I thought psychotherapists were PhD/PsyD (I mean, a psychiatrist can do it, but they would call themselves a psychiatrist). No surgery for them!And a psychotherapist can legally perform vascular surgery. Equally bad idea.
I thought psychotherapists were PhD/PsyD (I mean, a psychiatrist can do it, but they would call themselves a psychiatrist). No surgery for them!And a psychotherapist can legally perform vascular surgery. Equally bad idea.
A lot of psychiatrists do psychotherapy.I thought psychotherapists were PhD/PsyD. No surgery for them!
Yeah, you quoted before my edit. They do it, but they don't call themselves psychotherapists. It was like when I worked on the ambulance - Sisters Hospital in Buffalo, NY absolutely, abjectly refused to put on our nametags anything but "ambulance driver". As was said, many times, by EMTs and paramedics, "That is part of our job, but only a minor one".A lot of psychiatrists do psychotherapy.
You're reading much more into my post than I meant. The point is that once you have a medical license as an MD/DO/MBBS/etc, you can actually do "anything" with it. But realistically, you can / should only do what you were trained to do.
Definitely suburban. I want to be close to the city, but not far.
IM practice is easier and I've been working on it for while. My parents and friends are well established in IM world, but I do have connections to psych. Autism practice, I would have to look for patients that want to be treated by me and I would probably have to compete with other well established specialists in that field.
I know. I might just do IM and then apply to Psych after I finish residency. >_>
Crazy I know.
To the first question, it wouldn't be bad for me to treat Schizophrenia or Bipolar. I love patient interaction and would love to be of service to patients of this population as they are victimized a lot.
To the second question, yes. Completely. I would love to be of service to patients suffering from pain disorders or cancer or patients recovering from surgery. IM is interesting because it's an endless ocean and learning about new things in general is fun for me.
"Jones, a family physician, spends a full hour with each person. This allows him to uncover medical issues that people with autism may not readily communicate. He has learned, for example, that constipation is common in adults with autism, particularly those who take antipsychotic drugs. Severe constipation often manifests as behavioral problems, he has found."
THIS! This is why I wanna train both in IM and Psych, because Autism also has a lot of medical problems that need to be addressed in a population like this as well. I would love to have both medical and psychiatric training in helping this population!
Why didn't you apply Med-psych exactly? There's like 13 IM-Psych programs, I think they at least take 2 each. It honestly looks exactly like what you're interested in, and I'd imagine you would use both aspects of training doing what you want to do (regardless of what people say about only using one after combined training). Med-psych is 5 yrs, meaning only 1 yr longer than a Psych residency, and you'd get all the training in medicine that you want. That makes a whole lot more sense than doing sequential training for 6-7 yrs.
I know a few people doing sequential training, but its a tougher road.
So I know a few people that treat autism, CP, ID, and more patients with disabilities. They are primarily trained in either IM, IM/peds, or physiatry, and had a particular interest. The best of them was an IM/peds trained physician I did a rotation with that works as the medical director of a huge "facility" that covers acres of land, includes dorms, a school, a clinic, a farm, and other things. He is uniquely able to serve in that capacity due to both his training and his interest in serving that population, and honestly he seems to do an amazing job.
Another doc I know did 1 year of IM, and then transferred to a Psych residency. Does primarily mood work, but also is heavily involved in a Diet and Weight loss center for obese patients with medical complications. A lot of his patients have major psych comorbidities (i.e. schizophrenia, bipolar 1, as well as MDD, GAD, etc.).
A lot of medicine is guided by our interests, and the additional training we're willing to complete. I'm sure you could do a lot after either IM, Psych, combined, or through fellowships (accredited and not), training sessions, workshops, etc. after residency. My advice is to rank the programs in the order you felt that you would succeed most in, whether that's IM or Psych programs. If you're still up for it by the end of one residency, I think you could certainly get more training in the area you want, it'll just be a matter of how willing you are to move or take a pay cut.
