PGY III COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH ROTATION

FOR DARTMOUTH MEDICAL SCHOOL

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY TRAINING PROGRAM

(6/00)

 

West Central Behavioral Health

2 Whipple Place, Suite 202

Lebanon, NH 03766

 

The Mental Health Center of Greater Manchester

1555 Elm St,

Manchester, NH  03101

 

A.                ROTATION GOALS

                To provide the PGY III psychiatry residents in training with the clinical experience and the opportunity to acquire knowledge in the role of the psychiatrist in the provision of mental health services in a community setting.

 

B.                ROTATION SITES

                West Central Behavioral Health

                                Recovery Center, Lebanon, 85 Mechanic Street, Lebanon

                                Recovery Center, Claremont, 140 North Street Claremont

                The Mental Health Center of Greater Manchester,

                                Community Support Services 1555 Elm St, Manchester, NH 

 

 

C.                ROTATION OBJECTIVES

 

a.        To train residents in a recovery-oriented community approach to the care of adults with severe mental illness.

 

b.       To expose psychiatry residents to a model of community psychiatry including the necessary close interaction and sharing of responsibilities between MD and other professional care providers.

 

c.        To acquire knowledge and clinical experiences in the diagnostic evaluation and ongoing follow-up of mental health outpatients in the community setting.

 

d.       To provide educational and clinical experience in the care of persistently mentally ill adults in community settings.

 

e.        To provide exposure to the financial aspects of providing psychiatric treatment in a private nonprofit practice model (including 3rd party payers, Medicaid, State benefit screening evaluation, etc.)

 

f.         To expose residents to the role of the psychiatrist in the assessment and treatment of patients with co-occurring psychiatric illness and developmental disabilities.

 

g.       To learn appropriate ways to alter therapeutic techniques to fit individual situations (e.g. when are home visits appropriate, when should we work to increase or decrease client reliance on caregivers).

 

h.       To learn to anticipate difficulties in treatment adherence and learn techniques to minimize these difficulties.

 

i.         To learn to recognize and manage substance abuse difficulties in adults with coexisting mental illness.

 

j.         To learn to efficiently and effectively document clinical activity.

 

k.        To learn community methods of crisis intervention and hospital diversion.

 

l.         To acquire experience in working collaboratively with families.

 

m.      To learn how to enhance and support consumer self help initiatives.

 

n.       To learn how to work effectively with other community resources and systems of care.

 

o.       To gain experience addressing treatment and rehabilitation issues simultaneously.

 

p.       To understand the importance of events in the lives of people with persistent mental illness.

 

q.       To learn ways of supporting competitive employment.

 

D.            LEVEL OF TRAINING

                PGY III residents take this rotation one day per week for the entire third year of training.  Special arrangements can be made to increase the days/week.

 

E.                DESCRIPTION OF STAFFING

                West Central and HCS-GM staff include psychiatrists, PhD psychologists, program directors, case managers/social workers/therapists, nursing staff and emergency service workers.

 

F.                EDUCATIONAL METHOD

                Combined model of direct and indirect clinical exposure combined with supervision and feedback.  Contact with non-psychiatric staff will be encouraged.

 

G.                BREADTH OF CLINICAL POPULATION

                Adult (18 and older) outpatients with mental illness.  This population includes adults with severe and persistent mental illness, developmental disabilities and substance abuse disorders and elderly individuals.  Residents choosing to spend more than one day/week at a site may perform Child and Adolescent and/or substance abuse requirements at the mental health centers.

 

H.                AVERAGE CASELOADS AND DESCRIPTION

                Residents are expected to have an average of five hours of direct clinical care per day.  Clinical expectation is based on what will provide residents with good, engaged clinical experience.

 

                During the first month they will do no more than one intake evaluation each day.  After that they will do no more than two intake evaluations per day.

 

I.                SUPERVISION

                At least one hour of 'formal' supervision by a staff psychiatrist with additional open-ended consultation/support throughout the day as needed.

