I'm a second-year post-doc. I was talking to the other fellows and psychiatry residents about how the prospects for patients receiving mental health looks so much different than the text books. In other words, in the text books every body improves greatly or improves a great deal, there is always a solution to every problem and every provider always knows all the evidence-based methods in-the-book
In realtiy, very ew people improve from things like personality disorders and even event those with less severe illness don't completely remit or they relapse and there are often no solutions to dilemmas we face in the treatmnet of patients. Also, when we refer out in the community, we refer to psychiatrists or PMHNPs who havent picked up a book since school and psychotherapists who say they perform all these evidence-based techniques but, during the rare times they actually do use some evidence-based interventions, they do so with a hodge-podge approach.
What are other people's biggest shocks about entering this field?
In realtiy, very ew people improve from things like personality disorders and even event those with less severe illness don't completely remit or they relapse and there are often no solutions to dilemmas we face in the treatmnet of patients. Also, when we refer out in the community, we refer to psychiatrists or PMHNPs who havent picked up a book since school and psychotherapists who say they perform all these evidence-based techniques but, during the rare times they actually do use some evidence-based interventions, they do so with a hodge-podge approach.
What are other people's biggest shocks about entering this field?