policy-related efforts have been influential in Boston, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and on a national level. The Grayken Center for Addiction’s Addiction Medicine Fellowship program is nationally recognized for its excellence in training the next generation of addiction medicine physicians. The Center’s Addiction Nursing Fellowship is a unique resource supporting the critical role that nurses play in treatment of substance use disorders.</p><p>Importantly, while <i>ASCP</i> and the Grayken Center for Addiction are aligned in their missions and dedication to improving substance use treatment, treatment access, and quality of care, the journal will retain its editorial independence and receive no editorial input from the Grayken Center for Addiction or its representatives. Our peer and internal review processes remain as robust as ever, and the recent onboarding of several new Associate Editors has only strengthened these processes.</p><p>While our editorial team and processes remain independent, the work of the Grayken Center for Addiction is not absent from the pages of <i>ASCP</i>. The first submissions to a new, ongoing series—The Grayken Lessons Case Conference Reports—have already been published. These reports describe cases in substance use treatment recently presented by addiction medicine fellows as a part of the Grayken Center for Addiction’s regular case conference series and provide critical insight about addiction treatment approaches. Each include expert commentary from the physicians, nurses, and other providers involved in each case. Over time, these case conference reports will constitute a growing repository of expertise and insight into lessons learned from treating complex patients with substance use problems. Submissions to the Grayken Lessons series are subject to non-biased external and internal peer review, like any other manuscript.</p><p>As we step into this next phase, <i>ASCP</i> remains committed to the principle that substance use treatment should be based on the best available evidence and accessible outside of specialty care settings. Over a decade after the publication of “Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use,” [2] there indeed remains much to learn about engaging and retaining people with unhealthy substance use in care and addressing barriers to quality care rooted in stigma and bias, especially among minoritized groups. With the support of and partnership with Boston Medical Center’s Grayken Center for Addiction—a pioneer in substance use treatment, research, and education—we continue and expand our mission.</p><ol data-track-component=\"outbound reference\" data-track-context=\"references section\"><li data-counter=\"1.\"><p>Williams EC, Samet JH. Shifts at the Helm: gratitude, re-commitment to our work, and a call for addictions disparities research. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2022;17(1):12.</p><p>Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar </p></li><li data-counter=\"2.\"><p>Saitz R, Samet JH. Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2012;7(1):1.