About

About the Conference

 

The ISAMVALLETTA2022 Congress is being organised by ISAM in collaboration with the Foundation for Social Welfare Services and University of Malta.  The conference will be held both physically and virtually at the Valletta Campus, University of Malta. 

The congress will be held in English, and a number of selected sessions will also be translated to French and Spanish.

 A map of Valletta with key locations for the Congress may be downloaded here

 

ISAM 

As an international fellowship organization of physicians, ISAM provides a membership- based forum for physicians worldwide.

Born out of the recognition that substance abuse is associated with medical and psychiatric consequences among populations regardless of race, gender, or ethnicity and that are global in nature, a need was identified for an international network in the field of addiction medicine.

The educational mandate of the Society is to promote the exchange of information and ideas about drug addiction reseach, treatment and management

 ISAM is committed to:

• Advancement of knowledge about addiction seen as a treatable disease.

• Recognition that physicians worldwide have a major role to play in its management

• Enhancement of the credibility of the physician’s role

• Emphasis of the importance of educational activities

• Establishment of consesus documents and practice guidelines

 

ISAM Scientific Committee members

Co Chairs:

Dr Anna Maria Vella 

Professor Richard Muscat

Members:

Professor Alexander Baldacchino 

Professor Kouimtsidis Christos

Professor Marilyn Clark

Professor Anton Grech

Professor Bowden-Jones Henrietta

Professor Potenza Marc

Dr Galea-Singer Susanna

Professor Hamed Ekhtiari 

  

Board of Directors

Executive Positions

Dr Alexander Baldacchino, President (UK)

H.E. Dr. Hamad Alghaferi, President- elect (UAE)

Dr Kathleen Brady, Immediate past president (USA)

Dr Yasser Khazaal Secretary- Treasurer (Switzerland)

 

Board Members

Dr Shalini Arunogiri (Australia)

Dr Susana Galea- Singer (UK)

Prof. Helena Hansen (USA)

Prof. Marc Potenza (USA)

 

Ex-Officio

Dr Nady el-Guebaly ; chief examiner (Canada)

Dr Roshan Bhad; Chair, ISAM NexT (India)

Mrs Marilyn Dorozio;Office Administrator (Canada)


Affiliated Addiction Medicine Societies

Addiction Medicine Association of Malaysia - AMAM

Addiction Psychiatry Society of India - APSI

American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry - AAAP

American Society of Addiction Medicine – ASAM

Argentine Society of Addiction Medicine - ArSAM

Canadian Society of Addiction Medicine - CSAM

Egyptian Psychiatric Association. - AEPA

Icelandic Society of Alcoholism & other Addictions – SAA

Indonesian Psychiatrist Organisation - IPA

Iranian Institute for Science and Technology of Addiction – ISTA

Israeli Society in Addiction Medicine –ILSAM

Japanese Society of Alcohol-Related Problems - NCBI

Korean Academy of Addiction Psychiatry – KAAP

Philippine Addiction Sciences Society - PASS

Nederland Society for Addiction Medicine - VVGN

Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists: Addiction Faculty - RANZCP

Swiss Society in Addiction Medicine - SSAM 

Association Marocaine D’Addictologie - AMA

Australasian Chapter of Addiction Medicine (AChAM) - RACP

Lithuanian Association of Addiction Psychiatry – LPPA 

 

Affiliate Addiction Related Organizations

European Opiate Addiction Treatment Association – EUROPAD

Greek Organization Against Drugs- OKANA

Maltese Foundation for Social Welfare Services – FSWS

National Addictions Management Service of Singapore - NAMS

National Rehabilitation Center, UAE - NRC 

 

About FSWS

The Foundation was established by means of a Public Notarial Deed made by Prime Minister Dr Alfred Sant, on February 27, 1998. ​The Foundation is made up of Board of Directors which include a President and at least four members who are responsible for the general policy and activities of the Foundation. Through the services it offers the Foundation is statutorily bound:

to provide social welfare services, in particular in relation to alcohol and substance abuse and in relation to other social welfare problems prevalent in the country, especially those related to family welfare; 

to furt​her and promote social and related studies and scholarship, through research, publications and education;

to collaborate with other similar entities, especially, though not exclusively, on a regional and international basis.

The everyday work of the Foundation is carried out by the Chief Executive Officer and the Senior Management Team through the 1000 employees, 78% of whom are professionals doing direct face to face client work.

