If hijacking a thread was a crime....
🙂
My complaint with the training is that when it's a documented pathology of much severity, they're often chaptered out...a lot of the lightweight stuff treatable by counseling stays in
I suppose this entire discussion is based on point of view because the things I mentioned- slitting dog's throats, threatening to shot your wife,etc- sound like pretty severe things to me! And they all went on to continue to serve. If your standard for 'severe' is Hannibal Lector [sic?], then fair enough, I guess they're not that bad.
Certainly your original point about the population being young (17-25) is quite true. Good for OB/sports med, but bad for most other fields.
And true enough, if you enjoyed working with schizophrenics you'd be out of luck. And you're right, you also don't get to follow up for more than a couple of years.
Yep, GMO required for Navy, that sucks, agree with you there.
But the military also can't afford to keep in folks who look like they're going to become true psych-cases
They also can't afford to, say, get rid of over a thousand Arabic translators just because they're gay. I mean, there's a shortage of them and people could die, so that makes no sense.
Unfortunately in my time working for the armed forces I found them doing a lot of things that didn't conform to reason. There are quite a few people serving who really don't belong there because of a serious mental illness. There are plenty of active duty folks walking around with PTSD, just as one example. Not to mention that the #2 killer in active duty forces is suicide, more common than being killed by enemy/friendly fire. Surely the pyschopathology is severe if so many are killing themselves.
More reasons not to join! So kids: stay away.
Surveys done have found that overwhelmingly the biggest gripe from deployed docs in the military is skill atrophy.
Again, surgeons and the like suffer big like I said. But I've yet to hear a
psychiatrist gripe about atrophy of their skills, and I'd be interested if you have. Quite the opposite in my experience.
Meanwhile everyone knows at least a few civilian psychiatrists that would sweat at the thought of psychical contact with a patient.
Oh yeah one other thing.
I never said that armed forces hospitals are superior, what I'm saying is that their residencies are. The fact that they align themselves with excellent civilian academic/community hospitals is not a bad thing, it means you get the best of both worlds. And as I said, you can get the same training as a civilian because several of their programs are open to all.
But it is like you say a matter of opinion and that's fair enough.
I should probably study now or else, speaking of residencies, I might be forced to do mine down at that Florida correctional facility (it's real!) Sorry again for the hijack sunlioness, hope we haven't killed your thread