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What has been the most difficult thing for you to learn/get comfortable doing?
Boundary setting and not admitting every chronically suicidal or homicidal patient seems to be the most challenging for a lot of people.
Is this necessarily a bad thing though? For some psychiatrists, their focus and expertise is on biologics. For therapy they refer out to the appropriate source.Incorporating therapy into my appointments. I went to a very biological program and I find myself routinely running out of things to talk about/address 15 minutes into the appointment.
Threatening to report you to the state board, DEA, your hospital board, and spam your business with 1 star reviews will make you really glad to have had good training on handling this in residency...Imagining the challenges of boundary setting isn't very difficult. You have a patient yelling (often literally) for some sort of controlled substance. You know that explaining why you aren't going to prescribe it, for the 4th time, is going to take another 20 minutes you don't have. Just prescribing it will get the person out of your office immediately. Choose the right...
In the span of residency I've already been spammed with 1 star review by a patient who was angry I couldn't guarantee admission to a specific hospital from the ER. Another completely psychotic patient complained to the medical board about me for a completely psychotic reason.Threatening to report you to the state board, DEA, your hospital board, and spam your business with 1 star reviews will make you really glad to have had good training on handling this in residency...
Your best bet is to screen these patients out so they don’t make it through the doorIn the span of residency I've already been spammed with 1 star review by a patient who was angry I couldn't guarantee admission to a specific hospital from the ER. Another completely psychotic patient complained to the medical board about me for a completely psychotic reason.
Any tips for handling patients (and their demands/threats) these patients when they come into your outpatient practice?
Yes.In the span of residency I've already been spammed with 1 star review by a patient who was angry I couldn't guarantee admission to a specific hospital from the ER. Another completely psychotic patient complained to the medical board about me for a completely psychotic reason.
Any tips for handling patients (and their demands/threats) these patients when they come into your outpatient practice?
Please forgive my ignorance, still learning the liability side of practice as a pgy4, but, what's the best way to document when I see a patient for an initial evaluation but decide not to take them on as a patient full time? I recogize a doctor patient relationship has been formed, so am I simply required to give them other resources to potential doctors at that point if I don't wish to take them on?Your best bet is to screen these patients out so they don’t make it through the door
If they are asking for something inappropriate you document your recommendation. It’s up to them to follow it or seek care elsewhere.Please forgive my ignorance, still learning the liability side of practice as a pgy4, but, what's the best way to document when I see a patient for an initial evaluation but decide not to take them on as a patient full time? I recogize a doctor patient relationship has been formed, so am I simply required to give them other resources to potential doctors at that point if I don't wish to take them on?
If they are asking for something inappropriate you document your recommendation. It’s up to them to follow it or seek care elsewhere.
I write in my note literature does not support use of Adderall at doses above blah blah or concomitant benzo and opioid therapy. Offered patient alternative or whatever, patient declined
That you saw them for a consultation and the two of you mutually agreed to not continue treatment together. Most people won't want to schedule a follow-up once it's clear that you're not budging on an issue like that. They might try to convince you when they think they can succeed in changing your mind. Sometimes it takes being a little extra firm.Right, but what if you no longer want to see the patient? How do you document and handle this?
Sure, that makes sense. But what if it's not due to the fact the patient wants stimulants. What if it's due to the fact the patient is a borderline train wreck of which you want nothing to do with? How do you handle that with the patient in a way that doesn't send them in to a tizzy?That you saw them for a consultation and the two of you mutually agreed to not continue treatment together. Most people won't want to schedule a follow-up once it's clear that you're not budging on an issue like that. They might try to convince you when they think they can succeed in changing your mind. Sometimes it takes being a little extra firm.
You recommend a comprehensive treatment plan and tell them that your clinic unfortunately is not equipped to provide that. They will want the level of care you recommend and when they hear who might be able to offer it they will seek that clinic out, as long as you're not recommending something they explicitly told you they don't want.Sure, that makes sense. But what if it's not due to the fact the patient wants stimulants. What if it's due to the fact the patient is a borderline train wreck of which you want nothing to do with? How do you handle that with the patient in a way that doesn't send them in to a tizzy?
What has been the most difficult thing for you to learn/get comfortable doing?
Agree. Biggest reason why is cause as healers we should be compassionate and open-minded. These two characteristics are the exact thing that a malingerer is going to try to exploit.Boundary setting and not admitting every chronically suicidal or homicidal patient seems to be the most challenging for a lot of people.
