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Home » Schizophrenia

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 28 No. 6
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COMMENTARY 

Are We Training Psychiatrists to Provide Only Medication Management?

By Sidney Weissman, MD | June 27, 2011
Dr Weissman is Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago.

In reviewing the practice patterns of psychiatrists today, it is clear that many provide mostly medication checks or medication management for their patients. The conventional wisdom for this model of practice is that it is based on current methods of payment for clinical service, which places a premium on brief interventions by psychiatrists. Medications must be prescribed by a physician, while a non-MD mental health worker can provide psychotherapy and be paid by an insurance company at a lower unit cost than that paid to a psychiatrist to perform the same form of treatment.

Although it is true that today’s economics encourage the practice of medication management by psychiatrists, the current structure of clinical experiences in residency training programs may also serve to implicitly encourage and support this model of practice.

The practice of psychiatry is the merger of scientific disciplines that inform us in understanding behavior and caring for our patients. The science of psychiatry is taught effectively in most, if not all, psychiatric residencies by a graded curriculum that addresses the biology, psychology, and social factors of human behavior. Resident performance on the psychiatric resident training examinations (PRITE) taken during each year of residency and the written examination of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology for certification confirm that current graduates are well versed in the varied aspects of the science of psychiatry.

The art of psychiatric practice is learned by residents during various supervised clinical rotations. Each rotation has a number of stated learning objectives and related competencies that a resident must master. But once the resident masters the required competencies, is he or she in fact able to perform these required competencies? The ability to perform in a clinical rotation may not mean that the resident has the competence to practice unsupervised. In assessing performance during or after a rotation, we must determine whether the resident will be able to practice in the field.

While one learns science in an academic framework, the art of psychiatry is learned experientially, in graded supervised settings. The skill set grows with increased experience. In psychiatry more than any other medical specialty, the art of being a psychiatrist is most critical. The psychiatrist’s core knowledge, skills of interviewing, and his or her empathic capacity serve as the diagnostic imaging and laboratory tests of other medical specialties.

The only activity that the psychiatric resident is able to master . . . is . . . prescribing medication . . .

The psychiatrist performs a diagnostic assessment by talking to the patient and to individuals in the patient’s life. After completing the diagnostic interview, the psychiatrist may obtain information from other professionals and from laboratory results. A unique form of information for psychiatrists regarding their patients, which is frequently not acknowledged in both the diagnostic and therapeutic process, is the psychiatrist’s empathic sense of the patient. Using all the collected data, the psychiatrist makes a DSM diagnosis and answers any special concerns regarding the patient. At this point, a treatment plan is developed. Assessing patients and developing and instituting a treatment plan is the essence of the psychiatric residency.

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by Matthew Vukin | June 27, 2011 6:16 PM EDT

I appreciate Dr. Weissman's recent commentary (June 2011 Psychiatric Times) speculating on the direction residency programs have gone in emphasizing psychopharmacology as the only intervention offered by psychiatrists. I have been out of residency for two years and feel lucky to have found ways, as a VA employee, to integrate further psychotherapy training into my work, co-leading a group, and participating in research. Psychotherapy training was available in my residency, but I had to pursure if actively. I am conerned that academic training programs often dismiss psychotherapy because it does not lend itself to lucrative research funding and because of the presesnce of psychology and social work training programs often nearby. Personally I find psychopharmacology interesting, but limited generally in effectiveness even in my primarily outpatient population. I find it impossible to prescribe responsibly without paying attention to the psychosocial factors effecting my patients, in addition to the biologic ones. I have attempted, in precepting and supervising other medical trainees, to emphasize the psychosocial aspects of treatment and enhance appreciation for these. We struggle against unrealistic expectations set forth in pharmaceutical advertisments, recommendations by well intended non physicians to "get your [patient] meds adjusted", and our own high hopes for the newest pharmaceutical compounds. One of our biggests charges is knowing when not to prescribe, and when we cannot, feeling competent to invoke other treatment modalities. Psychiatrists are physician who specialize in the treatment of those with mental illnesses. It's not inappropriate to have a unique niche or interest, but a balance seems imperative given our lack of objective tests and that numerous diagnoses that can masquerade as one another. It does, in residency training, require special attention as not to convey the expectation that psychiatrists only heal with prescriptions. Our patients would want us to be familiar with all evidence based modalities to be able to act in their best interest. I believe focusing primarily on psychopharmacology will create dissatisfaction in the field, perpetuate erroneous and negative stereotypes of psychiatrists by the public, and most importantly not foster knowledge of the widest and best range of potentially useful treatments for each of our patients.

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