Keeping up to date with the literature in psychiatry alone takes up enough time. Relying on your med school experience and 4 months of IM in intern year to be sufficient years down the line isn't good care for the patient.It seems ridiculous to think that after 4 years of medical school, 3 licensing exams, and an internship that following a JNC algorithm for managing hypertension would be beyond the scope of practice for a psychiatrist. It's cool for an FNP to prescribe Zyprexa but not for me to start someone on a little Lisinopril or albuterol?
Apa is in cahoots with apbn to make us do only their "approved" cme.It seems ridiculous to think that after 4 years of medical school, 3 licensing exams, and an internship that following a JNC algorithm for managing hypertension would be beyond the scope of practice for a psychiatrist. It's cool for an FNP to prescribe Zyprexa but not for me to start someone on a little Lisinopril or albuterol?
I think it comes down to the severity of the problem, the patient's access to primary care services, and the comfort level of the psychiatrist. Psychiatrists should be giving this some serious thought and taking a more active role providing better care for some of the more common medical issues seen in our seriously mentally ill patients (tobacco use, CV illness, metabolic issues). The APA even approved a statement saying as much, declaring that screening and, yes, even treatment, is an essential component of good psychiatric practice.
http://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/full/10.1176/appi.pn.2015.9b4
Does the opinion that psychiatrists ought to stick to psychopharm apply to C/L docs?
It would be even more inappropriate for a C/L psychiatrist to be treating non-psychiatric conditions given that by definition the patient has a real doctor responsible for their care who should be managing their medical problems. As consultants we don't prescribe anyway, we only make recommendations to the patient's primary treating physician on how to manage the patient. Much of the time consultations do not involve recommending medications at all.Does the opinion that psychiatrists ought to stick to psychopharm apply to C/L docs?
It seems ridiculous to think that after 4 years of medical school, 3 licensing exams, and an internship that following a JNC algorithm for managing hypertension would be beyond the scope of practice for a psychiatrist. It's cool for an FNP to prescribe Zyprexa but not for me to start someone on a little Lisinopril or albuterol?
I think it comes down to the severity of the problem, the patient's access to primary care services, and the comfort level of the psychiatrist. Psychiatrists should be giving this some serious thought and taking a more active role providing better care for some of the more common medical issues seen in our seriously mentally ill patients (tobacco use, CV illness, metabolic issues). The APA even approved a statement saying as much, declaring that screening and, yes, even treatment, is an essential component of good psychiatric practice.
http://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/doi/full/10.1176/appi.pn.2015.9b4
What a coincidence. I just wanted to ask a very similar question and then discovered this thread.
In German inpatient psychiatry, some psychiatrists feel comfortable prescribing antihypertensives, statins, etc. to their patients whereas others run a consult for every tiny detail. Length of stay for non-acute psychiatry admissions is usually around a month here, sometimes up to three months. There is certainly no fear of medico-legal problems here.
My question was very similar to that of the OP: How common is it in U.S. inpatient psychiatry to act as a "temporary PCP"? I would certainly never try to outsmart a patient's family doctor, or start an insulin therapy on a newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic, but how common is it in the U.S. to handle the "everyday health problems" of inpatients without a PCP?
Cardiologists are usually board certified in internal medicine or have at least completed an IM residency and this could practice the range of IM if they so wished. But usually they make more money sticking to cards. Also chest pain is within the scope of cardiology so it would be well within their remit to start someone on a PPI. That said GERD drugs are available OTC and an inpt psychiatrist would not think twice about rxing for GERD or whatever in that setting - but there is no need to do so in an outpatient setting and to do so without exam or consideration of further workup could lead to a malpractice claim (for example if the pt had Barrett's esophagus that went undiagnosed and later developed esophageal ca)How about other specialties? For instance, is a cardiologist running any kind of professional risk if he or she prescribes a drug for gastric reflux in a patient whose CVD they're managing?
Around here, a lot of the CHF docs are also their patients' PCP. But, like splik said, they actually had that training already.How about other specialties? For instance, is a cardiologist running any kind of professional risk if he or she prescribes a drug for gastric reflux in a patient whose CVD they're managing?
Correct.Cardiologists are usually board certified in internal medicine or have at least completed an IM residency and this could practice the range of IM if they so wished. But usually they make more money sticking to cards. Also chest pain is within the scope of cardiology so it would be well within their remit to start someone on a PPI. That said GERD drugs are available OTC and an inpt psychiatrist would not think twice about rxing for GERD or whatever in that setting - but there is no need to do so in an outpatient setting and to do so without exam or consideration of further workup could lead to a malpractice claim (for example if the pt had Barrett's esophagus that went undiagnosed and later developed esophageal ca)
It seems ridiculous to think that after 4 years of medical school, 3 licensing exams, and an internship that following a JNC algorithm for managing hypertension would be beyond the scope of practice for a psychiatrist. It's cool for an FNP to prescribe Zyprexa but not for me to start someone on a little Lisinopril or albuterol?