Tobacco Kills: Intervention and Policy Solutions in Addiction Treatment

Duration
90 Minutes
Speakers

Joseph Guydish, PhD, MPH

Professor of Medicine and Health Policy, University of California, San Francisco

Joseph Guydish, PhD, MPH, is Professor of Medicine and Health Policy at the University of California, San Francisco. His research concerns access, delivery, and organization of substance abuse treatment services. He leads the NIDA P50 San Francisco Treatment Research Center, which is focused on continuing and extended models of addiction treatment. He is co-investigator in the regional node of the NIDA Clinical Trials Network, one of 13 such nodes in a national network dedicated to improving substance abuse treatment through multi-site clinical trials research. He has led studies evaluating San Francisco efforts to improve access to publicly-funded drug abuse treatment, assessing federal policy to end drug addiction and alcoholism as an SSI disability category, evaluating needle exchange as an HIV prevention strategy, and investigating Drug Court and intensive case management interventions for drug-involved offenders. He is currently testing strategies designed to support drug abuse treatment programs in better addressing tobacco dependence.

Colleen Hopkins, MPH

Senior Associate, Tobacco Prevention, CADCA
Colleen Hopkins serves as CADCA’s Senior Associate for Tobacco Prevention. In this role, Colleen works on the CDC Community Transformation Dissemination Grant to strategically disseminate evidence-based practices related to tobacco-free living within CADCA’s coalition affiliates and national partner network. Before coming to CADCA, Colleen worked at the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) on the Chronic Disease team, as a Health IT Research Assistant at Information Innovators Inc., and as an AmeriCorps VISTA member for the Rappahannock Area Health District. Colleen holds a Bachelor of Science in Biology from the University of Mary Washington and a Masters in Public Health from George Mason University.
Webinar Objectives
  • Discuss the very high prevalence of smoking among persons in addiction treatment, and some of the reasons underlying this high prevalence.
  • Explain the role of smoking in excess mortality as well as premature mortality among persons who receive addiction treatment.
  • Describe program and policy approaches to better addressing smoking in addiction treatment populations.
  • Identify the rate of quit attempts for persons in addiction treatment, and strategies for increasing quit attempts.
Additional Resources Cited in the Webinar