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    Learning for Early Careers in Addiction & Diversity (LEAD Program): Apply by April 15, 2025!

    The Learning for Early Careers in Addiction and Diversity (LEAD) program offers mentorship and training to postdoctoral fellows and assistant professors who are pursuing independent research careers in substance use and substance use disorder treatment. This support is aimed at individuals from racial and ethnic minoritized groups who are underrepresented among NIH-funded investigators in this field. The LEAD Program uses the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN) as a platform for training early-careerinvestigators. This 3-year training program is based at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), and visiting scholars spend three summers in a 4-week intensive program at UCSF. During the academic year, scholars work with their primary mentor to collaborate on substance use and substance use disorder treatment research conducted in the CTN, develop a professional research network, and conduct a pilot study that will serve as a preliminary study for subsequent NIH funding. The program provides travel and housing funds for scholars, as well as pilot study funding. The 2025 summer program begins on July 7th and ends August 1st. The application deadline is April 15, 2025! Learn more and apply here!

  • Center for Dissemination and Implementation At Stanford (C-DIAS) Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science. Apply by April 1, 2025
    Jobs

    Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation Science – Deadline extended to APRIL 15!

    Applications are now being accepted for the 2025–2026 Center for Dissemination and Implementation At Stanford (C-DIAS) Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science. The C-DIAS Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science is for early or mid-career individuals with goals to improve public access to and quality of addiction treatment by leveraging advanced implementation science methods.  Submit your application by April 15th, 2025. This year-long mentored learning experience: Activities include monthly, virtual, hour-long lectures; participation in the C-DIAS Research Core sections activities; C-DIAS Virtual Grand Rounds; individualized mentoring; lead authorship opportunities; and support developing an NIH grant application or proposal to solve a health systems problem. The C-DIAS Fellowship is eligible for CME/CE credits. C-DIAS Fellows join an expanding network of individuals engaged in addiction treatment health services and implementation research, all committed to real-world impact. More information about the fellowship can be found on the C-DIAS website or this  flyer .

  • Node News
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    News from the Appalachian Node: Updates from the CTN-0139 Co-CARE study

    Jane Liebschutz (Appalachian Node), Rebecca Stone (NY Node) and Donna Beers (Boston Medical Center) traveled to Enterprise OR to conduct a site visit at Winding Waters, a federally qualified health center participating in CTN 139-CoCare.  The three city slickers enjoyed their first taste of Frontier designation, which is less than 6 people per square mile. The view was stunning with snow capped peaks and a gorgeous river. But what impressed us all was the dedication and smooth running of the clinic. The five physicians and three physician assistants provide primary care, mental health or dental health to 80% of the population in the area.  The program joined CTN-139 as part of the Care for Health Initiative, which supports multiple rural primary care research networks around the US. The research team, from both local and more distant locations in Oregon, showed the lead team how coherent leadership and dedication can make a low resourced area function well.  We expect them to start patient recruitment by early April at the latest.  Also: The Union Community Care site in Lancaster, PA has begun patient recruitment and so far in March have enrolled 6 participants! Posted on March 14, 2025

  • CTN Primary Care SIG
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    Primary Care SIG Meeting: March 24, 2025 (9-10am PT/12-1pm ET)

    The Primary Care SIG aims to engage primary care in research, develop substance use treatment interventions relevant to community-based practice, and promote the transfer of evidence-based results from substance use research into community-based practices.   Primary Care SIG Key Objectives Primary Care SIG Webinars and presentations The Primary Care SIG is led by Joe LeMaster, MD, MPH and Sebastian Tong, MD, MPH, and meets every other month on the 4th Monday of the month from 9-10am PT/12-1pm ET.  To join the Primary Care SIG webinar series listserv, please provide your contact information here: https://redcap.link/PCSIG Next Primary Care SIG Meeting  Implementing Practice Facilitation to Enhance Chronic Pain and Opioid Management in Older AdultsMarch 24, 2025 9-10am PT/12-1pm ET Zsolt Nagykaldi, PhD, BTh Professor, Director of Research Associate Director of Community Engaged Research Department of Family & Preventive Medicine   University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center  Juell Homco, PhD, MPH Assistant Professor Director of Research and Community Analytics Associate Director of Oklahoma Primary Healthcare Improvement CooperativeDepartment of Medical Informatics  University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine   Heather Gamble, BS Community Outreach Manager (Practice Facilitator) Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center  Register for the Primary Care SIG Meeting here Posted on March 14, 2025

  • Node News
    Node News

    Northeast Node Science Series Webinar: Cannabis: Therapeutic Use and Consequences (April 10, 2025,12-1pm ET)

    The landscape of cannabis research has sharpened in recent years, with new understandings of what is therapeutically beneficial and what is not.  There is a great diversity in cannabis products and nearly as many ways to consume it, with more US states seeking legalization of both medicinal and recreational use. In this presentation, Dr. Alan Budney will review the state of the science related to the clinical efficacy of cannabis use and discuss alternative ways to consider and act on what is known. He will also review the potential consequences of cannabis use for patients with substance use disorders and how we need to consider situational and individual context when evaluating risk and impact of cannabis consumption. Register for the webinar here

  • Node News
    New in the Library,  Node News

    News from the Pacific Northwest Node

    The Pacific Northwest Node will be presenting four CTN-related posters at this year’s College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD) conference in New Orleans (June 14-18, 2025): Authors from the node also have a new paper out, related to CTN-0082: Attitudes Toward and Experience with Naloxone Among People Who Use Drugs in the Southeastern United States. Le MH, et al. International Journal of Drug Policy 2025; 139: 10479. Find it in the CTN Dissemination Library. Posted on March 12, 2025

  • Virtual SC Meeting, March 11, 2025, 1-5pm ET
    Events

    Virtual CTN Steering Committee Meeting: March 11, 1-5pm ET

    The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Center for the Clinical Trials Network (CCTN) is hosting a virtual Quarterly Steering Committee Meeting on Tuesday, March 11, 2025 from 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Eastern.  View agenda | Register for the meeting Once registered you will receive the Zoom information, including an option to download a calendar invitation. If you have any questions about the meeting logistics, please contact CTNSupport@sdsolutionsllc.com. Individuals with disabilities who need sign language interpreting and/or other reasonable accommodations to participate in this event should contact Sean Randol at (202) 258-3638 or srandol@sdsolutionsllc.com or through the Federal Relay (1-800-877-8339). Requests should be made at least five business days in advance of the event.