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Addiction Medicine is a medical specialty within which all aspects of addictive disease are treated. The specialty is often described as crossing over into other areas, since various aspects of addiction fall within the fields of public health, psychiatry, and internal medicine, among others. Incorporated within the specialty are detoxification, rehabilitation, harm-reduction, abstinence-based treatment, individual and group therapies, oversight of halfway houses, treatment of withdrawal-related symptoms, acute intervention, and long term therapies designed to reduce likelihood of relapse. Some specialists, primarily those who also have expertise in family medicine or internal medicine, also provide treatment for disease states commonly associated with substance use, such as hepatitis and HIV infection. Doctors of addiction medicine are medical specialists who focus on addictive disease and have had special study and training focusing on the prevention and treatment of such diseases. There are two routes to specialization in the addiction field: one via a psychiatric pathway and one outside of psychiatry. The American Society of Addiction Medicine notes that approximately 40% of its members are psychiatrists while the remainder have received medical training in other fields.[1] This page is a candidate for speedy deletion, because: it is patent nonsense. ...
Within the United States, there are two accepted specialty examinations.[1] One is a Certificate in Added Qualifications in Addiction Psychiatry from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.[2] The other is a certificate from the American Society of Addiction Medicine following a peer-reviewed Board-type examination.[3] The latter approach is available to all physicians, while the former is available only to board-certified psychiatrists.
References - ^ Schnoll et al: "Physician certification in addiction medicine 1986-1990: a four-year experience". J Addict Dis. 1993;12(1):123-33
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