EPISODE · Jun 29, 2026 · 25 MIN
Enhancing Addiction Care Through Care Touchpoints
from ASAM Practice Pearls · host ASAM Education
In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Stephen Taylor and Dr. Mike Fingerhood discuss the importance of enhancing addiction care through community support and compassionate touch points. They explore how providing access to basic needs can serve as entry points into treatment for individuals struggling with addiction, the effect of compassionate interventions on clinical outcomes, and the challenges related to funding and community acceptance for addiction services. ----more---- Looking for this episode's transcript? Download it HERE Get credit for listening! Claim your 0.5 CEs HERE Have an idea for a future episode? Share it with us at [email protected]. Host Stephen M. Taylor, MD, MPH, DFAPA, DFASAM Dr. Stephen M. Taylor is ASAM's President and is board certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, and addiction medicine. With over 30 years of practice experience, Dr. Taylor is dedicated to helping adolescents and adults overcome addiction and co-occurring psychiatric disorders. He has served as the Medical Director of the NBA and NBPA Player Assistance and Anti-Drug Program for 16 years and is the Chief Medical Officer of Pathway Healthcare, which operates multiple outpatient addiction and mental health treatment offices across six states. Expert Michael I. Fingerhood, MD, FACP, DFASAM Dr. Michael I. Fingerhood is a Professor of Medicine and Public Health at Johns Hopkins University and Chief of the Division of Addiction Medicine at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. Dr. Fingerhood created The Comprehensive Care Practice in 1994, a primary care practice largely devoted to providing care to individuals with substance use disorder. The practice has been innovative in integrating buprenorphine treatment into the primary care setting for over 650 individuals. He has also co-created novel buprenorphine treatment programs for a community center, church, and a mobile van outside the Baltimore Detention Center. Dr. Fingerhood received the Health Equity Leadership Award from the Baltimore City Health Department. He is the co-author of the ASAM Handbook of Addiction Medicine. Dr. Fingerhood serves on the ASAM Board of Directors as Ex-Officio, Chair of the Medical Education Council. In addition, he has co-authored over 80 research papers and received NIH research funding continuously over the past 30 years. 📖 Show Segments 00:05 - Introduction 01:48 - Patient Letter 04:13 - Redefining Harm Reduction 06:26 - Low-threshold, High-impact Intervention 09:30 - Translating Interventions into Clinical Outcomes 11:14 - Community Engagement and Overcoming Resistance 13:21 - Funding and Support of Care Touchpoint Programs 15:05 - Changing Mindsets and Moving Towards Acceptance 20:59 - Use of Test Strips 22:46 - Practice Pearls 23:51 - Conclusion and Additional Learning Opportunity 📋 Key Takeaways Every interaction matters: A single compassionate encounter can plant the seed for change, reinforcing that every person is worth the effort and the investment. Stigma is a barrier to treatment: Reducing stigma through peers, integrated care environments, and direct patient relationships is essential to change how clinicians and communities approach addiction. Low-threshold services are high-impact entry points to care: Access to showers, laundry, naloxone, HIV and hepatitis C testing, and safe spaces restores dignity, builds trust, and often serves as the first step toward recovery and ongoing engagement in healthcare. Recovery starts before substance use stops: Labeling someone as "not ready" puts the burden on the individual; instead, clinicians should ask, "What can I do?" Progress should be defined by making today better than yesterday, recognizing that meaningful change can begin at any touchpoint. Peers are essential to engagement and trust: Peer support provides a nonjudgmental connection, helping individuals feel understood and empowering them to engage in care on their own terms. Compassionate care drives measurable clinical outcomes: Integrated, compassionate care models improve engagement, increase hepatitis C cure rates, support HIV treatment, and reduce overall healthcare costs. Community buy-in is critical for success: Engaging law enforcement, local leaders, and community associations, while actively supporting community needs, turns potential opposition into a partnership. Syringe services and naloxone distribution save lives: These evidence-based interventions reduce infectious disease transmission and overdose risk while creating opportunities to connect individuals to broader care. Make test strips available: Providing tools to detect unwanted contaminants such as xylazine or medetomidine helps individuals make informed decisions and reduce harm in an ever-evolving drug supply. 🔗 Resources The American Society of Addiction Medicine Handbook of Addiction Medicine, Third Edition Charm City Care Connection Impact Report Integration of Buprenorphine Treatment with Primary Care: Comparative Effectiveness on Retention, Utilization, and Cost - Hsu YJ, Marsteller JA, Kachur SG, Fingerhood MI. Popul Health Manag. 2019;22(4):292-299. doi:10.1089/pop.2018.0163 Targeting Community-Based Naloxone Distribution Using Opioid Overdose Death Rates: A Descriptive Analysis of Naloxone Rescue Kits and Opioid Overdose Deaths in Massachusetts and Rhode Island - Zang X, Macmadu A, Krieger MS, et al. Int J Drug Policy. 2021;98:103435. doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2021.103435 📢 Join the Discussion Share your thoughts using #ASAMPracticePearls — we’d love to hear from you! In support of improving patient care, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.
What this episode covers
In this episode of ASAM Practice Pearls, Dr. Stephen Taylor and Dr. Mike Fingerhood discuss the importance of enhancing addiction care through community support and compassionate touch points. They explore how providing access to basic needs can serve as entry points into treatment for individuals struggling with addiction, the effect of compassionate interventions on clinical outcomes, and the challenges related to funding and community acceptance for addiction services.
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Enhancing Addiction Care Through Care Touchpoints
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