Psychiatry Oral Boards: The End of an Era

Psychiatry Oral Boards will soon be a thing of the past. This development will no doubt cause considerable consternation for those who make a living by providing week-long practice sessions, but will be welcome news to psychiatry residents who suffer from performance anxiety! I have mixed feelings about the news myself. I confess to the feelings that anyone has when there is a sense that the journey has become a bit lighter for those following in one’s footsteps. I remember similar feelings years ago when resident work hours were reduced to the limit of ‘only’ 80 hours per week! After all, misery loves company.

But I found that I was wrong about those feelings about resident work hours. I teach medical students now, and I realize that current grads have it as tough as I ever did. I had to remember the name of one or two beta-blockers, I needed only a general understanding that something called ‘cytochromes’ degrade medications at the liver, and there were no classes that required an understanding of the human genome project’! I would guess that psychiatry residents will face new challenges that are not anticipated now.

I do hope that there is a significant hurdle placed at some point in the process– for reasons that current psychiatry residents may not yet fully appreciate. Right now, Psychiatry Board Certification means something. Those residents who work hard to truly understand the most difficult aspects of the art and science of psychiatry should have for their work to ‘count.’ As a solo practice psychiatrist who does not belong to insurance panels, I must rely on providing a good product– i.e. being a good psychiatrist– to keep my practice going. I see patients who have become fed up with what they describe as ‘psychiatry mills’ where they are hurried through appointments, are prescribed medications for reasons they do not understand, and who never feel a sense of support from the psychiatrist who has been assigned to provide their care. I am always surprised when I ask a patient the name of his/her previous psychiatrist and the patient cannot remember the name! The sad thing is that such an occurrence is not unusual. I encourage residents and others studying to be mental health practitioners to continue to demand a rigorous curriculum, as that is what will allow psychiatry to remain a respected field of medicine. I also encourage individual practitioners to strive to set themselves apart by being a psychiatrist who is truly valued by your patients– not someone who just happens to be on all of the panels.

The changes in the exams mean that I will have to change the way that I market my recordings to some extent– for example the keywords ‘oral psychiatry boards’ will no longer be all that useful! But the good news is that the recordings that I have prepared are as valuable for the new standards as they were before. I now recommend that people consider the recordings that provide an understanding of the DSM criteria for psychiatric disorders for use earlier in their residencies; I used to recommend the recordings for the oral boards, but now the plan is to assess competence at earlier points in the residency. The recordings for the diagnostic criteria are useful to lay the bedrock for your psychiatric education; I recommend listening to the recordings during your commute many times over (they are over 3 hours long, so it will take some time!) so that you have an automatic understanding of where different illnesses are categorized and the criteria required to make each diagnosis. Once a person has a good understanding of the diagnostic criteria he/she is miles ahead in the learning process, able to focus on the details, the studies of treatment paradigms, the theories of disease… or just to more quickly finish the write-up and for once get home at a respectable hour!

Good luck, everyone–

JJ

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New Recordings, New Specials

I have added new recordings for Psychiatry Board Preparation; I just added a ‘questions and answers in neurology’ recording. As always, the recordings are designed for efficiency; I take topics that have appeared on written Psychiatry Board Exams and ask the questions, pause, and then provide the answer. The goal is not so much to help you memorize specific glycogen storage diseases as it is to help you get a sense for what areas of neurology you have covered, and what areas you need a bit more focus on. The recordings are almost two hours long– about the amount of neurology that most psychiatry residents can tolerate before needing to walk away for awhile!

I have also posted a ‘combo special’, with significant discounting if you purchase several of the recordings together. As always, I appreciate your patronage, and I appreciate the nice comments that some of you have written back to me about the tapes. I recommend that you continue to use them during you morning and afternoon drives; using that little bit of extra time by popping the CD into the car CD player (or using an I-pod) will put you ahead of the pack, come exam time.

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Questions and Answers about Psychiatry

In earlier posts I said that I would produce a set of tapes for mood disorders, otherwise similar to the psychopharmacology recordings.  As I gathered material for the recordings though I realized that the yield on that type of project would be quite low.  My primary goal in producing these recordings was to come up with something different, and improved, over what is already out there.  I purchased recordings before taking the boards a few years ago, and found that after paying $800 for a well-known set of tapes, about 75% of the material was obvious (the treatment strategies for depression start with SSRIs, then SNRIs, and eventually ECT, for example… ), about 10% was outdated, 5% was incorrect, and only the remainder consisted of things that I needed to review.  And so I felt that listening to a couple hours of recordings, hoping to glean a few minutes of new material, was a waste of my time. I recognized the need for something better.

The other problem I found was that for a vast category of information like ‘mood disorders’, the listener becomes lulled into disinterest by all of the well-known information, and then misses the occasional nugget of new info that comes along.

I realized that a better approach would be to take PRITE-like questions and put them into recordings.  The part one or part two candidate would be more engaged, listening to the question and then pausing the tape and coming up with the answer– or NOT coming up with the answer– and then hearing the answer and in some cases some explanation.  Wouldn’t that be a better way to learn?  So that is what I am working on, and I’m sorry it has taken so long.  I live in Wisconsin, and the winter really just bums me out…  But I’m getting there.

A quick note– I have received a couple e-mails asking me if these recordings are ‘current’…  Yes they are– I am making the current batch in 2009 and the others were made a few months ago.

Please come back soon, and maybe I’ll have the new recordings ready.

JJ

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Order Page for Psychiatry Board Review Recordings

New Ordering Page for Recordings

This new order page is more user friendly than the links on the right side of the page.  Watch for new recordings coming soon.

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