I think initially I wanted to choose Psych, but then I thought about how much I would miss IM and so applied at my friend's urging. And it just never crossed my mind to apply to combined programs as I thought I would just choose one or the other. In any case, I can't think about what I should have done. I have to think about what I can do now.
I feel like the IM route seems pretty good and if I wanted to do Psych later I can. Money is nice, but I'm motivated by making a difference more so than money. I wouldn't be bothered by prolonged training. And it sounds to me I can accomplish all I want to do as a IM doctor or PCP.
Autism, in general, involves interdisciplinary care and I can have patients that do have Autism. I can handle their medical problems and also counsel them on appropriate lifestyle interventions. And then I don't have to abandon treating HTN, DM and obesity and I get to see more of the different pathologies. Sure, I'll miss out on learning psychotherapy and managing schizophrenia or bipolar, but I think I can live with that. I would rather be involved with getting my patients fit and motivating them to be fit. 😀
not necessarily. Unless a doctor registers with an insurer as a psychiatrist, psychotherapy add-on codes will likely not be reimbursed. Standard E and M codes still should be reimbursed.Insurance would reimburse you, no different than any other provider that submits a bill. The issue would be credentialing and recruitment of patients, not legality or billing.
As a PCP, I'm under the impression that you can see all comers and also have an interest in patients with specific disorders such as Autism. Couldn't I do counseling for all their medical issues and perhaps lifestyle issues as well?
My understanding is that autistic patients need interdisciplinary care, so I CAN be involved as a doctor that handles their medical issues if I seek out the right institution. And I can additionally treat obesity, HTN and DM.
I have an idea that I want to have a practice connected to a gym almost. Like be a lifestyle coach as well as a doctor if that makes sense.
I know this is not helpful now, but I wish you had applied to FM -- you would have been able to treat both medical and (straight forward) psych issues in both adults AND kids.
I agree though that the best route for you sounds like it's IM -> outpatient doc/PCP so you can manage medical issues but also be on the front-line for psych issues (though I'd expect would mostly be depression and anxiety, and much less autism). Over time I do think you could carve out a niche by building up a panel of patients who have both medical and psych issues. A lot of internists do NOT like working with patients with psych issues, so you would be providing a much needed service.
Of note, I do know of at least 2 internists who focus exclusively on patients with obesity and all its complications -- things like DM, HTN, and yes, psych issues -- so they work with an interdisciplinary team that includes people like nutritionists and psychologists. I feel like they are as close to a 'life coach' as you can get.
Psych lifestyle does tend to be good. But, what on call looks like for an outpatient office depends on the set up of the office, not the specialty. All specialties have emergencies, or at least patients that feel they're having emergencies. Some people in both Psych and IM will be on call always for their patients (typically providing guidance over the phone, not going into the office -- if someone is having a heart attack you tell them to go to the ED). Others will work in a group that rotates the call. Some work for a hospital system that has some sort of call/back-up system.The thing is with IM that people have heart attacks, COPD exacerbations all the time and you need to be at your phone ready to respond and go to work.
While psychiatry might have the emergencies where suicide was threatened or someone is manic, it's appears that psych has less burnout and more of a lifestyle friendly balance.
I call myself a "psychiatrist and psychotherapist" when advertising my practice because nowadays a lot of people don't realize that psychiatrists do provide psychotherapy and im not really interested in treating patients who don't want psychotherapy.Yeah, you quoted before my edit. They do it, but they don't call themselves psychotherapists.
I call myself a "psychiatrist and psychotherapist" when advertising my practice because nowadays a lot of people don't realize that psychiatrists do provide psychotherapy and im not really interested in treating patients who don't want psychotherapy.