Appreciate the input. Would you avoid starting them on any medications and just make med recs?You recommend a comprehensive treatment plan and tell them that your clinic unfortunately is not equipped to provide that. They will want the level of care you recommend and when they hear who might be able to offer it they will seek that clinic out, as long as you're not recommending something they explicitly told you they don't want.
If they're a borderline trainwreck, then yes, I wouldn't be starting any new medications in general (since they're undoubtedly taking some already). In general I don't recommend starting meds in the outpatient setting that you wouldn't be following. Starting a treatment makes it seem like you're starting a doctor-patient relationship. You can give some psychoeducation and document that you discussed RBA of certain medications, psychotherapies, and levels of care, and that after shared clinical decision-making the plan was for them to seek care elsewhere. Ideally you say the places you recommended or what their plan is to seek out that care. You could, if you want, say more, but I wouldn't say more than that.Appreciate the input. Would you avoid starting them on any medications and just make med recs?
Agreed completely. What's especially frustrating is that the academic curriculum frequently espouses the EXACT opposite view, that everyone with any risk factors NEEDS an admission if they come into an ER. Residents who try to learn the subtlety are frequently accused of letting their countertransference guide them to harming a patient or committing flagrant malpractice or being incompetent.Agree. Biggest reason why is cause as healers we should be compassionate and open-minded. These two characteristics are the exact thing that a malingerer is going to try to exploit.
Hard to be compassionate and open-minded while balancing it out with telling people to leave the hospital. It's a very difficult balancing act, not of a few grams on each side of the scale but hundreds of pounds.
Add to this, the academic curriculum really doesn't include this difficult learning curve in any lectures which I think is ridiculous. It's obvious this is an ongoing problem and has been for several decades. Why isn't this issue tackled in research? E.g. percentages of patients malingering who come to the ER with psych complaints. I already know the answer but it's not acceptable. There's no drug money research profits, this type of research is hard to do, and add to this forensic level training on this is not done in general residency.
Which only points to the conclusion that psychiatry academic training wants hospital psychiatrists to do something where they're not trained to do it per the academic curriculum. Yeah with clinical experience you could learn it but it's not part of the structured on-paper curriculum.
It's not just malingerers. It's also cluster B patients who really are suffering but inpatient treatment isn't the answer. Also chronically suicidal patients where they don't commit suicide.
It's not just malingerers. It's also cluster B patients who really are suffering but inpatient treatment isn't the answer. Also chronically suicidal patients where they don't commit suicide.
Now, now, no need to malign the good name of Hollywood Upstairs Medical College.PCP dumping chronic benzo use patients on me to taper off and remembering that the patient is often the victim in this scenario because someone who can't read or got their degree from university of phoenix medical school decided xanax high dose TID was 1st line for GAD
Agreed completely. What's especially frustrating is that the academic curriculum frequently espouses the EXACT opposite view, that everyone with any risk factors NEEDS an admission if they come into an ER. Residents who try to learn the subtlety are frequently accused of letting their countertransference guide them to harming a patient or committing flagrant malpractice or being incompetent.
Agree. Biggest reason why is cause as healers we should be compassionate and open-minded. These two characteristics are the exact thing that a malingerer is going to try to exploit.
Hard to be compassionate and open-minded while balancing it out with telling people to leave the hospital. It's a very difficult balancing act, not of a few grams on each side of the scale but hundreds of pounds.
Add to this, the academic curriculum really doesn't include this difficult learning curve in any lectures which I think is ridiculous. It's obvious this is an ongoing problem and has been for several decades. Why isn't this issue tackled in research? E.g. percentages of patients malingering who come to the ER with psych complaints. I already know the answer but it's not acceptable. There's no drug money research profits, this type of research is hard to do, and add to this forensic level training on this is not done in general residency.
Which only points to the conclusion that psychiatry academic training wants hospital psychiatrists to do something where they're not trained to do it per the academic curriculum. Yeah with clinical experience you could learn it but it's not part of the structured on-paper curriculum.
It's not just malingerers. It's also cluster B patients who really are suffering but inpatient treatment isn't the answer. Also chronically suicidal patients where they don't commit suicide.
