Substance Use Evaluation Practice in Chicago, Illinois

Addiction counselors and clinicians in Chicago face the same challenge as professionals across the country: they are frequently asked to write substance use evaluations — for courts, probation departments, treatment programs, and employers — without ever having received formal training on how to do so.

In Illinois, substance use evaluations must align with current clinical standards including the DSM-5-TR diagnostic criteria and the ASAM Criteria (4th Edition) for level-of-care recommendations. Courts, probation offices, and treatment agencies in Chicago rely on these standards to make decisions about diversion, sentencing, and treatment placement.

Whether you hold a CADC / CRADC (IL IAODAPCA) credential or are working toward licensure, this guide provides the practical framework you need to write evaluations that satisfy Illinois courts and reflect best practices in the field.

Illinois Addiction Counseling Credentials

The primary addiction counseling credential in Illinois is the CADC / CRADC (IL IAODAPCA). This guide supports the evaluation writing competencies required by Illinois's credentialing board and is aligned with IC&RC standards recognized nationwide.

Professionals in Chicago holding or pursuing CADC, LCADC, LADC, MAC, SAP, LCSW, LPC, LMHC, or any other substance use-related credential will find this guide directly applicable to their evaluation practice.

What This Guide Covers for Chicago Clinicians

How to conduct a structured clinical interview for substance use
Administering and interpreting AUDIT, MAST, DAST, and SASSI-4
Writing a complete biopsychosocial assessment
Applying DSM-5-TR criteria for substance use disorder diagnosis
Using ASAM Criteria (4th Ed.) for level-of-care recommendations
Writing court-defensible evaluation reports with clinical rationale
Sample reports you can model in your own practice
Guidance for court-involved and high-risk populations

Ready to Write Better Evaluations in Chicago?

Get the only step-by-step guide that demystifies substance use evaluation writing for Illinois clinicians.