I am interested in why you want to treat autistic people. are you autistic? do you have any family members who are autistic? seems like a very specific interest at this point in time. I started out in IM and then switched to psychiatry. I received zero training in the treatment of adults with autism in my residency training. I did co-facilitate a social skills group for kids with autism but that is about it. I would say that my experience is typical for the vast majority of psychiatrists. I wish I had learned more about this. the director of our adult autism clinic was incidentally a neurologist, not a psychiatrist. Even if treating adults, autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder so training in pediatrics, child psychiatry or neuodevelopment is a must.
dentists can specialize in treating autistic patients, so i don't see why you couldn't be an internist who specializes in autism. you could certainly with additional training and experience manage psychotropic medications in this population as an internist. you would have a lot of grateful parents i am sure.
Yes, it's definitely possible. Where I work now there is a center that does exactly this. It's grant-funded, and they see adults with any developmental disability not just autism.Just wanted to ask: In your opinion, could the OP treat Autistic patients as IM doctor and let Psychiatrists like you handle the psychiatric/mental health side while he deals with their medical issues?
Mm, in some states don't need credentials beside the MD and a license. As I understood it, some insurances can balk at bills submitted by those who aren't BC/BE. I guess I assumed that would be related to the type of thing they were billing for, but perhaps as long as you are boarded in SOMETHING they don't care that a vascular surgeon submits a bill for psychotherapy?
I've been having a bit of cold feet about my decision and I guess I need to ask something. In IM, burnout and workload is rampant. Not to say I want to take it easy, but I eventually do want to have a family and have some work/life balance. The thing is with IM that people have heart attacks, COPD exacerbations all the time and you need to be at your phone ready to respond and go to work.
While psychiatry might have the emergencies where suicide was threatened or someone is manic, it's appears that psych has less burnout and more of a lifestyle friendly balance.
So what do you guys think about this? I'm partially asking so that someone can come here and just destroy this line of reasoning and therefore I can stop being not so confident in my decision to go IM.
If you want to treat primarily autism, you will need to do a peds and/or child psych residency.
There are not large concentrated populations of adult with autism waiting for you to treat, they are scattered around here and there. There are some adults with severe autism and comorbid MR in institutions for the ******ed, so I guess if you were interested in ******ation also you could do IM or adult psych.
Insurance would reimburse you, no different than any other provider that submits a bill. The issue would be credentialing and recruitment of patients, not legality or billing.
You'll get a LOT more exposure to autism in pediatrics than in internal medicine if that's one of your big interests (and it's awesome that it's an interest for you!). I don't even know how you would get exposed to autism in a general IM residency...maybe if you have a big institution that has an adult developmental disabilities clinic? But even then that would likely be part of the psychiatry/neurology/developmental department. Peds gets tons of exposure to autism screening, autism evals, management, behavioral management, etc. If you go to a big institution, the developmental and behavioral peds department will see a LOT of older teenagers and adults with autism, since there aren't many places for them to be seen. Big institutions often also have an autism diagnostic/management center although this is also usually within the peds/neuro/psych departments (not IM).
If you don't want to just do kids and get some adult training too, I would definitely choose med/peds over IM. You'll get exposure to autism through the peds part and most of the places that have med/peds are big academic institutions, so likely to have a developmental and behavioral pediatrics department. Look for a place that has a strong developmental/behavioral peds department (or at least has one) +/- a place that has an adult intellectual disabilities clinic/person.
dentists can specialize in treating autistic patients, so i don't see why you couldn't be an internist who specializes in autism. you could certainly with additional training and experience manage psychotropic medications in this population as an internist. you would have a lot of grateful parents i am sure. one thing you want to bear in mind is if you are working with more impaired autistic patients who can't work, then they will likely have medicaid, especially if they're over 26 and can;t be on their parents' insurance, so your reimbursement would be poor. Unless you were catering to wealthy families with an autistic child etc.
