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- Mark Servis, Scott M Fishman, Mark S Wallace, Stephen G Henry, Doug Ziedonis, Daniel Ciccarone, Kelly R Knight, Steven Shoptaw, Patrick Dowling, Jeffrey R Suchard, Shalini Shah, Naileshni Singh, Lynette C Cedarquist, Navid Alem, David J Copenhaver, Marjorie Westervelt, and Brigham C Willis.
- Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
- Pain Med. 2021 Feb 4; 22 (1): 60-66.
ObjectiveThe University of California (UC) leadership sought to develop a robust educational response to the epidemic of opioid-related deaths. Because the contributors to this current crisis are multifactorial, a comprehensive response requires educating future physicians about safe and effective management of pain, safer opioid prescribing, and identification and treatment of substance use disorder (SUD).MethodsThe six UC medical schools appointed an opioid crisis workgroup to develop educational strategies and a coordinated response to the opioid epidemic. The workgroup had diverse specialty and disciplinary representation. This workgroup focused on developing a foundational set of educational competencies for adoption across all UC medical schools that address pain, SUD, and public health concerns related to the opioid crisis.ResultsThe UC pain and SUD competencies were either newly created or adapted from existing competencies that addressed pain, SUD, and opioid and other prescription drug misuse. The final competencies covered three domains: pain, SUD, and public health issues related to the opioid crisis.ConclusionsThe authors present a novel set of educational competencies as a response to the opioid crisis. These competencies emphasize the subject areas that are fundamental to the opioid crisis: pain management, the safe use of opioids, and understanding and treating SUD.© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
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