Core Curriculum of Addictions Nursing Official Publication of the International Nurses Society on Addictions (IntNSA) Prepping for certification? Core Curriculum of Addictions Nursing is your ticket to becoming a Certified Addictions Registered Nurse (CARN) or Certified Addictions Registered Nurse–Advanced Practice (CARN-AP). Indispensable for all practice areas, this factual, practical aid will guide you to develop and expand the knowledge and clinical skills required for caring for patients with addictions. This is a must-read not only for acing the exam, but for practicing insightful, evidence-based addictions nursing. • Content presented in both paragraph and outline form to aid study and retention of facts, theories and methods • Chapter goals and objectives preceding each chapter help you grasp important themes and central concepts • Full range of addiction theories and concepts, with focus on evidence-based practices • Topics include: o History of substance abuse in US – Regulatory efforts; mutual aid groups; role of nursing o Epidemiology and prevention – Current addictions issues o Theoretical frameworks – Explaining addictive behavior; taxonomies of addictions o Neurobiology of addiction o Health promotion and risk reduction - Prevention strategies theories; early identification and intervention o Assessment, diagnosis and treatment – Caring for those with: substance abuse disorders; eating disorders; impulse control addiction o Recovery, change and growth – Relapse prevention; promoting health during recovery; spirituality; mutual aid/self-help groups o Special populations – Women, perinatal, school-aged children and adolescents, older populations, those experiencing pain, incarcerated/forensics, workplace, LBGTQ, cultural diversity and addiction disorders o Nicotine dependency – Impact of tobacco use; barriers to smoking cessation; health benefits; addressing tobacco use dependence; tobacco use and adolescents; tobacco use with behavioral health diagnoses; pharmacotherapies for tobacco dependence o Psychiatric pharmacology o Pharmacology for substance use disorders About the Authors: Dr. Albert Rundio is a former Vice President of Nursing at Shore Medical Center in New Jersey, current Associate Dean for Post Licensure Nursing Programs at Drexel University, and President of the IntNSA. In 1999, he was awarded the Governor’s Nursing Merit Award for Advanced Practice Nursing in New Jersey. He was the first nurse to serve on the editorial board of The Merck Manual of Medical Information – Home Editions. He is co-author of the Nurse Executive Review and Resource Manual (2010) and of The Doctor of Nursing Practice: The Nurse Executive Role (2012), and author of The Nurse Manager’s Guide to Budgeting and Finance (2012). Dr. William J. Lorman is a board certified psychiatric nurse practitioner, board certified psychiatric clinical nurse specialist, and certified advanced practice addictions specialist (CARN-AP). He serves on the medical staff at Livengrin Foundation in Bensalem, Pennsylvania, where he is also Chief Clinical Officer, responsible for all medical, nursing and counseling staff and all clinical programming. In his private practice, he works with adults who suffer from a full range of psychiatric disorders, and specializes in addiction psychiatry. He utilizes a psychoanalytic-medical model and provides services including individual and group psychotherapy, psychiatric evaluations, and medication management. |