
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
22. Contingency Management for Coronary Artery Disease
22: We discuss an article about contingency management and the regression of coronary plaques in HIV+ cocaine users.
Lai, Hong PhD; Bluemke, David A. MD; Fishman, Elliot K. MD; Gerstenblith, Gary MD; Celentano, David D. ScD; Treisman, Glenn MD; Foster, Parker MS; Mandler, Raul MD; Khalsa, Jag MS, PhD; Chen, Shaoguang MS; Bhatia, Sandeepan MD; Kolossváry, Márton MD; Lai, Shenghan MD. High-risk Coronary Plaque Regression in Cash-based Contingency Management Intervention Among Cocaine Users With HIV-associated Subclinical Coronary Atherosclerosis. Journal of Addiction Medicine 17(2):p 147-154, 3/4 2023.
How to understand contingency management, from the Bloomberg school of public health:
Contingency Management for Treatment of Stimulant Use Disorder and Strategies to Address Polysubstance Use
We also discuss places to get your new MATE-ACT 8-hour trainings:
Providers Clinical Support System
The Curbsiders Addiction Medicine
NIDA Courses
ASAM E-Learning Courses
AMA Opioid Education
----------
This podcast offers category 1 and MATE-ACT CME credits through MI CARES and Michigan State University. To get credit for this episode and others, go to this link to make your account, take a brief quiz, and claim your credit. To learn more about opportunities in addiction medicine, please visit MI CARES.
---------
Episode 22 Credits:
----------
This is Addiction Medicine Journal Club with Dr. Sonya Del Tredici and Dr. John Keenan. We practice addiction medicine and primary care, and we believe that addiction is a disease that can be treated. This podcast reviews current articles to help you stay up to date with research that you can use in your addiction medicine practice.
The best part of any journal club is the conversation. Send us your comments on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Spotify, email, or join our Facebook group.
Addiction Medicine Journal Club is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered medical advice. The views expressed here are our own and do not necessarily reflect those of our employers or the authors of the articles we review. All patient information has been modified to protect their identities.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.9
3030 ratings
22. Contingency Management for Coronary Artery Disease
22: We discuss an article about contingency management and the regression of coronary plaques in HIV+ cocaine users.
Lai, Hong PhD; Bluemke, David A. MD; Fishman, Elliot K. MD; Gerstenblith, Gary MD; Celentano, David D. ScD; Treisman, Glenn MD; Foster, Parker MS; Mandler, Raul MD; Khalsa, Jag MS, PhD; Chen, Shaoguang MS; Bhatia, Sandeepan MD; Kolossváry, Márton MD; Lai, Shenghan MD. High-risk Coronary Plaque Regression in Cash-based Contingency Management Intervention Among Cocaine Users With HIV-associated Subclinical Coronary Atherosclerosis. Journal of Addiction Medicine 17(2):p 147-154, 3/4 2023.
How to understand contingency management, from the Bloomberg school of public health:
Contingency Management for Treatment of Stimulant Use Disorder and Strategies to Address Polysubstance Use
We also discuss places to get your new MATE-ACT 8-hour trainings:
Providers Clinical Support System
The Curbsiders Addiction Medicine
NIDA Courses
ASAM E-Learning Courses
AMA Opioid Education
----------
This podcast offers category 1 and MATE-ACT CME credits through MI CARES and Michigan State University. To get credit for this episode and others, go to this link to make your account, take a brief quiz, and claim your credit. To learn more about opportunities in addiction medicine, please visit MI CARES.
---------
Episode 22 Credits:
----------
This is Addiction Medicine Journal Club with Dr. Sonya Del Tredici and Dr. John Keenan. We practice addiction medicine and primary care, and we believe that addiction is a disease that can be treated. This podcast reviews current articles to help you stay up to date with research that you can use in your addiction medicine practice.
The best part of any journal club is the conversation. Send us your comments on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Spotify, email, or join our Facebook group.
Addiction Medicine Journal Club is intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered medical advice. The views expressed here are our own and do not necessarily reflect those of our employers or the authors of the articles we review. All patient information has been modified to protect their identities.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
133 Listeners
3,318 Listeners
1,090 Listeners
29 Listeners
1,321 Listeners
714 Listeners
183 Listeners
285 Listeners
512 Listeners
548 Listeners
362 Listeners
42 Listeners
121 Listeners
8 Listeners
112 Listeners