Addiction Impaired Professionals
How society should view addiction
Let’s stop insisting addiction is a disease
Will insurance cover addiction treatment if addiction is not a disease?
AA’s dominance in the US is harmful
Court-ordered 12-step attendance is illegal
CRAFT: An alternative to addiction “intervention”
Substance abuse evaluations in child custody cases
Addiction and youth
Teach teens drinking before it kills them
Why do college students drink so much? Why does anyone?
From adolescent substance experimentation to addiction
Helping your troubled teen without making things worse
Alcohol advertising targets youth
Addiction impaired professionals
On June 30, 2008, the state of California stopped its medical diversion program. This program was designed to protect the public from physicians with addiction problems, and simultaneously to assist physicians in achieving addiction recovery. The diversion program was widely criticized as less than effective. To address the concerns about the medical diversion program, the California legislature passed SB1441:
“SB 1441 created the Substance Abuse Coordination Committee (SACC) subject to Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act and requires the committee, by January 1, 2010, to formulate uniform and specific standards in specified areas that each healing arts board shall use in dealing with substance-abusing licensees, whether or not a board chooses to have a formal diversion program.” quoted from http://www.dca.ca.gov/about_dca/sacc/index.shtml.
Dr. Horvath has submitted written comments to the SACC:
Addiction evaluation and treatment, comments on Standards 1 and 2 (submitted May 4, 2009)
Addiction evaluation and treatment, comments on Standards 3-6 (submitted May 4, 2009)