Were the patients challenging? Did you feel like you impacted their health? Was is stressful? Did you feel fairly compensated? Do you think there is a better way to help under served populations? Can you do PP with this job?
I briefly did community MH part-time with the thought that I'd start a private practice. I wound up combining it with an inpatient job and then bailed for full-time inpatient. Here's what I have for the community job in my neck of the woods.
1. yes. Patients were pretty seriously ill. However, with the agency I worked for, the type of patients you had varied based on which clinic you were in. My patients were mainly SPMI (severe/persistent mentally ill) who lived in group homes with refractory illness. I filled in some in a clinic on the other side of town, and there I saw a lot of borderline personality disorder. Mine were easier overall because access to therapy was pretty limited. In my clinic, there were lots of patients with lots of med trials, and minor but not major success stories. It felt a bit like providing palliative care.
2. See above about palliative care. I honestly didn't feel too impactful, but I think being there maybe gave a little more than I thought. Patients certainly seemed grateful because my agency had such a shortage of providers. Lots of things limited my ability to help, though, including significant psychosocial factors for my patients, and big problems in the agency with therapists who were overworked and quitting all the time. 60+ patients on a panel, $40k/year, first job out of school = only sticking around for six months or so.
3. Compensation was OK. More than academic/VA jobs although with fewer benefits. Benefits weren't so great. Not compensation on the level you see in the money thread going on right now, but you'd make above $200k working full-time. Pretty close to $200k but above $200k.
4. Don't know. Maybe not.
5. Yeah, totally. That's the upside. Lots of folks do part-time community + private practice. Community agencies are usually pretty flexible with work arrangements because they are so freaking short- staffed and happy to get what they can. Things to watch out for, though, are how much your agency might expect you to do when you're not there. Mine was actually pretty good in that there was no expectation for me to answer my phone or emails on days I wasn't there. Not so true with other places in my town from what I've heard.