Present at the meeting were
Senior Scholars: Christina M. Delos Reyes, M.D., Karen Drexler,
M.D., Katherine McQueen, M.D., and Gail L. Rose, Ph.D.
Junior Scholars: Sarah W.
Book, M.D., Andrea F. DiMartini, M.D., Marian Fireman, M.D.,
and Joseph T. Sakai, M.D., along with Wendol Williams, M.D.
from NIAAA
The meeting was chaired by
Marc Schuckit, M.D. with the assistance of Marianne Guschwan,
M.D. and Marcy Gregg.
I. The initial get
together Wednesday, October 22nd.
The initial get together
occurred in the lobby of the Kapalua Bay Resort with an
introduction of all those present and a brief overview of the
three-day agenda. Discussions continued over dinner at the
Sansei Restaurant.
II. Session 2: 8 a.m. - 2:30
p.m. (including working breakfast and lunch) on Thursday,
October 23rd
The morning began with an
update of the general responsibilities expected of first and
second-year scholars at this meeting and throughout the
year. Marc Schuckit then reviewed the lectures already
existing on the website. The group did some brainstorming
about possible topics for future lectures and came up with
such ideas as alcohol in the emergency department, alcohol use
among college students, treating chronic pain, brain imaging
to show that alcohol is a brain disease, overview of treatment
options (although Chris' lecture covers this to some extent),
and resilience and prevention among youth. Gail Rose raised
the question of how to appropriately date all lectures (Susan
Tapert will be asked to follow through) while also updating
lectures currently on the site when appropriate. Another
suggestion included the need for a lecture on the optimal use
of Endnotes or Procite for the next meeting - a task to be
taken on be Karen Drexler from Emory.
The majority of the
morning was spent with a highly detailed presentation and
discussion of the AMSP lecture on “How to Give a Lecture”.
The first-year scholars were reminded of the primary
importance of preparation: the optimal approach for a
literature review (assuming that 20-30 or more references are
likely to be given for each of the lectures developed); the
importance of carefully following an outline format (with the
suggestion that lectures on the website be studied as
examples); the need to use sentence fragments rather than full
sentences and (even worse) paragraphs in presenting the
outline; the importance of using abuse and dependence as
defined in DSM IV; issues related to the appropriate use of
the term “binge”; the optimal use of slides that can be
understood within 10 or 15 seconds; and so on. Readers of
these minutes who want to review more details regarding this
lecture are invited to see the lecture itself as posted with
lecture notes and slides on the web.
General questions
regarding the functioning of AMSP were discussed;
in particular, the optimal use of the first-year salary offset
(meant to enrich research and free up time from clinics but
never to give someone a higher salary or to help the
university meet its requirements for support of the scholar).
Also, in reaction to some of the issues raised, Sarah Book
offered to help write a more detailed letter that can be used
to help orient first-year scholars as they prepare for their
first meeting. In addition, we will consider the possibility
of creating another poster session at the Research Society on
Alcoholism, and Sarah offered to take this on as her
responsibility.
Karen Drexler next
reviewed her accomplishments over the last six months at Emory
University. These included: giving a
lecture to the Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology
undergraduate students on emotion regulation in cocaine
dependence; being invited to help organize and speak on SUD
treatment at the Advances in Medicine day given to112
third-year medical students; being one of the 10 teachers from
all of the Emory University School of Medicine to receive the
Emory Medical School Dean's Teaching Award; being promoted
from Associate to Assistant Professor; joining the advisory
group for the Faculty Staff Assistance Program at Emory
Wellhouse; submitting an RO1 grant on the treatment of
nicotine dependence with a neuroimaging component to examine
neural correlates of craving before and after treatment (it
was the skills and clinical perspectives learned in AMSP that
made this application possible); and becoming a member of the
Board of Directors, Metro Atlanta Recovery Residences. Her
ongoing activities include: being Director of the Addiction
Psychiatry Residency Training Program; being an Assistant
Professor in Emory's school of medicine; being Director of the
Substance Abuse Treatment Program in the Atlanta VAMC;
participating as a scholar in the Drug Abuse Research Scholars
Program in Psychiatry (APA, NIDA-sponsored career development
award) studying emotion regulation and emotional decision
making in substance dependence; working as Block Director for
Substance Use Disorders/Human Behavior course for second-year
medical students (12 hours); working as Course Director for
Addiction Psychiatry course for Psychiatry Residents and
organizing eight hours of lectures to the PGY-1 constituents
and four hours of lectures for PGY-2 residents; working with
the VA Psychiatry Residents Journal Club two to four hours per
year; participating as a co-author in a chapter for the Oxford
University Press Textbook on Neuropsychiatry on Craving in
Human Subjects; being placed in a position where she herself
can hire two junior faculty to help augment the substance use
disorders program. In addition, Karen: gives a lecture on
Comorbid SUDs for PGY-3 psychiatry residents; has submitted a
paper on neural correlates of cocaine craving in women;
continues to mentor medical students starting in their first
year and now into their third year; mentored two MS-2 students
in the summer research program from which one of those
resident's project was selected for special recognition;
lectures in the Cognitive Behavior Therapy course for PGY-3s
at the VAMC outpatient clinic; is a member of the ABPN
Addiction Psychiatry Exam Committee, a member of the AAAP
PGY-5 Committee, a member of the Atlanta VAMC Research and
Development Committee, and a member of the Mental Health
Clinical Operations Committee in the VAMC.
