New Program Offers Doctoral Students Expertise in Substance Use Disorders
A 3-year grant funds specialized training for psychologists
Colorado has the prescription drug abuse rate in the country, yet reports show only a small percentage of people coping with the problem are able to access treatment.
aims to address that access problem with its new COST program, which takes the school鈥檚 innovative specialty track in psychology a step further. COST, which stands for the Colorado Opiate Use Disorder/Substance Use Disorder Training program, addresses substance use in pregnant and parenting mothers, as well as in Spanish-speaking Coloradans.
鈥Seeing the field evolve over more than 20 years, I also knew that substance use treatment had been completely sidelined in听doctoral听training in psychology and that psychology, as a field faced with a growing public health problem, had an obligation to be better听prepared听to serve our communities,鈥 says professor Kim Gorgens, who spearheads the new program.
Thanks to a 3-year $1.35 million grant from HRSA (Health Resources and Services Administration) 鈥 the largest GSPP has ever been awarded 鈥 the COST program enrolled its first cohort of PsyD students and Morgridge College of Education PhD students听in fall 2019.
鈥淲e want to educate our students in the most robust way,鈥 COST program coordinator Hollis Lyman says. 鈥淭hose are such underserved areas. We really want to focus on those populations with our expertise. We want to make sure our supervision is great, our mentorship is great and our academic background in it is great.鈥
Students complete a three-course听specialty track for substance use disorder and 1 speciality course in either Latinx psychology or infant & early childhood mental health.听Then students participate in a听one-year field placement at one of COST鈥檚 partner agencies. These include Denver Health Medical Outpatient Behavioral Health Services, Salud Family Health Center clinics, Parentline Colorado at GSPP鈥檚 Caring for You and Baby (CUB) clinic sites and Anschutz's Addiction & Treatment Services.
This new specialty adds to the groundbreaking academics that make GSPP one of the most comprehensive programs in the field. COST brings together an all-star lineup of professors: clinical professor Laura Meyer; clinical assistant professor Jennifer Tippet, who directs GSPP鈥檚 substance use disorder specialty; clinical assistant professor Tracy Vozar, director of the specialty in infant and early childhood mental health and head of the ; and clinical assistant professor Henrietta Pazos, director of the Latinx psychology specialty.
鈥I knew we could capitalize on one of the things that makes GSPP so special: We have听extraordinary听faculty expertise in substance and opiate use treatment with a special emphasis on pregnant and parenting moms and underserved members of our Latinx community,鈥 Gorgens says. 鈥淲e also have incredibly talented staff that could build and support the infrastructure听necessary听for a large federal听training听grant.鈥
In addition to specialty supervision and mentorship, the COST program provides participants a $25,000 stipend, health care coverage and travel funds for one professional conference.
鈥We are committed to finding every single dollar of student support. We never miss a chance to offset the costs of graduate education,鈥 Gorgens explains.
Brian Iliescu and Lauren Gross are two of the eight students selected for the first cohort. While Gross initially viewed substance use as separate from her work with pregnant women and expectant families, the COST program helped her discover how substance use can impact all parts of life.
鈥淚鈥檝e learned so much from [the substance use] sequence,鈥 Gross says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been able to take the information I鈥檝e learned and apply it, so that鈥檚 been really useful.鈥
Iliescu, meanwhile, sought out GSPP for its focus on trauma, and the COST program helped him further his work听and step into a mentorship role for the upcoming school year.
鈥淲e need programs like this to teach people in our field [that] this is an issue that needs to be included in the way that we think of people and in our treatment,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 just send people to AA meetings and expect that to be good enough. We need to understand where the addiction comes from.鈥
Gross agrees, crediting the training with enriching her understanding of a complex problem.
鈥淸It] did make me realize, this is actually everywhere, and it鈥檚 really important for any type of work you do to have a background in substance use,鈥 Gross shares. 鈥淣ow that I鈥檓 here, I鈥檓 really glad I have this training.鈥
For anyone interested in pursuing the COST training, the application process for the third cohort, which will start in fall 2021, begins this fall. Information can be found . Community partners interested in getting involved can reach out to the coordinator, Hollis Lyman at hollis.lyman@du.edu.