</p><p>Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar </p></li></ol><p>Download references<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><h3>Authors and Affiliations</h3><ol><li><p>Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA</p><p>Katherine E. Calver</p></li><li><p>Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA</p><p>Jeffrey H. Samet</p></li><li><p>Department of Health Systems and Population Health, School of Public Health, University of Washington; Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered and Value-Driven Care, Health Services Research & Development, VA Puget Sound, Seattle, WA, USA</p><p>Emily C. Williams</p></li></ol><span>Authors</span><ol><li><span>Katherine E. Calver</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li><li><span>Jeffrey H. Samet</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li><li><span>Emily C. Williams</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li></ol><h3>Contributions</h3><p>KEC drafted the editorial; JHS and ECW provided edits and all authors approved the final manuscript</p><h3>Corresponding author</h3><p>Correspondence to Katherine E. Calver.</p><h3>Competing interest</h3>\n<p>KEC and JHS work at Boston Medical Center. ECW has no competing interests to declare.</p><h3>Publisher’s note</h3><p>Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.</p><p><b>Open Access</b> This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.</p>\n<p>Reprints and permissions</p><img alt=\"Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark\" height=\"81\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"data:image/svg+xml;base64,<svg height="81" width="57" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><g fill="none" fill-rule="evenodd"><path d="m17.35 35.45 21.3-14.2v-17.03h-21.3" fill="#989898"/><path d="m38.65 35.45-21.3-14.2v-17.03h21.3" fill="#747474"/><path d="m28 .5c-12.98 0-23.5 10.52-23.5 23.5s10.52 23.5 23.5 23.5 23.5-10.52 23.5-23.5c0-6.23-2.48-12.21-6.88-16.62-4.41-4.4-10.39-6.88-16.62-6.88zm0 41.25c-9.8 0-17.75-7.95-17.75-17.75s7.95-17.75 17.75-17.75 17.75 7.95 17.75 17.75c0 4.71-1.87 9.22-5.2 12.55s-7.84 5.2-12.55 5.2z" fill="#535353"/><path d="m41 36c-5.81 6.23-15.23 7.45-22.43 2.9-7.21-4.55-10.16-13.57-7.03-21.5l-4.92-3.11c-4.95 10.7-1.19 23.42 8.78 29.71 9.97 6.3 23.07 4.22 30.6-4.86z" fill="#9c9c9c"/><path d="m.2 58.45c0-.75.11-1.42.33-2.01s.52-1.09.91-1.5c.38-.41.83-.73 1.34-.94.51-.22 1.06-.32 1.65-.32.56 0 1.06.11 1.51.35.44.23.81.5 1.1.81l-.91 1.01c-.24-.24-.49-.42-.75-.56-.27-.13-.58-.2-.93-.2-.39 0-.73.08-1.05.23-.31.16-.58.37-.81.66-.23.28-.41.63-.53 1.04-.13.41-.19.88-.19 1.39 0 1.04.23 1.86.68 2.46.45.59 1.06.88 1.84.88.41 0 .77-.07 1.07-.23s.59-.39.85-.68l.91 1c-.38.43-.8.76-1.28.99-.47.22-1 .34-1.58.34-.59 0-1.13-.1-1.64-.31-.5-.2-.94-.51-1.31-.91-.38-.4-.67-.9-.88-1.48-.22-.59-.33-1.26-.33-2.02zm8.4-5.33h1.61v2.54l-.05 1.33c.29-.27.61-.51.96-.72s.76-.31 1.24-.31c.73 0 1.27.23 1.61.71.33.47.5 1.14.5 2.02v4.31h-1.61v-4.1c0-.57-.08-.97-.25-1.21-.17-.23-.45-.35-.83-.35-.3 0-.56.08-.79.22-.23.15-.49.36-.78.64v4.8h-1.61zm7.37 6.45c0-.56.09-1.06.26-1.51.18-.45.42-.83.71-1.14.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.36c.07.