Marc Schuckit then
reviewed the time frame for the first-year scholars regarding
the development of their lectures.
These include: the need to have created a first workable draft
of the outline to be shared with the senior scholar no later
than November 20th; working with the senior
scholars to put together the best possible draft of the
lecture outline and have this to Marc no later than December
20th (this is an extremely important deadline); to
then continue to work with Marc going through sequential
drafts of the lecture; beginning to develop rough drafts of
the slides, and beginning to think of and create the
bibliography with a goal of having a final draft of the
lecture and workable drafts of the slides to the senior
scholar by 01/10/04 and best form to Marc no later than
01/25/04. Final drafts of everything must be completed no
later than March 1st. First-year scholars are
encouraged to go back to the website repeatedly to look at how
outlines, slides, and references are done.
The discussion next turned to
some preliminary thoughts by the first-year scholars on
topics that they might use for their lecture, along with some
thoughts on how first and second-year scholars might team up.
Because (including Wendol Williams) there are five first-year
people preparing lectures, but only four second-year scholars,
Marianne Guschwan will serve in the additional second-year
scholar role.
The lunchtime was used for a
discussion of career development issues. These
included: promotions; sharing of data with colleagues; time
management; working out ways when and how to say “no”, if
appropriate, when asked to do things within the department;
research versus clinical tracks; the meaning of tenure; and so
on.
Gail Rose demonstrated her
lecture on mentoring. It was assumed
(as the original lecture had been developed) that this was
being given to medical students over approximately a forty
minute period. Issues related to organization, presentation
style, the use of slides, handling of questions, and so on
were discussed for this excellent lecture, with an emphasis on
issues relevant to junior scholars as they develop their
material.
The meeting adjourned around
2:45 p.m. with a review of the next day’s agenda and time
frames.
III. The working session of
Friday, October 24th from 7:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
(with working breakfast and lunch).
Katie McQueen began the
morning with her lecture on alcohol and cocaine.
Once again, this excellent lecture was used to discuss issues
of slide preparation, organization of lectures, various
aspects of delivery; and so on. Some elements of diagnostic
instruments and references were discussed.
Christina Delos Reyes from
Case Western Reserve next presented an overview of her
accomplishments over the prior six months.
These include her promotion to assistant professor (for which
she cited the help given by AMSP); her taking over the
second-year medical student lectures regarding substance use
disorders as part of a month long immerson in psychiatry for
the second-year students - she is responsible for four hours
of material for approximately 150 students; her work as an
active editor of a report commissioned by the Ohio Substance
Abuse Authority involving a survey of seven Ohio medical
schools regarding education on substance use disorders; her
lecturing to first year psychiatry residents offering two
hours on substance related emergencies; her role as chair of
the Physician Wellness program at her medical school;
co-authoring a chapter for a text book on dual diagnoses;
helping a fourth-year psychiatric resident present at grand
rounds - using AMSP lecture guidelines as a model; along with
her active clinical responsibilities. Over the next six
months she hopes to increase the number of lecture hours to
both medical students and psychiatric residents.
