Students Certified as Substance Use Disorder Specialists
Students Certified as Substance Use Disorder Specialists
D鈥橸ouville program offers free course through federal grant
Buffalo, New York 鈥 October 2, 2020 鈥 Western New York has 15 new certified professionals to help combat the opiate crisis, as D鈥橸ouville graduated its first class of Substance Use Disorder Specialists (SUDS) last week.
D鈥橸ouville offers an eight-week certificate program, in partnership with Horizon Health Services, to train new and existing behavioral-health paraprofessionals to be proficient in supporting substance use disorder treatment as part of an integrated and interprofessional care team. Thanks to a $680,000 grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration Opioid Workforce Expansion Program, the course is free of charge.
The inaugural class used a combination of self-paced online modules and live trainings via Zoom to complete the training and held a Zoom 鈥済raduation鈥 on September 26. The students learned the core skills of effective interprofessional practice and communication, cultural competence, professional accountability, support skills for patients and families, and patient safety.
鈥淭he participants鈥 enhanced clinical judgment and reasoning will prepare them to work in a community health setting with medically underserved populations,鈥 said Patricia Abbott, PhD, newly named director of the SUDS program and chair of social sciences at D鈥橸ouville. 鈥淎dditionally, students are linked with job-placement resources so they can find employment in high-need areas of Western New York.鈥
鈥淕raduates from this program can be part of countywide efforts to address opioid use in a professional, clinical role,鈥 said Erie County Commissioner of Health Dr. Gale Burstein. 鈥淲e appreciate D鈥橸ouville鈥檚 work to establish this innovative program and to add to our region鈥檚 capacity to fill crucial openings in behavioral health and healthcare settings.鈥
Congressman Brian Higgins said, 鈥淭he opioid crisis has been exacerbated by the pandemic making the need for this program even greater. We are seeing an immediate return on this federal investment with 15 new certified Substance Use Disorder Specialists prepared to better treat addiction. We commend D鈥橸ouville and Horizon Health Services for teaming up to provide this program as well as the healthcare professionals who sought out this opportunity to grow in their understanding of the best tools to help those struggling.鈥
The next eight-week SUDS program will launch on January 4, 2021. Applications are now being accepted, with a deadline of December 14. The free training is appropriate for current healthcare professionals, people who wish to transition to work in the field of substance use disorders, or those who wish to launch a career in the field.
More information is available at the SUD Support Specialist certificate webpage or by emailing sudsprogram@dyc.edu. Additional workforce development courses for healthcare careers, including pharmacy technician and community health worker, will launch soon through D鈥橸ouville鈥檚 Pathways Program at the new Health Professions Hub, which is set to open in late December.