I am an IMG( South-Eastern Europe, step 1 261/99, YOG 2015)...During the course of my medical studies, I also obtained a degree in psychology. Now, I do not know if I should take step 2 and try to match into psychiatry residency( with all the obstacles facing an IMG without connections), or I should embark on psychology career path and pursue a PhD.
Reading books of Freud, Adler, Erikson, Jung, Beck... and my parallel interest in philosophy and sociology, is what aroused my interest in psychiatry/ psychology when I was a teen, and I do not like materialist direction of modern psychiatry, I find its new face unrecognizable and sometimes ethically problematic. Having said that, I do not really have an interest in psycho-pharmacology( although I do recognize that in some cases medications are necessary but I view them as last resort). I am interested in academic career, but it appears to me that all the major fronts in psychiatric research are in the field of psycho-pharmacology. Of course, there are some residency programs which offer training in psychotherapy( such as Pennsylvania, are they IMG friendly?), but these are in minority. I am not interested in lucrative aspects.
On the other hand, choosing psychology would mean that my 6-years of medical studies will go down the drain. Also, as a psychologist, I would not want " shared jurisdiction" over a patient with a psychiatrist.
Reading books of Freud, Adler, Erikson, Jung, Beck... and my parallel interest in philosophy and sociology, is what aroused my interest in psychiatry/ psychology when I was a teen, and I do not like materialist direction of modern psychiatry, I find its new face unrecognizable and sometimes ethically problematic. Having said that, I do not really have an interest in psycho-pharmacology( although I do recognize that in some cases medications are necessary but I view them as last resort). I am interested in academic career, but it appears to me that all the major fronts in psychiatric research are in the field of psycho-pharmacology. Of course, there are some residency programs which offer training in psychotherapy( such as Pennsylvania, are they IMG friendly?), but these are in minority. I am not interested in lucrative aspects.
On the other hand, choosing psychology would mean that my 6-years of medical studies will go down the drain. Also, as a psychologist, I would not want " shared jurisdiction" over a patient with a psychiatrist.