Consortium on Substance Use and Addiction 6th Annual Conference
Monday, May 5th | Eric J. Barron Innovation Hub, University Park Campus
Register Now!
Please note that the conference is free for all attendees, but registration is required. We encourage people to join us in-person at the Eric J. Barron Innovation Hub at the University Park Campus with an optional Zoom stream for both the morning and afternoon sessions. Please contact Joel Segel, CSUA Director, with any questions.
We are currently accepting abstract proposals for the Research Talks and Poster Session. Interested applicants can submit their proposals here.
Please see the section below for more information about the submission process.
Keynote Speaker
Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center
Research Psychiatrist at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
Dr. Nunes is a Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and Research Psychiatrist at New York State Psychiatric Institute. He is an internationally recognized leader in research on treatments for opioid use disorder and other substance use disorders, and on co-occurring psychiatric and substance use disorders. For the past thirty years with continuous funding from NIH, mainly National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), including a series of Career Development Awards, he has led clinical trials on medication and behavioral treatments for cocaine and opioid use disorders. He has over 250 peer-reviewed scientific publications, including papers in JAMA, New England Journal of Medicine, and Lancet, in addition to numerous book chapters and a textbook on diagnosis and treatment of co-occurring psychiatric disorders among patients with substance use disorders. His group was among the first to demonstrate that depression could be identified with careful clinical diagnosis and successfully treated among patients with alcohol, opioid or cocaine use disorders, and to demonstrate that behavioral intervention could improve the effectiveness of naltrexone as a treatment for opioid use disorder.
For the past 20 years he has served as a Principal Investigator in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN, New York Node), focused on clinical trials to demonstrate the effectiveness of new treatments in real-world clinical settings. Among other accomplishments his group led the first large multisite trial of behavioral treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder among women with substance use disorders, the first large multi-site trial of a technology-delivered behavioral treatment for substance use disorders, and co-led the first large U.S.-based trial comparing extended-release injection naltrexone versus sublingual buprenorphine for treatment of opioid use disorder. Currently in the CTN, he and his colleagues are developing a major clinical trial that will be a cornerstone of the NIH HEAL Initiative (Help End Addiction in our Lifetimes), testing strategies--different medication doses and formulations, and behavioral treatments--to improve the effectiveness of buprenorphine and injection naltrexone for treatment of opioid use disorder. He is also a multiple Principal Investigator on the New York Healing Communities Study, a major NIH funded effort which, along with 3 other States, seeks to demonstrate that a concerted community wide effort to expand medication treatment and other interventions can drive down the high rate of deaths from opioid overdose.
He has served on the Board of Directors of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence, the American Board of Addiction Medicine and the Addiction Medicine Foundation, and National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse, and currently serves on the NIH Working Group on the HEAL Initiative, the Addiction Medicine sub-Board of the American Board of Preventive Medicine, and is Deputy Editor of the American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse. Locally, he has been active throughout his career mentoring research fellows and junior faculty, and he serves as Co-Chair of the New York State Psychiatric Institute/Columbia University Department of Psychiatry Institutional Review Board.
Agenda
To be determined.
Poster Session and Research Talks Submissions
We invite you to present your work on substance use and addiction during our Research Talks and Poster Session for the CSUA 5th Annual Conference on Monday, May 5. We strongly encourage researchers, students, clinicians, community members and partner organizations to attend and participate in these sessions.
The Poster Session will occur from 12:45pm - 2:00pm and will include an award for best student poster. The Research Talks will be given from 2:15pm - 4:30pm. These talks will be “flash talks” and be targeted to 7 to 10 minutes in length. Lunch will be provided from 12:00-12:45. Additionally, the Social Science Research Institute will cover the cost of the poster printing.
Interested applicants for the Poster Session and/or Research Talks must submit a short abstract (approximately 300-350 words) about their poster or research talk presentation. The deadline for participating in the Poster Session and/or Research Talks is Monday, March 31. Finalized posters must be submitted by Friday, April 25 to csua@psu.edu to ensure adequate time for printing. Submissions for the Poster Session and/or Research Talks can be sent here.
Please email Joel Segel, CSUA Director, if you have any questions.