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King's College London
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Department of Addictions

 

Thirty years of research excellence

The emphasis of our research is on ‘what works’ in the prevention and treatment of substance misuse: the Addictions Department represents a network of clinicians, researchers and clinical teachers who have a shared commitment to excellence in prevention and treatment work, and to supporting and strengthening national and international endeavours in this field. Over the last 30 years, our staff have developed a body of research evidence that has informed the development of new treatment services for alcohol, smoking and drug problems in the UK. This work ranges from trials of new therapies and preventative treatments to studies seeking to understand the genetic and biological basis of addictive behaviour.

A leading research centre

The Addictions Department, also known as the National Addiction Centre (NAC), is one of the most productive addictions research groups in Europe. We represent an important area of health-related study as the Addictions Clinical Academic Group (CAG) within King’s Health Partners, and form one of the core areas of the Academic Health Science Centre that brings together university partners King’s College London with the NHS from South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation TrustKing’s College Hospital, and Guy’s and St Thomas’. RAND Europe rated our work on Substance Abuse Research as leading in the field. Substance Use Disorders is one of the main themes of the NIHR Maudsley BRC which is based at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN).

Our courses

 

See if you're eligible for a Master's Scholarship for 2022 entry.

ADVANCE

Advancing theory and treatment approaches for males in substance misuse treatment who perpetrate intimate partner violence.
ADVANCE

Alcohol Research Group

Based in the Addictions Department, the Alcohol Research Group is led by Professor Colin Drummond and comprises a multidisciplinary research team.
Alcohol Research Group

Drugs Research Group

Substance misuse research within the Addictions Department is led by Professors John Strang and John Marsden. 
Drugs Research Group

King's Experimental Research and Gambling Group

The King's Experimental Research and Gambling Group was formed in 2023 and focuses on gambling, disordered gambling, gaming and gaming disorder.
King's Experimental Research and Gambling Group

Nicotine Research Group

The Nicotine Research Group leads and collaborates on a variety of projects on tobacco harm reduction and e-cigarettes.
Nicotine Research Group

NIHR Policy Research Unit in Addictions

Addictive products, behaviours and systems
NIHR Policy Research Unit in Addictions

Substance Use and Psychiatric Epidemiology Research (SUPER)

The group often has research finding published in many high-quality journals, and we are open to MSc and PhD students joining us.
Substance Use and Psychiatric Epidemiology Research (SUPER)

The Addictions Service User Research Group (SURG)

The central aim of the SURG is to build meaningful and reciprocal relationships between addiction researchers and service users when thinking through research problems, designing studies, preparing grant applications and ultimately conducting and disseminating research.
The Addictions Service User Research Group (SURG)

Virtual Reality-enhanced Cue Exposure Treatment for people with cocaine dependence

Development, evaluation and testing of a Virtual Reality-enhanced Cue Exposure Treatment integrated with a wearable device to address craving, prevent relapse and improve treatment outcomes of people with cocaine dependence.
Virtual Reality-enhanced Cue Exposure Treatment for people with cocaine dependence

For a full list of projects in the Department, pleasevisit this page.

ADVANCE

Advancing theory and treatment approaches for males in substance misuse treatment who perpetrate intimate partner violence (Programme ADVANCE).

Find out more about the ADVANCE programme

International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project (ITC Project)

The ITC Project was the first-ever international cohort study of tobacco use and provides a systematic evaluation of tobacco control policies (particularly those in the World Health Organisation Framework Convention on Tobacco Control). The ITC Project involves over 100 collaborators worldwide and conducts cohort surveys in more than 25 countries. Prof Ann McNeill (a founding member since 2001) and Dr Sara Hitchman (joined 2006) lead the UK research, and have published 63 papers from the ITC Project.

The Stepping Stones Study

People treated for substance use problems also have an increased risk of many physical and mental health problems. Some of these problems, such as hepatitis C viral infection or the risk of suicide, have been researched extensively. However, long-term, potentially preventable, conditions such as skin and soft-tissue infections, liver disease, and breathing problems are poorly researched, despite becoming more common in this group. We are investigating the morbidity, mortality, and healthcare utilisation attributable to these conditions, and associated risk factors, in people treated for substance use.