Gail Rose of the
University of Vermont next presented her accomplishments over
the last six months. These have
included her active consideration for an important promotion
in her research track; doing Brief Intervention (an AMSP
lecture) and Behavioral Change workshop lectures to third-year
medical students in July, to family practice and primary care
internal medicine residents (one each this summer), to primary
care clinics in the community (has given two since the last
AMSP meeting), and to the upcoming Statewide CME Conference
next month; working as a case facilitator in teaching medical
students about the genetics of alcoholism and nicotine
dependence; preparing and implementing two new senior medical
student electives regarding research on substance use
disorders and the other on medical education and professional
development; developing a paper (jointly with a graduate
scholar, Margaret Rukstalis) describing mentoring and AMSP
("Multi-Level Mentoring for Junior Faculty in Academic
Medicine: AMSP"); she is also working with Margaret to develop
another paper for Academic Medicine dealing with additional
teaching and mentoring aspects of AMSP; she is mentoriing the
Medical Student Leadership Group for first-year medical
students, which has a general professional development
curriculum of which includes a problem-based learning
approach, group functioning skills (collaboration,
decision-making, effective teams, constructive controvery),
communication skills, ethics, cultural diversity, life
balance, and personal wellness and health; her participation
in a six session introductory course to psychiatric residents
to help them prepare for optimal participation in a journal
club; as well as her usual research responsibilities. Gail
shared with us the fact that Margaret Rukstalis has been
nominated for a teaching award at Pennsylvania University.
A working lunch was used
for a discussion of career development issues.
This included how to handle issues of politics in the
department; the assets and liabilities of becoming part time;
how to handle time sheets when one works at several different
universities; and so on.
Chris Delos Reyes next
presented her lecture giving an overview of the evidence that
treatment for substance use disorders works.
As always, this was an excellent presentation, and
Marc asked her to be prepared at the next meeting to focus on
what a shorter lecture with fewer slides would look like. He
also asked Chris to give some thought to what five or so
slides she would pick if she was going to give a ten-minute
lecture, and to share some of these thoughts with the group on
Saturday.
Joseph Sakai, a first year
scholar from the University of Colorado, next reviewed what he
hoped to accomplish during his first six months with AMSP.
These included: assessing the courses currently being offered
at the university on substance use disorders; increasing his
level of involvement in the current teaching activities going
on by working with his mentor, Tom Crowley; consider
developing a ten-session elective for medical students;
working toward the possibility of becoming part of the
Physician’s Wellness Committee; looking into the possibility
of starting a DOC group at the University of Colorado; and
meeting with his chair and other prominent teachers in his
university to find ways to optimally expand his role.
The next report was the
plans for accomplishment at the Oregon Health & Science
University by Marian Fireman. Marian is in an excellent
position to have a major impact on alcohol and drug education
at OHSU because she is currently the psychiatry clerkship
director for medical students, a member of the Medical Student
Education Committee, and a member of the Clinical Services
Subcommittee for the school of medicine Curriculum Committee.
Specifically related to AMSP, she plans to survey the levels
of teaching in substance use disorders offered to first and
second-year medical students in the neurosciences curriculum
and as part of the principles of clinical medicine; she will
work to enhance the clerkship-related information for medical
students in years three and four as they apply to alcohol and
drugs; and will increase the number of lectures on substance
use disorders offered to third-year medical students.
Regarding psychiatric residents, she also serves in an
important role which gives her the opportunity to work toward
expanding substance use disorder-related education by:
increasing the length of the curriculum involvement for
substance-related problems for second and third-year
residents; working to improve the quality of lectures offered
as part of the introduction to addiction psychiatry;
considering (as a consequence of her AMSP involvement) joining
the residency training committee; expanding her role as a
screener of residency candidates which will enhance the option
of choosing individuals with interests in substance use
disorders; working to evaluate and improve the rotation in
substance-related problems given to third-year residents; and
reviewing current components of substance-related teaching to
the residents. To accomplish these tasks she is setting up a
series of meetings with the director of medical education,
director of residency training, chair of her department, and
the dean for graduate medical education.
Friday’s discussion ended
with a re-review of information related to career
development. First and second-year scholars broke off on
their own for further discussions and planning beginning at
2:30 p.m.
IV. Saturday, October 25th:
7:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
The morning began with the
presentation of Karen Drexler’s lecture on craving. This
was a superb demonstration of a way to get complex information
across to medical students while being engaging and
approachable. The discussion focused on how to make the
lecture even more accessible to individuals who know much less
about neuroanatomy, including several ideas regarding slides
that might be a bit too complex. Karen will develop an
alternative form of this lecture with the hopes of presenting
this to our group during our spring 2004 meeting.
Katie McQueen next
presented her accomplishments at Baylor University.