These professionals are grouped into three agencies and three directorates, as follows:

Agency APPOĠĠ

Agency SEDQA

Agency for Community and Therapeutic Services (ACTS)

Gozo Branch Services Directorate

Directorate for the Protection of Minors (CPS)

Directorate for Alternative Care (DAC) 

 

Conference Facilities 

The Valletta Campus, popularly known also as the 'Old University Building' in Valletta, was constructed to serve as a Jesuit College, the first stone laid in 1595 by Grand Master Martino Garzes. Within two years the construction had advanced so much that it was possible to transfer to the new premises the classes which used to take place in an old house in Valletta.

Huddled between St. Paul, St Christopher, Merchants and Archbishop streets, the plan of the structure is typical of Renaissance large public buildings, with a central courtyard. Almost half of the site is taken up by the Jesuit church, whose construction started in 1592 and concluded in 1609.

The main entrance was initially from Merchants Street. Originally the facade was rather plain, with practically no decoration whatsoever. A Baroque facade was then re-designed in c. 1647 by famous architect Francesco Buonamici.

The ceiling of the corridors is a spectacle, lending itself to particular events such as Renaissance or Medieval themed dinners. Of equal interest is the wide staircase leading to the first floor, hardstone polished by the hundreds of Jesuit fathers, students and professors who made use of this building throughout the centuries. The portraits of distinguished personalities which embellish the corridors on the 1st floor were donated by Sir Joseph Nicholas Zammit in the 1800s. It is also interesting to point out that some of the rooms nowadays used as offices used to be the original cells of the Jesuit priests.

The building had quite a turbulent history. A few decades after completion, the structure suffered serious damage in September 1634, caused by an explosion in a nearby gunpowder magazine. This incident led to the re-modelling of certain parts of the building. Eventually the college and church were once again badly damaged in 1693, when an earthquake which hit Sicily in January affected the Island of Malta as well. It is believed that the creation of a sundial on the back of the Jesuits’ church in 1695 and its Latin inscription 'There will be a time where time will cease, and there will be eternal light to the good and endless night to the wicked' was intended as a reminder of the anxious moments experienced during the earthquake. Similarly, there was also the creation of a clock in the courtyard with the Latin inscription 'The Hours Perish and Are Put to Our Account'.

With the expulsion of the Jesuits from Malta in 1768, all their property, including the church and college in Valletta, were seized by the Order and administered by its Treasury. The course of studies, however, continued and the existing professors retained their posts. A conventual chaplain was chosen to take care of the adjacent church in order to keep it open to the public. In 1769, the Order officially established a college and a University on the premises.

After a brief suspension of studies during the reign of Grand Master Ximenes (1773-1775), the University was re-inaugurated in April 1779 by Grand Master de Rohan. From records kept by the Order it has been discovered that public academic debates were already being organised on the premises at the time.

During the French interlude (1798-1800), the University was replaced by the École Centrale, focusing mostly on the natural sciences. Attached to it were the Public Library, a Museum, Botanical Gardens, and an Observatory. Re-organised in 1900 by the British, the latter served as the main source of meteorological observations and records keeping. The equipment was situated in a small room on the highest point on the roof of the building at the corner of Merchants Street & St Christopher Street. In 1906, a seismograph was set up in an underground room making possible the collection of further information.

In the 1800s the British reopened the University, Mgr. Francesco Saverio Caruana being the first Rector. The British also opened a new gateway on St Paul Street in 1824, following the architectural fashion of the time which favoured a Doric revival. The gateway consists of an archway with a free-standing representation in stone of the British royal coat-of-arms on a moulded lintel supported on two Doric fluted columns. An inscription in Greek: 'learning is the gateway to distinction'. Although this entrance is not commonly used anymore, it is still the gateway through which Masters and Doctoral Graduation processions pass before moving on to the Jesuit Church where the actual ceremony is held.

In early British period, the ground floor rooms were rented as the Commercial Rooms, or stanze. In fact this space was re-constructed and refurbished in 1810, and has recently undergone further refurbishment in 2013.

The Old University Building housed a long list of different offices and institutions among them the Anglo-Maltese Library, the Lyceum for male students, an Air Raid Precautions Centre during World War II, and more recently even the head office of Heritage Malta. Nowadays it houses the Conferences and Events Unit (CEU), the Research and Innovation Development Trust (RIDT), and the Centre for the Study and Practice of Conflict Resolution. Part of the building also houses the offices of the International Institute for Justice and the Rule of Law (IIJ).

For more historical and artistic details about the structure, one can consult Michael Ellul’s 'The Jesuit College and Church in Valletta'.

Discover more about the Valletta Campus here.

 

ISAM members are invited to click here  for a  survey organised by the ISAM Communications Committee 

 

 

 


 

https://www.um.edu.mt/event/isamvalletta2022/about