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.29 0 .57-.04.83-.13s.51-.21.76-.37l.55 1.01c-.33.21-.69.39-1.09.53-.41.14-.83.21-1.26.21-.48 0-.92-.08-1.34-.25-.41-.16-.76-.4-1.07-.7-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.6-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.07.45-.31.29-.5.73-.58 1.3zm2.5.62c0-.57.09-1.08.28-1.53.18-.44.43-.82.75-1.13s.69-.54 1.1-.71c.42-.16.85-.24 1.31-.24.45 0 .84.08 1.17.23s.61.34.85.57l-.77 1.02c-.19-.16-.38-.28-.56-.37-.19-.09-.39-.14-.61-.14-.56 0-1.01.21-1.35.63-.35.41-.52.97-.52 1.67 0 .69.17 1.24.51 1.66.34.41.78.62 1.32.62.28 0 .54-.06.78-.17.24-.12.45-.26.64-.42l.67 1.03c-.33.29-.69.51-1.08.65-.39.15-.78.23-1.18.23-.46 0-.9-.08-1.31-.24-.4-.16-.75-.39-1.05-.7s-.53-.69-.7-1.13c-.17-.45-.25-.96-.25-1.53zm6.91-6.45h1.58v6.17h.05l2.54-3.16h1.77l-2.35 2.8 2.59 4.07h-1.75l-1.77-2.98-1.08 1.23v1.75h-1.58zm13.69 1.27c-.25-.11-.5-.17-.75-.17-.58 0-.87.39-.87 1.16v.75h1.34v1.27h-1.34v5.6h-1.61v-5.6h-.92v-1.2l.92-.07v-.72c0-.35.04-.68.13-.98.08-.31.21-.57.4-.79s.42-.39.71-.51c.28-.12.63-.18 1.04-.18.24 0 .48.02.69.07.22.05.41.1.57.17zm.48 5.18c0-.57.09-1.08.27-1.53.17-.44.41-.82.72-1.13.3-.31.65-.54 1.04-.71.39-.16.8-.24 1.23-.24s.84.08 1.24.24c.4.17.74.4 1.04.71s.54.69.72 1.13c.19.45.28.96.28 1.53s-.09 1.08-.28 1.53c-.18.44-.42.82-.72 1.13s-.64.54-1.04.7-.81.24-1.24.24-.84-.08-1.23-.24-.74-.39-1.04-.7c-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.45-.27-.96-.27-1.53zm1.65 0c0 .69.14 1.24.43 1.66.28.41.68.62 1.18.62.51 0 .9-.21 1.19-.62.29-.42.44-.97.44-1.66 0-.7-.15-1.26-.44-1.67-.29-.42-.68-.63-1.19-.63-.5 0-.9.21-1.18.63-.29.41-.43.97-.43 1.67zm6.48-3.44h1.33l.12 1.21h.05c.24-.44.54-.79.88-1.02.35-.24.7-.36 1.07-.36.32 0 .59.05.78.14l-.28 1.4-.33-.09c-.11-.01-.23-.02-.38-.02-.27 0-.56.1-.86.31s-.55.58-.77 1.1v4.2h-1.61zm-47.87 15h1.61v4.1c0 .57.08.97.25 1.2.17.24.44.35.81.35.3 0 .57-.07.8-.22.22-.15.47-.39.73-.73v-4.7h1.61v6.87h-1.32l-.12-1.01h-.04c-.3.36-.63.64-.98.86-.35.21-.76.32-1.24.32-.73 0-1.27-.24-1.61-.71-.33-.47-.5-1.14-.5-2.02zm9.46 7.43v2.16h-1.61v-9.59h1.33l.12.72h.05c.29-.24.61-.45.97-.63.35-.17.72-.26 1.1-.26.43 0 .81.08 1.15.24.33.17.61.4.84.71.24.31.41.68.53 1.11.13.42.19.91.19 1.44 0 .59-.09 1.11-.25 1.57-.16.47-.38.85-.65 1.16-.27.32-.58.56-.94.73-.35.16-.72.25-1.1.25-.3 0-.6-.07-.9-.2s-.59-.31-.87-.56zm0-2.3c.26.22.5.37.73.45.24.09.46.13.66.13.46 0 .84-.2 1.15-.6.31-.39.46-.98.46-1.77 0-.69-.12-1.22-.35-1.61-.23-.38-.61-.57-1.13-.57-.49 0-.99.26-1.52.77zm5.87-1.69c0-.56.08-1.06.25-1.51.16-.45.37-.83.65-1.14.27-.3.58-.54.93-.71s.71-.25 1.08-.25c.39 0 .73.07 1 .2.27.14.54.32.81.55l-.06-1.1v-2.49h1.61v9.88h-1.33l-.11-.74h-.06c-.25.25-.54.46-.88.64-.33.18-.69.27-1.06.27-.87 0-1.56-.32-2.07-.95s-.76-1.51-.76-2.65zm1.67-.01c0 .74.13 1.31.4 1.7.26.38.65.58 1.15.58.51 0 .99-.26 1.44-.77v-3.21c-.24-.21-.48-.36-.7-.45-.23-.08-.46-.12-.7-.12-.45 0-.82.19-1.13.59-.31.39-.46.95-.46 1.68zm6.35 1.59c0-.73.32-1.3.97-1.71.64-.4 1.67-.68 3.08-.84 0-.17-.02-.34-.07-.51-.05-.16-.12-.3-.22-.43s-.22-.22-.38-.3c-.15-.06-.34-.1-.58-.1-.34 0-.68.07-1 .2s-.63.29-.93.47l-.59-1.08c.39-.24.81-.45 1.28-.63.47-.17.99-.26 1.54-.26.86 0 1.51.25 1.93.76s.63 1.25.63 2.21v4.07h-1.32l-.12-.76h-.05c-.3.27-.63.48-.98.66s-.73.27-1.14.27c-.61 0-1.1-.19-1.48-.56-.38-.36-.57-.85-.57-1.46zm1.57-.12c0 .3.09.53.27.67.19.14.42.21.71.21.28 0 .54-.07.77-.2s.48-.31.73-.56v-1.54c-.47.06-.86.13-1.18.23-.31.09-.57.19-.76.31s-.33.25-.41.4c-.09.15-.13.31-.13.48zm6.29-3.63h-.98v-1.2l1.06-.07.2-1.88h1.34v1.88h1.75v1.27h-1.75v3.28c0 .8.32 1.2.97 1.2.12 0 .24-.01.37-.04.12-.03.24-.07.34-.11l.28 1.19c-.19.06-.4.12-.64.17-.23.05-.49.08-.76.08-.4 0-.74-.06-1.02-.18-.27-.13-.49-.3-.67-.52-.17-.21-.3-.48-.37-.78-.08-.3-.12-.64-.12-1.01zm4.36 2.17c0-.56.09-1.06.27-1.51s.41-.83.71-1.14c.