So maybe 2 years of peds after IM residency. That might be interesting.
the OP is in the current match and applied and interviewed at IM and Psych programs and did not apply to med- peds programs...little late to now apply.or do a combined (4 years) Med-Peds residency
the OP is in the current match and applied and interviewed at IM and Psych programs and did not apply to med- peds programs...little late to now apply.
however OP, you may consider ranking the places you did interview that have med-peds programs high on your list and then after you match and start as an intern, see if you can transfer over to the med- peds program. Or go through psych and see if there is a child/psych program you can apply to (usually in the 2nd or 3 rd year of psych i think) that then would give you a decent foundation to treat pts with autism..maybe even be able to develop a sub fellowship at a place that has a great deal of autism.
Wouldn't transferring to another residency anger the Program Director though? I don't want to get on my Program Director's bad side
No like transfer to the med peds program in the same place. You have a valid reason for it and the PD likely wouldn’t care that much since he/she would still get 2 years of IM out of you.
Wouldn't transferring to another residency anger the Program Director though? I don't want to get on my Program Director's bad side
I talked to a pediatric neurologist still in training about this.
Developmental peds would be best for autism - it's a developmental disorder, and a lot of the heavy intervention is early in life. They often follow those kids until they develop adult medical problems that they can't manage. Peds is not a bad bet too. Both coordinate a lot of the diagnosis and care of those with autism - often there is a multidisciplinary team.
Neurology is in general a HORRIBLE field for what OP suggest they want to do, neuro does see a lot of MR and such, but what they manage is narrow and they don't really do autistic kids anymore than any other specialty might.
Psychiatry would not be good at all - they don't really do anything besides manage the cocktails of psych drugs for behavioral issues that some patients end up on - because managing psych cocktails, because of any specialist psych drugs are the best for that.
If you want to do adults with autism, though, developmental peds might not be the best fit. If you're stuck on the pathway of either IM or psych, go IM. You can create a practice that matches your post that way.
The irony is that my friend is in a combined peds program (not IM/peds, but alongside it), and questions the utility of IM/peds outside inpt setting, and even then.... though they think that perhaps that would built the foundation for the sort of practice you envision ultimately. They liked my idea of IM and then look to work in a combined IM/peds clinic, which do exist, if you really want breadth of practice with adults. In that framework it likely wouldn't be difficult to try to get more autistic patients on your panel and care for them.
You're missing the point. The point is that OP needs to get exposure to these patients while he is still in training. When you're an attending is not the time to be trying to get exposure to a patient population you've never worked with before. It's going to be very tough to get dedicated (or any) exposure to adults with autism in a general IM program. Most of what you're saying is generally incorrect as well. If you happen to see a few adults with autism/DD in the general IM resident clinic, you're likely going to be referring away a lot of their management to (gasp) psychiatry. The time for detection and treatment (ABA) is over by the time you're an adult. You can coordinate/manage some medical problems they might have but by adulthood it's unlikely you're going to be able to impact the core symptoms of autism. Most of the actual medication management at that point (and TBH in childhood as well) is for essentially psychiatric disorders. Inattention, hyperactivity, aggression. You will absolutely get exposure to this in child psychiatry, whether you want to or not. Not to mention you'd get a lot of exposure in basic ADHD management in a general pediatrics residency as well (a lot of autistic patients end up on ADHD medications to help improve their focus, especially high functioning ones).
Didn't @splik say that I could work with this population of patients as an internist? I'm assuming he is one of the psychiatrists in this forum.
What is the problem with getting subsequent exposure to a population of patients after you do residency? I want to fully understand that. Even if I were to not get exposure who autistic patients in residency, I still would be trained in handling medical management. And I'm certain that these patients would need medical management at some point in time.
Didn't @splik say that I could work with this population of patients as an internist? I'm assuming he is one of the psychiatrists in this forum.
What is the problem with getting subsequent exposure to a population of patients after you do residency? I want to fully understand that. Even if I were to not get exposure who autistic patients in residency, I still would be trained in handling medical management. And I'm certain that these patients would need medical management at some point in time.
