How Do I Become a Substance Abuse Counselor in North Carolina?
Question by Penelope: How do I become a Substance Abuse Counselor in North Carolina?
I have my Masters Degree in Speech-Language Pathology, but I am very interested in a career change. My brother died a year ago from a drug overdose and even before he died, I was considering changing professions to become an addiction/substance abuse counselor. I can’t find any helpful advice on the internet given my situation. Do I need to start from scratch or does having a Masters Degree help me? Do I just need a certification, or do I need a second Masters Degree? What are my options? If I could participate in online courses, that would be the most ideal for me. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!!
Best answer:
Answer by OldChair
If you already have a Master’s, a drug and alcohol certification would be sufficient in most cases and then you pursue that to the the highest level. This process can be very time consuming as you will see in the link there is 6000 hours of experience involved to get certified by your state.
This is, in my opinion, always the best way to go if you want to work in substance abuse, specifically. It gives you the proper tools to perform the work and is more attractive to employers of this field because you don’t go get certified in D/A unless you want to do the work.
Do some furthered research because every state is different. Things you want to search are phrases like “drug and alcohol certification north carolina” “CSAC north carolina” etc.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Adverse Childhood Experiences: Risk Factors for Substance Abuse and Mental Health – The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) Study assess associations between childhood maltreatment and later-life health and well-being. In this video, Dr. Ro…
Deaths from Prescription Painkiller Overdoses Rise Sharply Among Women
Filed under: drug addiction help substance abuse
Following guidelines for responsible opioid prescribing, including screening and monitoring for substance abuse and mental health problems. Using their states' prescription drug monitoring program; this can help identify patients who may be improperly …
Read more on HNN Huntingtonnews.net
Salvation Army plan to help addicts
Filed under: drug addiction help substance abuse
A five-year plan to help tackle drug and alcohol misuse has been unveiled by the Salvation Army. The charity is to expand its social work to help people achieve long-term recovery from addiction. It will use a system known as the Community …
Read more on BBC News
'Point-in-time' census finds more homeless are living in Santa Clara County
Filed under: drug addiction help substance abuse
"We are still experiencing a crisis. We have far too many people living outside who need our help." … The reasons for homelessness included job loss (42 percent), alcohol/drug abuse (21 percent), incarceration (9 percent) and family/domestic violence …
Read more on San Jose Mercury News