Close
Digital Health & Ai Innovation summit 2026
Medical Taiwan 2026

University Hospitals awarded nearly $3 million to collaborate with St. Vincent Charity Medical Center on addiction care

Note* - All images used are for editorial and illustrative purposes only and may not originate from the original news provider or associated company.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

โ€“ Access the Media PackNow

โ€“ Book a Conference Call

โ€“ Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Related stories

ARPA-H Launches IGoR Program for AI...

The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health has officially...

Medline Launches AI-Powered Supply Chain Platform...

Medline Industries has unveiled a new artificial intelligence-driven supply...

DOJ Launches West Coast Strike Force...

The United States Department of Justice has launched a...

University Hospitals announced the award of a $2.89 million grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to create, in collaboration with St. Vincent Charity Medical Center (SVCMC), the NE Ohio Center for Addiction Research, Prevention, and Education (โ€œCARPEโ€) Collaborative. This grant, which will be provided over a period of five years, will expand and extend the Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center in partnership with and alongside the long-standing SVCMC Addiction Medicine Fellowship. Funding will be used to increase the number of board-certified Addiction Psychiatrists and Addiction Medicine Physicians trained in Northeast Ohio.

NE Ohio has made improvement in reducing the loss of lives attributable to opioid use disorders since reaching peak levels in 2017. Collaboration among many stakeholders fueled this progress; however, overdose deaths recently spiked, underscoring the need to continue to press forward with meaningful solutions.

The CARPE Collaborative aims to improve quality of care for individuals with addictive disease (with and without mental health disorders); transform the addiction treatment workforce by targeting the needs of underserved communities; and expand telehealth services in rural counties in Northeast Ohio. The funding provided by the grant will more than double the Fellowship opportunities in Addiction Psychiatry and Addiction Medicine, greatly increasing the addiction treatment workforce in this region.

โ€œUH and St. Vincent have collaborated since 1990 to train psychiatrists and primary care physicians in the compassionate and evidence-based care of patients and families with substance use disorders,โ€ explained Christina M. Delos Reyes, MD, FASAM, Psychiatrist, UH Cleveland Medical Center and leader of UHโ€™s system-wide strategy for addiction services. โ€œThe funding provided by this grant will dramatically increase the number of physicians being trained in Addiction Psychiatry and Addiction Medicine in Northeast Ohio, which will improve access to care for patients. This grant is designed as a workforce development program that also emphasizes expanding addiction care to rural areas and integrating addiction care into primary care offices.โ€

The CARPE Collaborative will be led by Dr. Delos Reyes and her team, in partnership with Theodore Parran, MD and Christopher Adelman, MD, directors of the accredited program at SVCMC.

โ€œThe CARPE Collaborative enables us to take the longstanding relationship between our two organizations to the next level,โ€ said Theodore Parran, MD, FACP, FASAM, Co-Medical Director of Rosary Hall, SVCMCโ€™s addiction medicine program. โ€œThis dovetails nicely with St. Vincentโ€™s transformation of our Behavioral Health service line to provide an integrated health model that takes a person-centered approach to care, and expands our service continuum to better meet the needs of the complex population we serve. We will now be able to train doctors from multiple subspecialties such as psychiatry, internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, OB/GYN and emergency medicine to treat addiction. We believe this program will be a real game-changer because we will be able to provide a broader and richer training experience for both Addiction Psychiatry and Addiction Medicine Fellows.โ€

The CARPE Collaborative project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as part of an award totaling $2.89 million over five years ($415,000 in year one), which is to be awarded annually and is subject to funds available through federal appropriations. The contents of this announcement are those of University Hospitals and St. Vincent and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government.

MEDICAL FAIR ASIA 2026
MEDICAL FAIR CHINA

Latest stories

Related stories

ARPA-H Launches IGoR Program for AI in Biomedical Research

The Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health has officially...

Medline Launches AI-Powered Supply Chain Platform in Partnership with Microsoft

Medline Industries has unveiled a new artificial intelligence-driven supply...

AI Emergency Triage Study Shows Superior Clinical Accuracy

A Harvard-led study has found that advanced artificial intelligence...

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from any location or device.

Media Packs

Expand Your Reach With Our Customized Solutions Empowering Your Campaigns To Maximize Your Reach & Drive Real Results!

โ€“ Access the Media Pack Now

โ€“ Book a Conference Call

โ€“ Leave Message for Us to Get Back

Translate ยป