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The Future of Psychiatry Board Certification

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

Psychiatry Oral Boards will soon be a thing of the past.  This development will no doubt cause considerable consternation for those who make a living by providing week-long practice sessions, but will be welcome news to psychiatry residents who suffer from performance anxiety!  I have mixed feelings about the news myself.   I confess to the feelings that anyone has when there is a sense that the journey has become a bit lighter for those following in one’s footsteps.  I remember similar feelings years ago when resident work hours were reduced to the limit of ‘only’ 80 hours per week!  After all, misery loves company.

But I found that I was wrong about those feelings about resident work hours.  I teach medical students now, and I realize that current grads have it as tough as I ever did.  I had to remember the name of one or two beta-blockers, I needed only a general understanding that something called ‘cytochromes’ degrade medications at the liver,  and there were no classes that required an understanding of the human genome project’!  I would guess that psychiatry residents will face new challenges that are not anticipated now. 

I do hope that there is a significant hurdle placed at some point in the process– for reasons that current psychiatry residents may not yet fully appreciate.  Right now, Psychiatry Board Certification means something.  Those residents who work hard to truly understand the most difficult aspects of the art and science of psychiatry should have for their work to ‘count.’  As a solo practice psychiatrist who does not belong to insurance panels, I must rely on providing a good product– i.e. being a good psychiatrist– to keep my practice going.  I see patients who have become fed up with what they describe as ‘psychiatry mills’ where they are hurried through appointments, are prescribed medications for reasons they do not understand, and who never feel a sense of support from the psychiatrist who has been assigned to provide their care.  I am always surprised when I ask a patient the name of his/her previous psychiatrist and the patient cannot remember the name!  The sad thing is that such an occurence is not unusual.  I encourage residents and others studying to be mental health practitioners to continue to demand a rigorous curriculum, as that is what will allow psychiatry to remain a respected field of medicine.  I also encourage individual practitioners to strive to set themselves apart by being a psychiatrist who is truly valued by your patients– not someone who just happens to be on all of the panels.

The changes in the exams mean that I will have to change the way that I market my recordings to some extent– for example the keywords ‘oral psychiatry boards’ will no longer be all that useful!  But the good news is that the recordings that I have prepared are as valuable for the new standards as they were before.  I now recommend that people consider the recordings that provide an understanding of the DSM criteria for psychiatric disorders for use earlier in their residencies;  I used to recommend the recordings for the oral boards, but now the plan is to assess competence at earlier points in the residency.  The recordings for the diagnositic criteria are useful to lay the bedrock for your psychiatric education;  I recommend listening to the recordings during your commute many times over (they are over 3 hours long, so it will take some time!) so that you have an automatic understanding of where different illnesses are categorized and the criteria required to make each diagnosis.  Once a person has a good understanding of the diagnostic criteria he/she is miles ahead in the learning process, able to focus on the details, the studies of treatment paradigms, the theories of disease… or just to more quickly finish the write-up and for once get home at a respectable hour! 

Good luck, everyone–

JJ

Psychiatry and Psychology Board Preparation

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

While preparing for my Oral Examination earlier this year I found a way to prepare that was so useful that it may have made the difference for me.  I waited longer than I should have to prepare, and suddenly found myself with less time than I had planned for.

These recordings saved time, using time that was otherwise wasted:  my morning and evening commute!

Despite completing a good residency I worried that in the heat of the moment I would forget the specific criteria– the criteria I needed to defend the diagnosis I gave to my Boards patient.

I realized that I needed to focus on the FUNDAMENTALS– the criteria themselves!  If the criteria popped into my head during the exam, everything else would be gravy!

I realized that the way to accomplish what I needed was to engrain the material into my memory so completely that I could recall it automatically–

That is what these recordings did for me– and what they will do for you!

Click the purchase links at the right for the 3-CD set of recordings, or choose the instant download option.  The instant download option is less expensive, as it does not require me to burn the CDs and run to the Post Office–  You can simply burn the CDs yourself, or even easier place the MP3 files on your I-Pod or other MP3 player!  If you prefer the CDs I will have them to you within two weeks.

The recordings are efficient– I don’t drone on and on about things you won’t need to know.  I recite the criteria– listen to them, then listen again, and again– after two weeks if someone says ‘major depressive disorder’ the criteria and qualifiers will roll off your tongue with ease.  In my case that made my confidence take off like a rocket!  I walked to my exam room feeling as if I had a ‘secret weapon’ to success!

Try Them– They Work!

After your purchase, come back in January of 2009 for additional recordings.  Purchasers of the current recordings will have the opportunity to receive subsequent recordings at a discount.