I was actually surprised by this. Our program does a lot of teaching around this topic. There’s also a bunch of excellent clinical papers published in this area. I think one was called “the therapeutic discharge” or something like that, particularly aimed at training residents to discharge well. I had thought most academic programs would not be discharge-averse.Agreed completely. What's especially frustrating is that the academic curriculum frequently espouses the EXACT opposite view, that everyone with any risk factors NEEDS an admission if they come into an ER. Residents who try to learn the subtlety are frequently accused of letting their countertransference guide them to harming a patient or committing flagrant malpractice or being incompetent.
My academic curriculum certainly didn't, we were trained in careful assessment for appropriate admission or referral since the vast majority of people presenting with SI will have risk factors but we simply don't have even a fraction of the beds needed to treat them all as inpatients and the majority of them can be managed using outpatient and community resourcesAgreed completely. What's especially frustrating is that the academic curriculum frequently espouses the EXACT opposite view, that everyone with any risk factors NEEDS an admission if they come into an ER. Residents who try to learn the subtlety are frequently accused of letting their countertransference guide them to harming a patient or committing flagrant malpractice or being incompetent.
Agreed about the emphasis part, but if you do not develop solid psychotherapy skills you might find that some of the other problems that the psychiatrists are talking about in this thread will be much more difficult to deal with. It can literally be the difference between making lots of money and enjoying your job or being punched in the face and threatened with lawsuits. I would bet there are quite a few psychiatrists that would say that the biological part is the easier part of the job.Is this necessarily a bad thing though? For some psychiatrists, their focus and expertise is on biologics. For therapy they refer out to the appropriate source.
Yes it absolutely is a bad thing to be a mindless psychiatrist. And often those psychiatrist who claim to be more biological have a shockingly bad understanding of neuroscience as well. When all you have is a hammer everything looks like a nail. Most psychiatrists these days are not doing psychotherapy proper, but to be practicing at your very best ("top of your license") you have to be able to formulate patients from different perspectives, recognize the role of psychosocial factors in the presentation, identify transference, countertransference, resistance, and and utilize common factors (e.g. therapeutic alliance, empathy, positive regard, genuineness, and expectancy) to create a healing environment. The data is quite clear from clinical trials and prospective community studies that patients do better with more empathic physicians who create a better therapeutic environment. Put another way, the meds "work better" when you have a strong therapeutic relationship with your doctor. The converse is also true, if you are not empathic and not effective at creating therapeutic alliances your patients may do worse than no treatment at all.Is this necessarily a bad thing though? For some psychiatrists, their focus and expertise is on biologics. For therapy they refer out to the appropriate source.
What has been the most difficult thing for you to learn/get comfortable doing?
Imagining the challenges of boundary setting isn't very difficult. You have a patient yelling (often literally) for some sort of controlled substance. You know that explaining why you aren't going to prescribe it, for the 4th time, is going to take another 20 minutes you don't have. Just prescribing it will get the person out of your office immediately. Choose the right...
Is this necessarily a bad thing though? For some psychiatrists, their focus and expertise is on biologics. For therapy they refer out to the appropriate source.
Have to agree that this makes little sense, and that I don't really understand what this means?Is this necessarily a bad thing though? For some psychiatrists, their focus and expertise is on biologics. For therapy they refer out to the appropriate source.
My kid acts up [but I'm a terrible parent]
Dr: Abilify, Risperdal, and Clonidine. BTW have they tried Daytrana?
I like how you described this, and that first portion is exactly why I feel 90833 add-ons are justified for 30 min visits. Those of us who spend that time (or more on occasion) are much more likely to have a better therapeutic relationship with our patients and consequently, better outcomes.I agree that the ideal treatment encompasses therapeutic and lifestyle approach but it is not an easy thing to encompass in a 20, or even 30 minute f/u. And doing it on a sustained basis such as weekly or biweekly is not common/sustainable with most outpatient jobs. I even explain that to the patient "zoloft is not a fix for your stressors, it is a small part of the equation" and focus on brief bits of therapy each visit, depending on the patient. To summarize, in outpatient psychiatry were often limited by time constraints.
Have to agree that this makes little sense, and that I don't really understand what this means?
"Focus on biologics" is for bench scientists....or at least someone who is NOT practicing healthcare services on humans in front of them.
I mean, that's not really 'clinical psychiatry" at all. Is it? That would be a "psychopharmacologist"..... which is fine for a research setting/study, or some limited medication consultations if one has that level of demonstrated expertise. But for general psychiatry practice (inpatient or outpatient) I don't think that's what we want/aspire to?
