Lifetime Awards

ASAM Lifetime Awards – Awards that honor the profound contributions one has made to the field of addiction medicine.

CSAM’S 2023 LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD WINNER – Joseph Frawley, MD

(Pictured left to right: Sharone Abramowitz, MD, FASAM; Karen Miotto, MD, DFASAM; Joseph Frawley, MD; Anthony Albanese, MD, FACP, DFASAM)

Joseph Frawley, MD, is a CSAM Past President and has been a leader in treatment for patients with SUD in the Santa Barbara community for 40 plus years. He is a leader in advocating for better treatment for those with SUD, in educating students and the community about SUD, in starting innovative programs for the community, and in helping the hospital medical staff improve care for SUD patients. Dr. Frawley treats the most complex patients in the Santa Barbara community with comorbid SUD, pain, and mental health problems. He is the doctor other doctors call to refer complex SUD patients and to seek advice. He started a local physician meeting to discuss patients with chronic pain, SUD and mental health problems especially to help PCPs. Dr. Frawley has served on the SB Cottage Hospital Physician Wellness Committee, and consulted on hospital inpatients with complex addiction, pain, and psychiatric disorders. He has served CSAM on various committees over many years and persuaded other physicians to join CSAM. He also started a community Partial Hospital and Intensive Outpatient Program for individuals with SUD, pain and mental health disorders called Recovery Road. The only program that accepts patients with SUD and pain. He has been a leader in our community in adopting Buprenorphine treatment. Dr. Frawley is a highly regarded educator and has taught USC medical students in psychiatry, and internal medicine residents from SB Cottage Hospital.

CSAM LIFETIME OF SERVICE AWARD and ASAM LIFETIME MEMBERSHIP – Gail Jara

Gail Jara was CSAM’s first executive director from 1972-2000. She was awarded an Honorary Membership in the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) by the ASAM Board of Directors. This special recognition was presented by Penny Mills, ASAM Executive Vice President/CEO during the CSAM State of the Art Conference in San Francisco.

Gail Jara worked for the California Medical Association (CMA) from 1972-1987 where she was responsible for initiation, planning and implementation of projects in the areas of physician education about alcoholism and other drug dependencies, prescription drug abuse and prescribing practices, laws and regulations related to prescribing controlled substances, and programs addressing physician health/well- being/impairment, including case finding programs. CSAM was formed with the support of the California Medical Association.

In 1972, she initiated and coordinated the formation of what was originally called the “California Society for the Treatment of Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependencies” which later became the California Society of Addiction Medicine through a name change in 1989.

In 1985 she worked as a consultant and contractor to the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) to develop the ASAM certification exam. In 1987, she left CMA to devote her full time to CSAM.

Retired since 2000, she has continued working with CSAM as a consultant on policy and projects related to physician health and well-being and on opioid addiction treatment.

Garrett O’Connor, MD Receives Award Recognizing Lifetime Of Achievement 

The California Society of Addiction Medicine (CSAM) recognized Garrett O’Connor, MD, President of the Betty Ford Institute, for a lifetime of achievement in addiction medicine. At the ceremony held at CSAM’s State of the Art Conference in Long Beach, CA, Karen Miotto, MD, presented Dr. O’Connor with a stunning glass statue commemorating his ceaseless efforts to give voice to those who have been silenced by the disease of addiction. The inscription read “Garrett O’Connor, MD, who speaks for the ‘invisible people’ and inspires us to do the same.

Garrett O’Connor, MD, President, Betty Ford Institute, was surrounded by colleagues from the California Society of Addiction Medicine after receiving an award honoring him for the profound contributions he has made to the field of addiction medicine. Pictured from left back row are: Timmen Cermak, MD, CSAM President, Jeffery Wilkins, MD, CSAM President-elect, Kerry Parker, CAE, CSAM Executive Director; front row from left: Dr. O’Connor’s wife Fionnula Flanagan, and Dr. O’Connor standing between Karen Miotto, MD and Jean Marsters, MD, both are members of members of the CSAM Executive Council.

Garrett O’Connor, MD, received an award on the opening evening of the California Society of Addiction Medicine’s (CSAM’s) State of the Art Conference at the Hyatt Regency in Long Beach, California, to honor the profound contributions that he has made to the field of addiction medicine.

O’Connor took the stage accompanied by his wife, Fionnula Flanagan, and told the tale of his life, weaving in notes about the evolution of CSAM over the past four decades. Anybody who has experienced a Garrett O’Connor speech knows there is no way to describe the impact he is able to achieve through spoken word. With his signature mix of honesty, wit, tenderness, and humor, he covered everything from biography and genetics to the ravage of addiction and the promise of fellowship.

Dr. O’Connor’s riveting presentation was followed by tributes from long time CSAM colleagues, friends, and leaders. One by one, Peter Banys, MD, Gail Shultz, MD, Timmen Cermak, MD, Jeffery Wilkins, MD, Gail Jara, Tom McLellan, MD, and Karen Miotto, MD, shared the ways in which Dr. O’Connor had personally and deeply moved them and influenced the practice of addiction medicine.

CSAM presented him with a stunning glass statue commemorating his ceaseless efforts to give voice to those who have been silenced by their disease. The inscription read “Garrett O’Connor, MD, who speaks for the ‘invisible people’ and inspires us to do the same.”