NIDA and SAMHSA Enter Agreement to Expedite Transfer of Findings from Treatment Research into Clinical Practice

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The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) today announced a unique intra-agency agreement to expedite the application of findings from treatment research into clinical application.

The $1.5 million agreement between NIDA and SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) will help ensure that findings from NIDA's treatment research will be quickly and readily available to practitioners around the country.

Dr. Glen R. Hanson, NIDA Acting Director, says, "This collaborative effort puts into place a system to more rapidly alert health care providers about new and improved medications and behavioral therapies to treat patients for drug abuse and addiction."

SAMHSA Administrator Charles G. Curie noted, "This partnership is a significant step in our efforts working with the National Institutes of Health to define and develop a ?Science to Services' cycle and to reduce the time between the discovery of an effective treatment or intervention and its adoption as part of community-based care. Today, the Institute of Medicine tells us it can take up to 20 years."

Under the agreement, NIDA will provide funding to support CSAT's Addiction Technology Transfer Centers (ATTC), a network comprised of 14 independent regional centers and a national office charged with increasing the knowledge and skills of addiction treatment practitioners and fostering alliances to support and implement best treatment practices. The purpose of the agreement is to enhance efforts to disseminate and apply findings from NIDA's National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) as well as other NIDA-supported studies to practitioners served by the ATTCs.

Grants totaling almost $6 million were awarded this week to add three nodes - Northern New England (covering 5 states), New Mexico, and California/Arizona - to NIDA's CTN. The network is now comprised of 17 research nodes around the country. These nodes are conducting a variety of research protocols on behavioral, pharmacological, and integrated behavioral and pharmacological treatment interventions in 27 states at 120 community treatment sites. More than 3,500 patients are participating in these studies.

The CTN is designed to conduct community-based clinical trials of promising therapies for drug addiction and ensure the timely dissemination of effective treatments to community providers and their patients across a broad range of community-based treatment settings and diversified patient populations.

SAMHSA, a public health agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the lead federal agency for improving the quality and availability of substance abuse prevention, addiction treatment and mental health services in the United States. Information on SAMHSA's programs is available on the Internet at www.samhsa.gov.