Newton-Wellesley Hospital’s Substance Use Service provides consultative and ongoing outpatient services to adults suffering with substance use disorders. Our multidisciplinary team is committed to supporting patients during both the evaluation period and throughout the stages of recovery. We provide a safe and non-judgmental environment for those struggling with all manner of addiction.
How we work with you
- When you first call Substance Use Services at Newton-Wellesley Hospital, you will be asked a series of questions regarding your current challenges with substance use as well as your goals for your recovery so we can determine what resources at the clinic may best benefit you.
- Next, you will meet with a social worker for a more detailed assessment, who will then connect you to one or more of our skilled providers.
- Working with you as a team, we will help you develop a treatment plan. The plan will consist of individual therapy, group therapy, medication management (for both substance use and co-occurring psychiatric disorders, if applicable), as well as peer-led support groups and community resources.
Services
- Counseling service
- Counseling service referrals
- Diagnostic consultations and evaluations of substance use disorders
- Education
- Management of co-occuring psychiatric disorders
- Medication assisted treatment for substance use disorders
- Psychiatric evaluations
- Recovery coaching
- Support groups
- Support group referrals
Community Outreach
The SUS team also plays a key role in various community initiatives, including NWH-community collaborations with local Departments of Public Health, the Newton Coalition for Community Wellness (the Mayor of Newton’s opioid overdose task force), the Metro-Boston Opioid Overdose Task Force (with community public health departments, police and fire departments, and other groups), and the Charles River Regional Opioid Task Force in collaboration with the Middlesex District Attorney’s office, focusing on a public safety approach to addressing this crisis.
Common questions about opioid addiction
Watch video on the Mass General Brigham channel
Meet the Team
Meet the Team
Dr. Catharina Armstrong, Associate Director
Catharina Armstrong, MD, MPH, is Associate Director of the Newton-Wellesley Hospital Substance Use Services. Dr. Armstrong graduated from University College Dublin School of Medicine. She completed Internal Medicine residency training at Massachusetts General Hospital and a fellowship in Infectious Diseases at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Dr. Armstrong was awarded a Master’s in Public Health from Harvard Medical School in 2014. She is board certified in Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases and Addiction Medicine and is an Assistant Professor at Tufts University School of Medicine. Dr. Armstrong was previously the Chief of Infectious Diseases and director of the Boston Medical Center and Shattuck site Addiction Fellowship program at the Lemuel Shattuck Hospital in Boston. Her clinical and research interests are in prevention and management strategies to support those struggling with addiction and the intersect of infectious diseases and substance use disorders. Dr. Armstrong is an Addiction Medicine and Infectious diseases/HIV consultant at Framingham Women’s prison. She serves on the Continuing Medical Education (CME) Committee for the Addiction Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) and on the Board of Directors for the Boston Bulldogs Running Club, a non-profit running club established to provide a safe community of support for all those adversely affected by addiction.
Dr. Elliott B. Martin, Jr., Director of Medical Psychiatry
Elliott B. Martin, Jr., MD, is the Director of Medical Psychiatry at Newton-Wellesley Hospital. He is also an Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine. He is triple board certified, in General Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Addiction Medicine. He completed his residency at Yale, and his fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital. He has been at Newton-Wellesley since 2012. Dr. Martin has published over 50 articles in academic and popular journals, including research on clinician emotions during crises, philosophical and moral issues in medicine, the history of medicine and psychiatry, translations of ancient medical texts, and critical commentaries on current issues in psychiatry and medicine. He is a regular contributor to the Psychiatric Times and Op-Med. He is the author of Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age: Ghosts in the Machine (2021), The Virtuous Physician: A Brief Medical History of Moral Inquiry from Hippocrates to COVID-19 (2023), and Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Viral Age: Souls in the Machine (2024).
Dr. Antje Barreveld, Director of Education and Outreach
Antje Barreveld, MD, is Director of Education and Outreach at Newton-Wellesley Hospital’s department of Substance Use Services. She graduated from the University of California San Francisco Medical School and completed her residency in Anesthesiology and fellowship in Pain Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. She is board certified in Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine and is Associate Professor of Anesthesiology at Tufts University School of Medicine. Dr. Barreveld is also Medical Director of the Newton-Wellesley Hospital Pain Management Services and Anesthesiologist with Commonwealth Anesthesia Associates in Newton, MA. Dr. Barreveld is Research Scientist and Research Associate at Harvard Medical School in the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, MA and teaches pain and addiction courses at Harvard Medical School and Tufts University Medical School. She is Co-Principal Investigator of the Harvard School of Dental Medicine and Brigham and Women’s Hospital Center of Excellence in Pain Education (CoEPE), designated by the National Institutes of Health Pain Consortium. Dr. Barreveld is Co-Editor of the Pain Education Section in Pain Medicine, the official journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine. Her clinical and research interests are in safe practices in co-managing pain and addiction, addiction prevention in the community, pain management education, and multimodal pain management strategies.
Brenda Elizabeth Franco, MSW, LICSW, Clinical Social Worker
Brenda began her career working in the mental health field in 2014, when she was hired as an overnight Mental Health Specialist at McLean Hospital. She spent the next 10 years working with patients with substance use disorders and co-occurring disorders. In 2016 Brenda was accepted to Boston College School of Social Work and graduated in 2018. While in school, Brenda interned at BEST (Boston Emergency Services Team) and at Brigham and Women’s Hospital as a domestic violence advocate at Passageway. Following graduation, Brenda returned to McLean Hospital as an inpatient clinical social worker. After many years in the inpatient setting, Brenda made the decision to move to the outpatient world. She is now a clinical social worker in the Substance Use Services clinic. Brenda is a native Spanish speaker and experienced in working with the Latinx community.
- Gisselle Valencia, Recovery Coach
- Jennifer Torrone – Practice Manager II
- Shayla Spivey, Medical Assistant/Practice Coordinator
Contact Us
If you are interested in making a referral to Substance Use Services for yourself or someone you know, please call 617-243-6062.
Physician Referral
If you are a provider in the Mass General Brigham system and are interested in making a referral for one of your patients, please use the following in EPIC:
“AMBULATORY REFERRAL TO NWH SUBSTANCE USE SERVICES”