I wish that were the case and yet somehow I consistently see this not being so. I'd say roughly 50%-75% (depending on the setting) of patients I see managed by other board certified psychiatrists have done a good job with medications (which of course leaves 25-50% who have not). Particularly when you get out into the 2nd/3rd line treatments where things are still quite well known but would require someone to at least pretend to keep up to date on the latest literature. I recently saw a patient that had 6 trials of medication and thought wow, that's basically exactly what I would have done, and that happens quite rarely (this patient did come from an academic psychiatric clinic).i've got at least one of these a day
Also yes the "psychopharmacologist" thing is hilarious. Bro there's like 10 actual truly different med classes in psychiatry, I would expect everybody who graduates from a psychiatry residency to be an "expert" in the medications you need to use for your field.
It's like going to a pulmonologist who says they're an "expert in respiratory pharmacology"
If this is the case you have at least 1 astute psychiatrist, likely a few, who were able to go above and beyond and modify the teaching curriculum to compensate for the lack of education in the national curriculum.Mistafab:I was actually surprised by this. Our program does a lot of teaching around this topic. There’s also a bunch of excellent clinical papers published in this area. I think one was called “the therapeutic discharge” or something like that, particularly aimed at training residents to discharge well. I had thought most academic programs would not be discharge-averse.
I guess when I’m thinking the knowledge of psychotherapy skills would be an important differentiator, I was assuming solid medical and pharmacological knowledge for psychiatrists as a baseline. Kind of like the mistake of thinking that psychologists would have a solid base research that would steer them toward evidence based therapy only to find out that some of my colleagues wouldn’t know an exposure protocol from a DBT worksheet and think EMDR is the answer.I wish that were the case and yet somehow I consistently see this not being so. I'd say roughly 50%-75% (depending on the setting) of patients I see managed by other board certified psychiatrists have done a good job with medications (which of course leaves 25-50% who have not). Particularly when you get out into the 2nd/3rd line treatments where things are still quite well known but would require someone to at least pretend to keep up to date on the latest literature. I recently saw a patient that had 6 trials of medication and thought wow, that's basically exactly what I would have done, and that happens quite rarely (this patient did come from an academic psychiatric clinic).
Everyone keeps talking like doing a good job with medication is trivial, and maybe it is for the types of doctors who spend their free time between patients on SDN (points at self), but that does not mean every patient seeing a psychiatrist is done justice by their pharmacologic treatment. There is this consistent drum beat in this thread about psychiatrists only showing their differential value based on their therapy acumen or diagnostic skills, but I will push back and say I consistently find value-add spots for myself as someone takes pride in psychopharmacology.
"Little" things like knowing how to treat side effects (atropine drops, Viagra, beta blockers etc.), when to use lithium/clozapine and how to walk someone through this, appropriate Remeron or TCA usage, getting light box therapy setup, catching hyponatremia from Trileptal/carbamazepine, and many more can all make a huge difference in any one patient's life. I bang the drum as hard as anyone from evidenced based psychotherapy and see it change lives all the time, but that does not mean psychiatric medication management is doable at full value by an FMNP or someone who focused entirely on psychoanalytics and has never read a RCT in their career.
I wish that were the case and yet somehow I consistently see this not being so. I'd say roughly 50%-75% (depending on the setting) of patients I see managed by other board certified psychiatrists have done a good job with medications (which of course leaves 25-50% who have not). Particularly when you get out into the 2nd/3rd line treatments where things are still quite well known but would require someone to at least pretend to keep up to date on the latest literature. I recently saw a patient that had 6 trials of medication and thought wow, that's basically exactly what I would have done, and that happens quite rarely (this patient did come from an academic psychiatric clinic).
Everyone keeps talking like doing a good job with medication is trivial, and maybe it is for the types of doctors who spend their free time between patients on SDN (points at self), but that does not mean every patient seeing a psychiatrist is done justice by their pharmacologic treatment. There is this consistent drum beat in this thread about psychiatrists only showing their differential value based on their therapy acumen or diagnostic skills, but I will push back and say I consistently find value-add spots for myself as someone takes pride in psychopharmacology.