You're missing the point. The point is that OP needs to get exposure to these patients while he is still in training. When you're an attending is not the time to be trying to get exposure to a patient population you've never worked with before. It's going to be very tough to get dedicated (or any) exposure to adults with autism in a general IM program. Most of what you're saying is generally incorrect as well. If you happen to see a few adults with autism/DD in the general IM resident clinic, you're likely going to be referring away a lot of their management to (gasp) psychiatry. The time for detection and treatment (ABA) is over by the time you're an adult. You can coordinate/manage some medical problems they might have but by adulthood it's unlikely you're going to be able to impact the core symptoms of autism. Most of the actual medication management at that point (and TBH in childhood as well) is for essentially psychiatric disorders. Inattention, hyperactivity, aggression. You will absolutely get exposure to this in child psychiatry, whether you want to or not. Not to mention you'd get a lot of exposure in basic ADHD management in a general pediatrics residency as well (a lot of autistic patients end up on ADHD medications to help improve their focus, especially high functioning ones).
A few issues. There's only so many places that have the combined program. Many you needed to apply and interview and be accepted to both. Some you rank and might only get into one.
The other is that combined training programs tend to be shorter than what the separate programs combined would otherwise be - for example, neuro is 4, peds, 4, but peds neuro 5. The way that happens is unique, so there are potentially major issues with you starting on one track and then trying to switch over. That can work at some institutions and specialties but not all.
Going from one program at one institution to a combined program elsewhere, could be done, but it's not that much different than any other transfer (which are bitches to do, btw), except you might get more credit in the transfer for your rotations than you would otherwise. Kind in mind most people don't get total credit. Again, the scheduling can be a bit of nightmare.
Peds is 3 years (except maybe in Canada?). You need 2 years to be eligible for board certification if you're doing a combined program, but you lose out on basically all elective time by doing that (essentially, your elective time becomes your other specialty). I imagine Neuro, IM, etc are similar.
Doing a combined program from what I'm told doesn't make sense to do just to "keep options open." Because in reality it is best used if you have a clear idea that the sorts of practice scenarios it prepares you to do is what you want.
This comes up in IM, that with inpt heavy programs we seem to think since what is seen is more complex, sicker, higher acuity, that it would translate well to outpt practice. That isn't necessarily the case. Hence the primary care IM tracks we see.
This is another reason not to do a combined program if you are going to just end up in general and especially outpt practice in only one field. People do, don't get me wrong.
But having trained in only psych or IM makes you more prepared to either. If you do psych/IM, you will best trained for what the combo trains you to do, than to open a general psych outpt practice doing psychotherapy.
Pyschotherapy I keep reading on these boards, is hard, and many feel that even a gen psych program isn't all across the board great at every program and even when it is, it's hard and it's hard when you start as an attending (if your practice includes that). My understanding is that a psych/IM program tends to be light on psych outpt training, psychotherapy, and IM outpt training. Please correct me if I am wrong.
My understanding, which comes from a psych/IM doubleboarded doc, is that it is best used inpt to manage complex patients where the cocktail of meds they are on and how that affects the cocktail they are on for their complex medical problems, is best tweaked and managed by someone trained to deal with both simultaneously, because that is what is needed. What someone in IM or psych alone might have difficulty addressing.
I also have seen this mix in academia, where the combined boarding facilitates research. I saw it in an IM outpt resident clinic at a research institution, where the psych/IM doc did med management for the most part, but again, the IM portion of their training was meant to greater inform their practice, research, and training of IM and psych residents. They were also well-poised to manage geriatic psych inpts because of the multiple c0-morbidities. Also nursing home where again, multiple morbidities and lots of meds on board.
I did a combined IM/Psych residency, followed by a sleep fellowship. I am a diplomate of the ABIM in Internal Medicine and Sleep Medicine, and of the ABPN in Psychiatry and Psychosomatics (I guess they just renamed Psychosomatics consult liaison psychiatry). I am meeting MOC in all of these, and just recertified in Sleep and Psychiatry, and will be taking the Consult Psychiatry recertification exam in April.