Katie recently received a K12 Mentored Clinical Investigator
Award which pays 80% of her salary for two years of a project
focusing on detoxification in the treatment of cocaine and
alcohol dependence and the use of naltrexone; she has been
granted a position as an assistant professor of psychiatry and
behavioral sciences at the University of Texas Health Sciences
Center in Houston; her work was instrumental in obtaining a
Waggoner Addiction Scholars Program Funding for a junior
collaborator and in recruiting an additional scholar
interested in substance-related problems in the department of
family and community medicine; Katie teaches and writes the
exam in the core medicine course regarding screening and
intervention, identification and treatment of intoxication and
withdrawal; she has delivered her lecture on alcohol and
cocaine as well as the lecture giving an overview of
substance-related disorders treatment to psychiatric and
family practice residents; Katie developed a lecture on
prescription drug misuse which is delivered to primary care
physicians, her work was instrumental in obtaining a SAMHSA
grant for $17 million spread over five years which was given
to the state of Texas to enhance screening and brief
intervention in hospital emergency rooms - a process generated
through a joint effort with those in her hospital district;
and she has regularly used several AMSP lectures (including
“Does Substance Use Disorders Treatment Work?”) as part of her
teaching efforts at her university.
Sarah Book at the Medical
University of South Carolina in Charleston next presented her
goals. These include: working to
become a lecturer in the ongoing series of lectures to the
third-year clinical clerkship (i.e. offering to relieve the
load of the person doing it now; working with psychiatric
residents to develop lectures on mentoring, how to give a
lecture, and other AMSP topics; to consider implementing a
10-session elective; and working with students and the school
to develop a DOC program. In addition, Sarah will take
advantage of the fact that she is on the medical school
education committee and part of a university with some
excellent resources regarding research in substance use
disorders.
Andrea DiMartini of the
University of Pittsburgh next reviewed some of her plans for
the upcoming six months. She will:
survey current progress on education in substance use
disorders at her university; work to have a substance-related
problem become the focus of one of the four cases discussed by
first-year medical students during their first two weeks as
part of a problem-based learning objective; offer a lecture on
how to give a lecture to residents - especially to help them
for their presentations at grand rounds; work with the alcohol
research training program (headed by Dr. Nancy Day) to find
additional ways to contribute; and hopes to work toward
getting both an R01 and possibly a K24 grant.
Chris Delos Reyes then
presented her seven-slide, 10-minute version
of her original 30+ slide, 40-minute lecture on
“Does Alcoholism Treatment Work?” She did an excellent job in
demonstrating that once a lecturer decides on the four or so
basic points that are the most important for that
presentation, it is possible to then use those goals (as
already implemented as part of her longer lecture) to produce
a very effective short lecture. This type of exercise is
important regarding how to handle a problem that occurs when
what was originally posted as a much longer lecture becomes
shorter.
Katie McQueen presented a
half-hour overview of an introduction to PowerPoint.
Katie did an excellent job reviewing the essentials of the
preparation of slides and other visual aides. She used the
lecture originally developed for AMSP by Susan Tapert, a form
which is posted on our website, and brought all members up to
date on the important use of this tool.
Marcy Gregg reviewed
recent developments on the AMSP website.
These include an estimated 3,300 hits on the website from
October 1st to 20th, with the top referrers being
Google (U.S., Canada, and Australia), Yahoo Search, MSN
Search, and direct hits (about 10%) on our website address.
We have received interest from the U.S., Europe, Asia, Oceania
(e.g. the South Pacific), South America, and Africa.
Depending on the time of year, the greatest interest appears
to be in information relating to athletes, medical
consequences, pharmacology, personality disorders,
substance-related problems in physicians, cocaine, and family
issues, along with a high level of interest in our minutes and
in our list of videos that can be useful to alcohol and drug
programs.
We next reviewed issues of
recruitment, established our dates for the spring
meeting (beginning on Wednesday, March 31st);
the venue (San Diego); and discussed several career
development issues.
The final assignment of
first-year topics and mentors were reviewed.
Marian Fireman will develop a lecture on hepatitis C in
substance use disorders, using as an advisor Marianne Guschwan
as well as either Katie McQueen and/or Susan Tapert to help
with technical issues; Wendol Williams will develop a lecture
on substance use disorders as demonstrated through brain
imaging and will be working with both Karen Drexler and Katie
McQueen; Sarah Book will produce a lecture on alcoholism and
social anxiety disorder working with Karen Drexler as her
primary mentor; Joseph Sakai will produce a lecture on opioid
agonist treatments (e.g. methadone), using Chris Delos Reyes
as a mentor; and Andrea DiMartini will produce a lecture on
screening for alcohol use disorders (which will include some
videotapes) working with Gail Rose as her primary mentor along
with help on the optimal use of the computer through Katie
and/or Susan.
The meeting ended with the
making of plans for following through with deadlines and
working closely with mentors.