Find out more about the Stepping Stones Study

ADAM - Alcohol Dependence and Adherence to Medications

Alcohol dependence causes considerable physical and mental health problems; the UK has experienced a consistent annual increase in alcohol related hospital admissions, including for alcoholic liver disease. Providing effective treatment for alcohol dependence and reducing alcohol related hospital admissions is therefore a priority. Acamprosate (Campral) may be prescribed to people who have had problems with alcohol to help reduce the risk of them drinking again. Many people who take this medication have problems taking it as regularly as it is prescribed and therefore may not be getting the full benefit from the medication. We are planning an intervention delivered by pharmacists via a central telephone service to help support people to take acamprosate as it is prescribed.

Find out more about ADAM

CODEMISUSED

Contemporary research has underscored the need for ‘increased pharmaco- vigilance’ around codeine dispensing as the most commonly consumed opiate worldwide. Although effects are milder than heroin, abuse potential remains of concern, with physical dependence occurring with regular use over a short period of time. Increases in treatment uptakes relating to codeine dependency and concerns for appropriate design of treatment protocols have been recorded globally. There is a clear need for the unique CODEMISUSED collaboration (Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland, Kings College London, UK, Medical Research Council, South Africa, Cara Pharmacy Group, Ireland, Weldricks Pharmacy, UK and Leading Pharmacy Group, South Africa) to present data on codeine user (prescribed, over the counter, web retailed) profiles so as to inform the design of protective mechanisms in the pharmacy profession to track, monitor, support and refer codeine misusers.

Find out more about CODEMISUSED

SURE Recovery

Members of staff in the Addictions Department have developed a range of tools with and for people who use drugs and alcohol, to support people in recovery. This includesan app to measure recovery from drug and alcohol dependence. To find out more, visit ourScales, Measures & Instruments page.

Addiction support services

For advice and further information, please see below details for organisations that can provide support:

Release
For information on addiction services in your area, contact addictions charityRelease:
By telephone - 0207 324 2989
By email -ask@release.org.uk
By completing awebform

FRANK
The Frank website includes anA to Z list of substances, including details of appearance and use, effects, chances of becoming addicted, health risks and UK law.
By telephone – 0300 123 6600 (available 24/7)
By email -frank@talktofrank.com

Drinkline
Drinkline is a free helpline for anyone worried about their own drinking or someone else’s.
Contact by telephone - 0300 123 1110 (weekdays 9am-8pm, weekends 11am-4pm).

Adfam
Adfam is a national umbrella organisation working specifically with and for families affected by drugs and alcohol.

South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) Service Finder
Usethis search to find mental health and addiction services, care and treatment provided by SLaM.

Alcoholics Anonymous & Al-Anon
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is a 12 step programme for sobriety and personal recovery with the help of regular support groups.Al-Anon Family Groups (Al-Anon) provides support for families and friends affected by someone else’s drinking.

 


MSc and student-related enquiries

Jacob Bailey, Programme Administrator (MSc Addictions)

AP-PGTsupport@kcl.ac.uk

For PhD-related enquiries

Please contact Prof Gail Gilchrist (Professor in Addictions Healthcare Research/Departmental Admissions Tutor for PhD students)

gail.gilchrist@kcl.ac.uk

For general enquiries

addictions@kcl.ac.uk

Our vacancies

To find out about our latest job opportunities, sign up for tailored job alerts at jobs.kcl.ac.uk and follow us on Twitter @KingsAddictions @KingsJobs

For media enquiries

Please send all media enquiries to the IoPPN Press & Communications Office:

ioppn-pr@kcl.ac.uk


Follow KingsAddictions

Partners & collaborators

Partners & Collaborators

Important Information about partners and collaborators

Diversity & inclusion

Diversity & inclusion

We want to make sure the core principles of diversity, equality, support and inclusion are embedded…

 

 

Further information for prospective students

Advice for International Applicants

Advice for International Applicants

Advice for International Applicants to the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience

Professional training

Professional training

The IoPPN offers a range of professional training opportunities to support your career development.

Careers

Careers

Careers in Psychiatry, Mental Health, and Psychology

 

 


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