"Little" things like knowing how to treat side effects (atropine drops, Viagra, beta blockers etc.), when to use lithium/clozapine and how to walk someone through this, appropriate Remeron or TCA usage, getting light box therapy setup, catching hyponatremia from Trileptal/carbamazepine, and many more can all make a huge difference in any one patient's life. I bang the drum as hard as anyone from evidenced based psychotherapy and see it change lives all the time, but that does not mean psychiatric medication management is doable at full value by an FMNP or someone who focused entirely on psychoanalytics and has never read a RCT in their career.
"Little" things like knowing how to treat side effects (atropine drops, Viagra, beta blockers etc.), when to use lithium/clozapine and how to walk someone through this, appropriate Remeron or TCA usage, getting light box therapy setup, catching hyponatremia from Trileptal/carbamazepine, and many more can all make a huge difference in any one patient's life. I bang the drum as hard as anyone from evidenced based psychotherapy and see it change lives all the time, but that does not mean psychiatric medication management is doable at full value by an FMNP or someone who focused entirely on psychoanalytics and has never read a RCT in their career.
It's a low bar for us talking here on SDN maybe. I went to an above average university training program and even in my class I would say about 75% did a good job with this "low bar". Don't get me started on some of the other folks I've interacted with who clearly went into psychiatry because it was all they could get into decades ago and their knowledge of psychopharmacology. This is not even withstanding the amount of psychiatric medication managed by PCPs and NPs.I get what you're saying, but that's a low bar honestly, though there are definitely too many in our field who do worse.
But I do think one should and can give deeper thought into pharmacology, as in, think a bit more about side effect profile, drug/drug interactions, patient-specific circumstances and stay up to date on the latest evidence. Also worth keeping in mind as someone mentioned that some tend to go overboard with this, and make all sort of claims and clinical decisions based on unsupported hypotheticals around neuroscience and physiology, sort of in the "Stahl" mode.
Still, the 'soft' skill sets around communication are much more challenging and more high yield imo, and also set apart the better psychiatrists from the rest. I'm hesitant to call them "therapy skills" because they can be equally powerful in a "medication management" appointment or even an ER evaluation. (though therapy training can do wonders to improve them).
You know, I had heard this idea that the pharmacology is banal and simple from a few of my program’s attendings. The ones who made these remarks were obviously trained well before me. I never thought the pharmacology was simple, and I thought mastering it involved progressive improvements in knowledge and skill, like anything else.I wish that were the case and yet somehow I consistently see this not being so. I'd say roughly 50%-75% (depending on the setting) of patients I see managed by other board certified psychiatrists have done a good job with medications (which of course leaves 25-50% who have not). Particularly when you get out into the 2nd/3rd line treatments where things are still quite well known but would require someone to at least pretend to keep up to date on the latest literature. I recently saw a patient that had 6 trials of medication and thought wow, that's basically exactly what I would have done, and that happens quite rarely (this patient did come from an academic psychiatric clinic).
Everyone keeps talking like doing a good job with medication is trivial, and maybe it is for the types of doctors who spend their free time between patients on SDN (points at self), but that does not mean every patient seeing a psychiatrist is done justice by their pharmacologic treatment. There is this consistent drum beat in this thread about psychiatrists only showing their differential value based on their therapy acumen or diagnostic skills, but I will push back and say I consistently find value-add spots for myself as someone takes pride in psychopharmacology.
"Little" things like knowing how to treat side effects (atropine drops, Viagra, beta blockers etc.), when to use lithium/clozapine and how to walk someone through this, appropriate Remeron or TCA usage, getting light box therapy setup, catching hyponatremia from Trileptal/carbamazepine, and many more can all make a huge difference in any one patient's life. I bang the drum as hard as anyone from evidenced based psychotherapy and see it change lives all the time, but that does not mean psychiatric medication management is doable at full value by an FMNP or someone who focused entirely on psychoanalytics and has never read a RCT in their career.
You know, I had heard this idea that the pharmacology is banal and simple from a few of my program’s attendings. The ones who made these remarks were obviously trained well before me. I never thought the pharmacology was simple, and I thought mastering it involved progressive improvements in knowledge and skill, like anything else.
So I have this theory that the dismissive “pharmacology is easy” comments are coming from people who trained in an era that really valued the dynamic/analytic side of our profession, and patients getting better with “just pills” threatens the primacy of that worldview, and thus they mount these defensive responses.
Just my armchair analysis anyway.