New Hampshire Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) Inter-Professional Education (IPE) Training Collaborative This project will provide essential training to a statewide collective of health professional students, using a combination of classroom and online learning, inter-professional training, and profession-specific clinical and field placements. Reaching 1,000 students or more per year, and reinforcing evidence-based practices among practicing health professionals and staff throughout the state, this program will have a tremendous impact on the use of SBIRT in New Hampshire (NH). The goals of this project are to increase the number of health professionals with the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to be leaders in implementing SBIRT and to increase access to high quality care for underserved populations who suffer from substance use disorders. Program objectives include the following: 1) Train the next generation of the healthcare workforce in NH to utilize SBIRT and to understand how to do so in an inter-professional framework. 2) Support widespread integration of SBIRT in clinical practice in NH. 3) Leverage opportunities to provide culturally appropriate substance misuse screening to vulnerable groups as identified by race, ethnicity, gender, disability, and sexual orientation. To achieve these objectives, a collaborative of NH-based health professional training programs, including the state's only medical school, physician assistant and pharmacy training programs, psychology, nursing, counseling and social work programs, has banded together under the leadership of the NH Area Health Education Center (AHEC). Through group exercises, clinical placements, and reflective learning, more than 3,000 students in 3 years will come to be highly competent team members in SBIRT, better serving the diverse needs of the target population.