psychiatry

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Psychiatry Clinical Skills Assessment (CSA)

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Six months ago I wrote about the change from oral board examinations in Psychiatry to a series of clinical skills assessments to be done by members of the resident’s training program.  I had some concerns at that time about the change;  I tend to do well on oral examinations and believe that with a couple helpful bits of advice, every candidate with a reasonable fund of knowledge can do well.  I have received good feedback about the approach taken in my recordings, which is to learn the basics so darn well, through repetition day after day, that intelligent discussion comes to mind automatically– even during moments of anxiety-provoked brain freeze!

My reservation about the change from Oral Board to CSA was concern over the residents own faculty performing the examinations.  On one hand such an arrangement could provide an unfair advantage, but I am more concerned over the disadvantage from being examined by someone who perhaps has negative preconceptions from prior courses or clinical work.  The change from orals to CSA seemed to drastic;  the policy in the former was to exclude anyone who had ANY knowledge of the candidate, and the new format guarantees that most or all of the examiners will know something about the candidate!  On the other hand, having knowledge of the candidate is not completely unique. I think back to my PhD disseration, which like all dissertations was presented to my thesis committee and to the university at large.

After serving as a Clinical Skills Assessment examiner several months ago, I have a better feeling about the new system.  The format is actually identical to the format of the clinical interview portion of the old Oral Boards.  The ‘vignette’ sections were eliminated, although that may be changed going forward.  I made a couple small changes to the recordings to account for the change in format, and all of my comments in prior posts remain valid– for those of you who take the time to read them!  Bottom line, I stand by my recommendation to use the recordings during your commute, ideally for weeks or even months before the exam.  Talk back to the recordings out loud to become completely familiar with the criteria for psychiatric disorders.  Doing so will guarantee your ability to provide an intelligent differential diagnosis as you run through the critera with ease!

Best of luck in your examinations and careers,

Jeffrey T Junig MD PhD

New Recording Series: Questions and Answers in Psychiatry

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

I have finally put together the new recordings;  As I have mentioned in the past I am trying to think of the things that I would have found useful to study for the boards.  I was going to go through the mood disorders next, but realized that trying to cover all of the disorders with a ‘shotgun’ approach would be the same old thing that is already out there.  I remember purchasing an $800 set of recordings that covered all of the different disorders;  90% of the material was obvious, another 8% was unintelligible from different accents or skipping CDs, and 2% was very helpful– but I had to listen for hours and hours to get to that part!

My hope is that by first covering ‘Q and A’ the preparing student or resident would learn the areas that need the most ‘brushing up’, and then focus on those areas for the other studying programs. These Q and A recordings consist of questions similar to those found on old Board Exams, Prites, studying guides, tests I helped make up for undergraduate studies…  and completely consistent with the questions found on the Part I Boards.  That does NOT mean that they won’t be helpful for Part II;  On the contrary the questions are similar to those asked during the newer portions of the Part II exam, and also provide the facts needed to converse about the differential diagnoses for the patient interview (e.g. how many weeks before bereavement becomes depression?).

The Q and A recordings will be released every two weeks, in a series of different categories.  This first category is ‘adult psychopathology’; future categories will include child psychiatry, forensics, emergency psychiatry, neuro, consult-liason. and others.   Each edition will contain from 110 to 120 minutes of questions and answers.

As always, the recordings are intended for use during otherwise wasted time, such as a morning or evening commute, or during a jog at the end of the day.  I simply ask the question, list the possible answers, pause for you to come up with the correct response, and then provide the correct response.  If you miss a question I suggest that you make a mental note of that section, or better yet use the myriad of recorders that are now found on I-phones, cell phones, and other hand-held devices.  Or buy a cheap voice recorder at best buy!  You will quickly identify the areas that you ahve down cold from those where you need to do a bit of review.

I welcome suggestions that would improve upon the product;  if you have nice things to say (and thank you to those of you who have already sent me those!), send them in with your name if you don’t mind.  I am realizing that for marketing purposes I should put a few of them on the site.

Thank you for your interest and for your purchase, and good luck, as always, in your studies!

Jeffrey T Junig MD PhD

Psychiatry Part II: Horses, not Zebras!

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Like most Board Certification examinations, the proving ground for psychiatry covers two areas.  Part I makes sure that the candidate has the ‘facts’– all of the things that are picked up during residency didactics and personal reading, including the different types of aphasia (ick), the metabolic derangements that affect brain development (ugh), or the specific pharmaco-kinetics of each therapeutic agent (I actually like that stuff!).

If you are reading this after searching for ‘part II preparation’, you have made it– you won’t neeed to really memorize that material for another ten years– for recertification! (sorry).

Part II is different– you need a totally different set of skills.  You need to think on your feet.  You need to diagnose on the ‘fly’.  You need a bit of confidence.  You need the basics down cold.

That is why I focus on these recordings so much– they are 90% of what you need!  They improve the basics– dramatically.  And they provide confidence–  Think about it–  think about how it would feel to KNOW, for CERTAIN, that the criteria will come to mind no matter how threatening the case?

If you can talk CRITERIA during the exam, and point out how the criteria match up with your patient, you are SET for Part II.

What Do You Need?

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

I will be preparing some new audio recordings as we get closer to the Oral Board season.  I have described why my tapes are helpful– for the Part II exam I am convinced that most senior residents know the material that they need already; the problem is getting it out of their heads in a timely, useful, and impressive manner.  As I have said before, if you use my recordings over and over you will be amazed at how confident you will become.

At my own boards I went out to dinner the night before;  a friend from residency was talking about his preparation, and spouting off the different diagnoses, along with how to support each one in patients– I saw the faces of the people at the dinner table turn white as they realized that this guy was much more prepared than they were.  On the other hand, I felt pretty good.  I was impressed by my friend, but I knew that I had gone through the criteria so many times that there was no way that I would have trouble remembering them.  And I was absolutely right about that!!

Try my tapes– just click on the button on the right of this page, your choice of CD or instant download.  You won’t be disappointed!

For those who have purchased the recordings, or for those who make a purchase, please write to me after the Boards with your feedback.  If I use your comment on the page for my advertising (after the Boards I am going to add a ‘feedback’ page) I will pay you $100.  I will select the top five comments– the ones that provide the best message for my advertising.  A list of the winners will be provided afterward for anyone who asks.

Finally, let me know what types of recordings would be useful for YOU.  If you make a purchase, and then suggest a recording that I end up producing, I will send your suggested recording to you for free!

Thanks, and good luck studying!

JJ