Training
in Public Psychiatry
FOLLOWING SEVERAL
YEARS of intensive planning, the Community Psychiatry Training
Program at OHSU was started in 1973. In 1987, the name of this program
was changed to the Public Psychiatry Training Program (PPTP) to
emphasize the training experience in state institutions as well
as community mental health programs. Residents are required to spend
three months at Portland Oregon State Hospital during PGY-2 and
six months half-time on community psychiatry during PGY-3. Electives
are also available in PGY-4 for more specialized training in public
psychiatry.
During PGY-2, two residents
at a time are assigned to Portland Oregon State Hospital for their
three-month rotation. They are assigned to a special teaching unit
at POSH which helps them learn to function in a state hospital and
in an enriched educational atmosphere. They are supervised at POSH
by on-site faculty, as well as by faculty from OHSU who travel there
regularly. On-site seminars on institutional psychiatry and the
care of the chronic patient also take place during this rotation.
The PPTP has developed
ongoing training agreements with most of the county mental health
programs in Oregon. Residents may choose from among these the one
that best fits their needs. During their six-month, half-time community
rotation during PGY-3, two days per week are spent at the community
placement and a half day per week at OHSU for seminars and additional
supervision. All residents are required to negotiate a specific
contract with the agency in which they are placed. These contract
negotiations take place during the first few weeks of community
placement and are put in writing. They are designed to meet the
educational objectives of the program, as well as the needs of the
resident and the community agency. Considerable flexibility is possible
in the specific details of the contract, but residents are allowed
to spend no more than 50 percent of their time in direct clinical
services. They are also required to spend two hours per week working
with children, adolescents, or their families; two hours per week
with the chronically mentally ill; two hours per month in administrative
activities; and to have an experience in forensic psychiatry as
a mental health investigator for involuntary commitment or a mental
health examiner for the court.
The clinical experience
in community psychiatry is supported by a weekly multi-disciplinary
seminar on public psychiatry, as well as by clinical and administrative
supervision on-site in the community and back in the Department
of Psychiatry at OHSU.
Special electives in
public psychiatry are also offered in PGY-4. These include additional
community or state hospital rotations, as well as geriatric, forensic,
transcultural, community support, child and adolescent, administrative,
and research experiences. All electives are closely supervised and
offer a range of clinical and didactic experiences.
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