DETROIT – Over 10,000 individuals within the Detroit Metro Area are diagnosed with HIV or AIDS, and many suffer from substance abuse problems. A new Wayne State University program aims to “expand and enhance” methods for treating these individuals.
Dr. Mark Greenwald of Canton, Michigan, associate professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences in the School of Medicine at Wayne State, along with a collaborative team of clinical researchers from the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences and the Division of Infectious Diseases in the Department of Internal Medicine, have been awarded a five-year, $2.5 million grant from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. The project, “Integrated Substance Use and Physical Health Intervention for Recovery (INSPIRE): A Substance Abuse Program for Minority Persons Living with HIV/AIDS,” will address the complex needs of individuals experiencing co-occurring conditions of substance use or abuse and HIV or AIDS among a primarily African American and uninsured or underinsured population, according to Dr. Greenwald.
Coinciding numbers from the Wayne State University and Detroit Medical Center HIV/AIDS Program, which currently serves over 1,700 persons, indicate that 79 percent are African American and most report incomes that are below the poverty line.
“This grant is significant because Psychiatry and the HIV Clinic already have a comparable Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration grant to deliver mental health services to these patients,” Greenwald said. “With the addition of this grant, we have a tremendous opportunity to create a comprehensive behavioral health unit to evaluate and treat the complex physical, mental health and substance abuse problems of these patients.”
Over five years, the interdisciplinary team plans to screen a total of 1,160 individuals and provide assessment and motivational enhancement interventions to 575 of them. These people will be filtered into targeted groups, which include: women; men who inject drugs; men who have sex with men and individuals released from prisons and jails within the past two years. These groups will be treated at different periods during the five-year program, with about 100 individuals to be provided medication-assisted treatment.
Dr. Greenwald will lead the team’s efforts toward: eliminating barriers to treatment; reducing the abuse and associated harms of illegal opioids and other drugs, and the misuse of prescription drugs; enhancing adherence to antiretroviral therapy to facilitate effective treatment of HIV/AIDS; and reducing or managing the debilitating interactions between physical health problems, psychiatric illness and substance use disorders.
Dr. Greenwald received his Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from the University of Florida, his M.S. in Clinical and Health Psychology from the University of Florida, his B.A. in Psychology from Oberlin College and a B.M. in Music Composition from Oberlin Conservatory of Music.
Wayne State University is one of the nation’s pre-eminent public research universities in an urban setting. Through its multidisciplinary approach to research and education, and its ongoing collaboration with government, industry and other institutions, the university seeks to enhance economic growth and improve the quality of life in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan and throughout the world.
Related articles
Accelerate mobility
-
Math's 'Flipped classroom’ model to support student success
-
Wayne State celebrates first-generation students, social mobility
-
Provost announces 2024-25 Academic Leadership Academy cohort
-
Wayne State School of Social Work receives more than $1 million to support the next generation of Michigan’s behavioral health social workers
College to Career
-
Take a seat: MillerKnoll’s Joel Olive discusses career path with Wayne State University design students
-
Wayne State University celebrates 2024 graduates
-
WSU student selected for prestigious trucking program to shape the future of logistics
-
Wayne State University introduces 24 courses to boost academic offerings
Fuel innovation
-
Wayne State University wins top national prize for innovation and economic engagement
-
Wayne State University launches WSU OPEN to speed and simplify external partnerships, names Michigan Central as first partner
-
Wayne State University partners with Michigan Tech to launch NEH-Funded Deep Mapping Institute
-
Detroit researchers find new clues in causes of vision loss in various ocular diseases that may lead to new treatments
Empower health
-
WSU students and faculty work to reduce food waste on campus
-
Michigan Developmental Disabilities Institute awarded $99,000 grant for health equity training on disability and aging in communities of color
-
Bernard J. Costello, MD, DMD, joins Wayne State University as Senior Vice President for Health Affairs
-
College of Nursing grant helps train hundreds to address mental health challenges
Public Health
-
Bernard J. Costello, MD, DMD, joins Wayne State University as Senior Vice President for Health Affairs
-
V Efua Prince explores urban health challenges in new book ‘Kin’ amid ongoing research on addiction and mental health
-
Riding with the Wayne Mobile Health Unit
-
NIH funds critical center in Detroit to lead efforts to investigate and mitigate health impacts of community-voiced chemical and non-chemical stressors