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.37c.08.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.3 0 .58-.04.84-.13.25-.09.51-.21.76-.37l.54 1.01c-.32.21-.69.39-1.09.53s-.82.21-1.26.21c-.47 0-.92-.08-1.33-.25-.41-.16-.77-.4-1.08-.7-.3-.31-.54-.69-.72-1.13-.17-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.61-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.08.45-.31.29-.5.73-.57 1.3zm3.01 2.23c.31.24.61.43.92.57.3.13.63.2.98.2.38 0 .65-.08.83-.23s.27-.35.27-.6c0-.14-.05-.26-.13-.37-.08-.1-.2-.2-.34-.28-.14-.09-.29-.16-.47-.23l-.53-.22c-.23-.09-.46-.18-.69-.3-.23-.11-.44-.24-.62-.4s-.33-.35-.45-.55c-.12-.21-.18-.46-.18-.75 0-.61.23-1.1.68-1.49.44-.38 1.06-.57 1.83-.57.48 0 .91.08 1.29.25s.71.36.99.57l-.74.98c-.24-.17-.49-.32-.73-.42-.25-.11-.51-.16-.78-.16-.35 0-.6.07-.76.21-.17.15-.25.33-.25.54 0 .14.04.26.12.36s.18.18.31.26c.14.07.29.14.46.21l.54.19c.23.09.47.18.7.29s.44.24.64.4c.19.16.34.35.46.58.11.23.17.5.17.82 0 .3-.06.58-.17.83-.12.26-.29.48-.51.68-.23.19-.51.34-.84.45-.34.11-.72.17-1.15.17-.48 0-.95-.09-1.41-.27-.46-.19-.86-.41-1.2-.68z" fill="#535353"/></g></svg>\" width=\"57\"/><h3>Cite this article</h3><p>Calver, K.E., Samet, J.H. & Williams, E.C. <i>Addiction Science & Clinical Practice</i>: a new partnership with the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center to usher in our next phase. <i>Addict Sci Clin Pract</i> <b>19</b>, 69 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x</p><p>Download citation<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><ul data-test=\"publication-history\"><li><p>Published<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-09-13\">13 September 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>DOI</abbr><span>: </span><span>https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x</span></p></li></ul><h3>Share this article</h3><p>Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:</p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"get shareable link\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Get shareable link</button><p>Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.</p><p data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"select share url\" data-track-label=\"button\"></p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"copy share url\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Copy to clipboard</button><p> Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative </p>","PeriodicalId":54223,"journal":{"name":"Addiction Science & Clinical Practice","volume":"10 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Addiction Science & Clinical Practice","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"SUBSTANCE ABUSE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In 2022, we announced [1] that our masthead was growing, with Dr Emily Williams stepping into the role of Addiction Science & Clinical Practice’s co-Editor-in-Chief (EIC), leading alongside co-EIC Dr Jeffrey Samet. We are now pleased to announce that ASCP enters this next phase with a new partner: the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center. As the joint owner of the journal (together with our publisher, Springer Nature/BMC), the Grayken Center for Addiction will ensure the longevity of ASCP, while preserving its editorial independence.