The combined IM/Psych residency prepares one well for inpatient psychiatry, especially for geriatric patients and for those undergoing complicated substance withdrawal, including the DT's. I am not a great psychotherapist and don't currently do outpatient psychiatry, but there is no reason a combined doc couldn't do a psych med management clinic with limited therapy. I do some limited medicine on weekend moonlighting assignments (coverage of an inpatient psych ward)- including ruling out MI's, treating asthma, managing unstable DM, treating electrolyte abnormalities, etc.
At my main job, In addition to doing inpatient psychiatry, I supervise the NP who does the medical H and P's on psych patients. My IM training gives added credibility to my position as chief of the dept of psychiatry.
I disagree that the combined residency is light on IM outpt training, It is a little light on IM in general.
Combined IM/psych does help when dealing with complex drug interactions, and in the psychiatric tx of medically compromised patients.
my background also helped me get a part-time job as director of a methadone clinic, without any formal addictions training (other than as part of residency).
It's also a relative thing. IM is almost exclusively one or all of those three things.
I disagree that the combined residency is light on IM outpt training, It is a little light on IM in general.
I did a combined IM/Psych residency, followed by a sleep fellowship. I am a diplomate of the ABIM in Internal Medicine and Sleep Medicine, and of the ABPN in Psychiatry and Psychosomatics (I guess they just renamed Psychosomatics consult liaison psychiatry). I am meeting MOC in all of these, and just recertified in Sleep and Psychiatry, and will be taking the Consult Psychiatry recertification exam in April.
The combined IM/Psych residency prepares one well for inpatient psychiatry, especially for geriatric patients and for those undergoing complicated substance withdrawal, including the DT's. I am not a great psychotherapist and don't currently do outpatient psychiatry, but there is no reason a combined doc couldn't do a psych med management clinic with limited therapy. I do some limited medicine on weekend moonlighting assignments (coverage of an inpatient psych ward)- including ruling out MI's, treating asthma, managing unstable DM, treating electrolyte abnormalities, etc.
At my main job, In addition to doing inpatient psychiatry, I supervise the NP who does the medical H and P's on psych patients. My IM training gives added credibility to my position as chief of the dept of psychiatry.
I disagree that the combined residency is light on IM outpt training, It is a little light on IM in general.
Combined IM/psych does help when dealing with complex drug interactions, and in the psychiatric tx of medically compromised patients.
my background also helped me get a part-time job as director of a methadone clinic, without any formal addictions training (other than as part of residency).
So question for you, was the amount of IM oupt training in your combined program more or less the same amount as an IM only program?
Uh... not really. Don't get me wrong. I do see a lot of DM and HTN. And hey, this is America. Every other patient is obese. That's just the way it is.
However, saying that this is all internists see is simply not true (I wish it was because I like managing those conditions).
On a regular basis, I see skin and soft tissue infections, flu, pneumonia, your run off the mill sinusitis, otitis, UTIs, vaginosis, sexually transmitted infections. Keep in mind that this is on a regular basis. I see much more than that.
I also manage DVTs/PEs using NOACS or warfarin.
I manage migraines and other headache syndromes as well as peripheral neuropathy.
We manage a lot of MSK complaints and I mean a lot.
We manage hypogonadism, hypothyrodism, thyroid nodules, and DM on a regular basis.
A fib, HTN, CAD, hypotension and orthostasis...
COPD, asthma, allergic rhinitis.
IBS, diarrhea, constipation, c diff, diverticulitis, chronic pancreatitis, evaluation of transaminitis, fatty liver.
Anemia, polycythemia.
Erectile dysfunction, BPH, epididymitis, urinary incontinence.
Skin rashes, skin moles.
Depression, anxiety, dementia, sleep disorders.
Lung cancer screening, prostate cancer screening, colon cancer screening, cervical cancer screening, breast cancer screening, melanoma screening, AAA screening and monitoring (if positive).
I could go on. I wish you were right. My job would be much easier.