We need to get students out of inpatient psychiatry and show them something more representative of what we do.
Med students are very susceptible to charismatic mentors. We just need to prioritize teaching more and have departments value teaching.
I've been saying this for years. Medical students for the majority, spend 4-6 weeks of their psych clerkship in a locked, inpatient unit, and walk out thinking thats all we do is admit bipolar/schizophrenia/depression(suicide ideation) and then just monitor for 7-10 days before discharging.
I mean every specialty has med students in outpatient clinic at some point, why not psych?? Students can truly experience a change they can make by following up with a depressed patient that was started on a SSRI 6-8 weeks ago, or put on VPA 1 month ago, and hear from the patient the positive clinical response they had. Plus they can also withness attendings doing psychotherapy..
Medical students have no idea about all the fellowships available to psych. I mean, I know psych residents who have no idea we can potentially do sleep/pain if we really wanted to, or even just do straight ER Psych. So if psych residents are clueless, what hope do we have for med students?
I don't think prestige is much to do with it to be honest. I also don't think our generation really cares about prestigie. If prestige was such a big deal, why is Derm still #1? I find it hard to believe that the general public are enamored by dermatologists and view them as the cream of the crop (like we do in the medical school world, and I'm not trying to insult derm, just making an anecdotal point). If prestige was such a factor, I'm pretty sure neurosurgery would be ROAD x 100 in competitiveness.....
And if prestige is so popular, one of the hottest fields in IM is now hospitalist, medicine residents are shying away from fields like Cardiology because of the brutal lifestyle and declining reimbursements. My friend in Peds also is saying that hospitalist is a hot field with fellowships popping up everywhere. No slam against hospitalists, but I don't think "Hospitalist" is more prestigious than "cardiologist". I mean, I dont even think the general public really knows what a hospitalist is, so I cant believe residents are doing it for prestige.
And its not money, because data shows that we are on par with middle to upper level specialties if you calculate per hour.
This whole "real doctor" nonsense baffles me. Prescribing psych drugs like Lithium and Haldol and Clozaril are far more "powerful" and have serious side effects/ramifications than dumping a statin for cholesterol or norvasc for BP. I mean my opinion is obviously biased, but I feel more pharmacologically challenged when I prescribe/choose a mood stabilizer than referring to an algorithim for BP management (again, no slam against medicine guys, I fully respect their knowledge and clinical skills, just making a point about psych).
and psych being a soft science also baffles me. Again, I am biased because I like neuropsychiatry, but if you give any resident some articles from AJP or Biological Psychiatry, I'm sure they will agree that it is "hardcore" neuroscience. I mean, I"m presenting at journal club this week the recent publication in AJP on schizophrenics, drug naive, in western China who had MRI analysis of their cortices and other neuroanatomical areas. Hardcore neuroradiology that correlates with schzophrenia, and fascinating as well! Are Psychiatrists going to start ordering MRI Brain for every first break psychosis or monitoring of schizophrenia patients? Probably not, but this could be seen in the future, possibly 10-15 years. Just like how DBS for TRD might be the future, Ketamine, etc.
I also think our generation is more open and concerned about mental health, which is why I am unrealistically optimistic about the future of neuroscience/psychiatry.