Since its transition from a National Institute on Drug Abuse journal in 2011 to its current form as an open access publication of Springer Nature/BMC, ASCP has enjoyed over a decade of continuous growth. We believe that the journal’s longevity is rooted in the importance of its core mission: to publish research that seeks to address the quality of care for people with unhealthy substance use across a spectrum of clinical settings. In 2012, introducing the rebranded journal in an editorial, “Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use,” then-co-EICs Drs Richard Saitz and Samet wrote: “In the health-care sector, attention to unhealthy substance use cannot be limited to highly specialized care settings; most patients with these conditions appear in general health settings where such problems are all too often ignored.” [2]. The editorial called for an increase in the quality and effectiveness of screening and treatment for people in primary care and other non-specialty settings, and for greater scrutiny of the effects of unhealthy substance use below the highest thresholds. More than ten years on, we remain dedicated to this mission while also building on it to advance equity in identification and evidence-based treatment of addictions and address structures that produce inequity [1].
We could not have hoped for a better partner than the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center to shepherd this work forward. Founded in 2017, the Grayken Center for Addiction is a national resource for substance use disorder treatment and education, research, advocacy, and thought leadership. As part of Boston Medical Center, the region’s safety net hospital, the Grayken Center for Addiction is driving innovation in substance use treatment, offering patients with varying identities and unique lived experiences low-barrier, patient-centered programs to address unhealthy substance use across a variety of settings, and provide harm-reduction initiatives and wrap-around care.
Under the leadership of Medical Director Dr Miriam Komaromy, the Grayken Center for Addiction’s treatment programming is focused on addressing known gaps in substance use care with evidence-based approaches. The program’s Rapid ACCESS Recovery Coaching program, and Faster Paths medication bridge clinic provide swift evaluation, support, and referral to a number of low-barrier substance use treatment options within Boston Medical Center and the community. Likewise, Project ASSERT provides screening, brief intervention, and counseling to patients in the Emergency Department, ensuring that this critical touchpoint with the healthcare system is supportive to people who may benefit from substance use treatment or harm-reduction services.
The Grayken Center for Addiction also specializes in substance use treatment for special populations, often those most vulnerable to the harms of substance use. A variety of specialized substance use disorder programs serve adolescents and young adults, pregnant people, parents of infants, and people who are unhoused.
The best-known program under the Grayken umbrella is the Office-Based Addiction Treatment (OBAT) program, led by Colleen Labelle MSN, RN-BC, CARN, who also leads the Grayken Center’s Training and Technical Assistance (TTA) Program. BMC’s OBAT program is the largest program providing pharmacotherapy for opioid and alcohol use disorders in New England, serving over 800 patients. OBAT providers integrate substance use treatment into primary care, ensuring that patients’ medical needs are addressed and care coordinated by a single team. The OBAT program is a nationally recognized leader upon which similar programs in outpatient settings across the country have been modeled, and the OBAT model has been replicated in a wide variety of healthcare institutions.
As the Grayken Center for Addiction leads the way in innovative substance use treatment programs and research, it also serves as a center for advocacy and education. Its substance use policy-related efforts have been influential in Boston, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and on a national level. The Grayken Center for Addiction’s Addiction Medicine Fellowship program is nationally recognized for its excellence in training the next generation of addiction medicine physicians. The Center’s Addiction Nursing Fellowship is a unique resource supporting the critical role that nurses play in treatment of substance use disorders.
Importantly, while ASCP and the Grayken Center for Addiction are aligned in their missions and dedication to improving substance use treatment, treatment access, and quality of care, the journal will retain its editorial independence and receive no editorial input from the Grayken Center for Addiction or its representatives. Our peer and internal review processes remain as robust as ever, and the recent onboarding of several new Associate Editors has only strengthened these processes.
