1 / 1

Exploration of the Substance Abuse Treatment Workforce: Education, Preparation and Certification

Exploration of the Substance Abuse Treatment Workforce: Education, Preparation and Certification Traci Rieckmann, Ph.D., Bret Fuller, Ph.D, Dennis McCarty, Ph.D., & Christiane Farentinos, MD, CADC II Oregon Health & Science University i.

monita
Download Presentation

Exploration of the Substance Abuse Treatment Workforce: Education, Preparation and Certification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exploration of the Substance Abuse Treatment Workforce: Education, Preparation and Certification Traci Rieckmann, Ph.D., Bret Fuller, Ph.D, Dennis McCarty, Ph.D., & Christiane Farentinos, MD, CADC II Oregon Health & Science University i The National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) is a partnership of drug abuse treatment programs and research centers testing new therapies for drug disorders. Previous research suggests that the majority of counselors in the field are Caucasian, female, and have a bachelors degree (Gallon, Gabriel & Knudsen, 2003; Ball et al., 2002; NTIES, 2001; Mulvey, Hubbard, Hayashi, 2003). High turnover rates, a lack of career development pathways and increasing use of evidence-based practices provides the impetuous for understanding the preparation and professional needs of this workforce. This presentation focuses on education, certification, licensure and use of evidence-based practices of counselors, managers, and supervisors in a sample of substance abuse treatment providers. Methods A survey was distributed to direct service providers in 344 treatment units participating in the CTN. The sample for this presentation included 1679 staff members (1328 counselors and 351managers / supervisors) that provided direct services within four treatment modalities, outpatient (n = 543), methadone (n = 329), residential (n = 618) and detoxification (n = 189). Results Demographics Table 1 shows that women represented 60% of the sample and there was no significant gender difference between supervisors and counselors. Slightly less than 70% of the sample identified as Caucasian. Twenty percent were African-American (n = 299), 11% identified as Hispanic (n=193), and 2% Native American (n =25). Managers/supervisors were more likely to have a master's degree or higher (61% managers vs. 43% counselors). Supervisors were significantly more likely to be credentialed and/or licensed (state: 55%, national 27%; professional licensure: 58%) than counselors (state: 47%, national 18% and professional licensure: 43%). Table 2 shows that counselors and managers with master's degrees were more common in outpatient (67%) and methadone (51%) programs than those in residential (40%) and detoxification (44%) programs. Further, outpatient and methadone programs tended to have staff with more experience on the job and as a clinician than those working in residential programs. Residential counselors were in their current position less time than those in methadone programs. The majority of providers (849; 51%) had either state or national certification. Table 4 shows that of the 700 (46%) managers and counselors who had professional licensure, the majority (68%; n = 337) were licensed as an alcohol and drug abuse counselor, 16% were licensed professional counselors (n = 79), with 30 (6%) psychologists, 26 (5%) nurses and the rest were licensed as physicians (n = 7), and social workers (n = 8). Surprisingly, the greatest percent of minorities were working in methadone programs. About 35% of those with Master’s Degrees reported having Associates degrees as well. Of these majors included psychology, addiction studies and general studies. Table 4 presents the majors of those with professional licensure and the most common degree was as an Alcohol and Drug Counselor. Evidence Based Practices A MANOVA tested four evidence based practice items for differences on gender, minority status and education (see Table 5). Multivariate effects were found for minority status (Wilks’ Λ = .943. F(4, 1496) = 22.58, p < .0001) and education (Wilks’ Λ = .947. F(8, 2992) = 10.23, p < .0001) but not for gender. Higher educational attainment predicted greater knowledge of ASAM and APA Practice Guidelines. Education also was related to perceptions that evidence based practices were useful for care and were not non-individualized “cookbook” treatments. Minority counselors and supervisors were less likely to report knowledge of ASAM placement criteria and were more likely to view evidence-based practice guidelines as non-individualized cookbook care. Conclusions Individuals without graduate degrees remain an important component of the counseling workforce. Managers/supervisors have more education and experience and can provide guidance on implementation of evidence-based practices. Some work settings hire more educated staff which may be due to the need for medical expertise in methadone treatment as well as managed care network criteria for reimbursement. People with more advanced education were more likely to support the use of evidence-based practices. Table 1: Demographics of Managers and Counselors Table 3: Type of Certification by Setting Table 4: Majors for those Professionally Licensed. Table 5: Evidence Based Practice Differences by Educational level and Minority Status Table 2: Counselor Demographics by Setting A National Institute on Drug Abuse Award (U10 DA 013036) supported this research.. Means in Bold typeface indicate significant effects at p < .005

More Related