While our editorial team and processes remain independent, the work of the Grayken Center for Addiction is not absent from the pages of ASCP. The first submissions to a new, ongoing series—The Grayken Lessons Case Conference Reports—have already been published. These reports describe cases in substance use treatment recently presented by addiction medicine fellows as a part of the Grayken Center for Addiction’s regular case conference series and provide critical insight about addiction treatment approaches. Each include expert commentary from the physicians, nurses, and other providers involved in each case. Over time, these case conference reports will constitute a growing repository of expertise and insight into lessons learned from treating complex patients with substance use problems. Submissions to the Grayken Lessons series are subject to non-biased external and internal peer review, like any other manuscript.
As we step into this next phase, ASCP remains committed to the principle that substance use treatment should be based on the best available evidence and accessible outside of specialty care settings. Over a decade after the publication of “Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use,” [2] there indeed remains much to learn about engaging and retaining people with unhealthy substance use in care and addressing barriers to quality care rooted in stigma and bias, especially among minoritized groups. With the support of and partnership with Boston Medical Center’s Grayken Center for Addiction—a pioneer in substance use treatment, research, and education—we continue and expand our mission.
Williams EC, Samet JH. Shifts at the Helm: gratitude, re-commitment to our work, and a call for addictions disparities research. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2022;17(1):12.
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
Saitz R, Samet JH. Science to improve care for people affected by unhealthy alcohol and other drug use. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2012;7(1):1.
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
Download references
Authors and Affiliations
Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA
Katherine E. Calver
Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA
Jeffrey H. Samet
Department of Health Systems and Population Health, School of Public Health, University of Washington; Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered and Value-Driven Care, Health Services Research & Development, VA Puget Sound, Seattle, WA, USA
Emily C. Williams
Authors
Katherine E. CalverView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Jeffrey H. SametView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Emily C. WilliamsView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Contributions
KEC drafted the editorial; JHS and ECW provided edits and all authors approved the final manuscript
Corresponding author
Correspondence to Katherine E. Calver.
Competing interest
KEC and JHS work at Boston Medical Center. ECW has no competing interests to declare.
Publisher’s note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
Reprints and permissions
Cite this article
Calver, K.E., Samet, J.H. & Williams, E.C. Addiction Science & Clinical Practice: a new partnership with the Grayken Center for Addiction at Boston Medical Center to usher in our next phase. Addict Sci Clin Pract19, 69 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x
Download citation
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-024-00499-x
Share this article
Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:
Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.
Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative
期刊介绍:
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice provides a forum for clinically relevant research and perspectives that contribute to improving the quality of care for people with unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, or other drug use and addictive behaviours across a spectrum of clinical settings.
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice accepts articles of clinical relevance related to the prevention and treatment of unhealthy alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use across the spectrum of clinical settings. Topics of interest address issues related to the following: the spectrum of unhealthy use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs among the range of affected persons (e.g., not limited by age, race/ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation); the array of clinical prevention and treatment practices (from health messages, to identification and early intervention, to more extensive interventions including counseling and pharmacotherapy and other management strategies); and identification and management of medical, psychiatric, social, and other health consequences of substance use.
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is particularly interested in articles that address how to improve the quality of care for people with unhealthy substance use and related conditions as described in the (US) Institute of Medicine report, Improving the Quality of Healthcare for Mental Health and Substance Use Conditions (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2006). Such articles address the quality of care and of health services. Although the journal also welcomes submissions that address these conditions in addiction speciality-treatment settings, the journal is particularly interested in including articles that address unhealthy use outside these settings, including experience with novel models of care and outcomes, and outcomes of research-practice collaborations.
Although Addiction Science & Clinical Practice is generally not an outlet for basic science research, we will accept basic science research manuscripts that have clearly described potential clinical relevance and are accessible to audiences outside a narrow laboratory research field.