 

                The supervisors responsibility includes a.) providing clinical supervision, b.) being available for clinical questions and back up throughout the day, c.) monitoring the residents experience to ensure that the resident is engaged productively in the clinic and experiencing an excellent training experience, d.) reviewing record keeping and Service/Activity logs and e.) generally helping resident with orientation and problem solving.

 

J.                COURSE EXPECTATIONS

               

a.        Residents are expected to participate in the clinic from 8 am to 5 pm at WCBH and 8:30 to 5 PM at MHC-GM on their CMHC day without returning to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center for conferences, supervision or patients.

 

b.       Residents are expected to miss no more than five CMHC days during the year (excluding holidays) for vacations, bad weather, or conferences.  Residents are asked to inform their supervisor at least one month in advance if they will be on vacation so that emergency coverage can be arranged.  For unexpected absences or delays, residents are expected to notify their site and supervisor ASAP so appointments can be rescheduled.  Residents working more than one day/week are expected to miss no more that five times the days/week of rotation CMHC days per year up to Dartmouth’s maximum of 15 vacation days and five conference days/year (ie. 2 d/wk rotation = 10 days off/year).

 

c.        Residents are expected to use their clinic time to: 1) work directly with service consumers; 2) be available to clinic staff for education, consultation, collaboration; and 3) receive supervision. 

 

d.       Residents are expected to prepare and present a minimum of two trainings for the non-medical clinical staff on medications or other topics of interest.

 

e.        If on a given day there is unstructured time, the expectation is that residents will seek out clinical learning opportunities through the case managers, psychiatrists or other clinicians.  If there is still time then read psychiatric literature directly related to community mental health.

 

f.         Residents are expected to participate in the emergency coverage of their clinic on their clinic day as outlined by their supervisor.

 

g.       Residents are expected to read the following book, Resident's Guide to Treatment of People with Chronic Mental Illness formulated by the Committee on Psychiatry and the Community; American Psychiatric Press, Inc.; Washington, DC., London, England, 1993, during the first three months of rotation.

 

h.       Residents are expected to participate in the PGY III community psychiatry didactics in the winter of 1999-2000.  The expectation is that they will attend the seminar punctually or call in advance if they will be late or absent.

 

i.         By agreement with DHPA, CMHC patients may not be seen in DHPA offices at the medical center.  They are to be seen at WCBH sites, in the community, on emergency service, in the hospital or in the partial hospitalization program.

 

j.         It is the supervising staffs' expectation that residents will call them or beep them if they have any significant clinical concern or question in the course of their work.  If they are unable to track down their supervisor they are encouraged to call or beep any psychiatrist at West Central or Manchester.

 

k.        Evaluation of residents will be provided by supervising faculty psychiatrist who will include feedback from case managers, vocational specialists, nurses, office staff and others.

 

l.         Although direct care of consumers is required only on the day residents are present in the clinic they will be expected to accept phone calls from clinical staff who are working on the site to provide them with appropriate information to handle crisis situations on non clinic days.  Residents are expected to handle calls from DHPA patients/staff in a way that does not interfere with the flow of clinical care during their CMHC days.

 

K.            OTHER INFORMATION

                Residents will meet with other administrative and financial staff to learn about some of the "mechanical" aspects of community mental health.

 

                Should a resident experience problems with his/her community rotation he/she should first bring it up to his/her immediate supervisor.  If not resolved Will Torrey will be the contact person at West Central and Doug Noordsy will be the contact person at The Mental Health Center of Greater Manchester.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                               

                William Torrey, MD

                Medical Director, West Central Services

                Coordinator of Community Training, Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School

                Office:  448-0126

                Home:  643-1479

 

 

 

                                                                                               

                Douglas Noordsy, MD

                The Mental Health Center of Greater Manchester

                Associate Director of Training and Education, Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School

                Office:  668-4111 X 5257

                Home:  547-6818

 

 

 

COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRY SEMINAR

PGY III DIDACTICS

 

William C. Torrey, MD

 

DATE              TOPIC                                                             INSTRUCTORS

 

2-3-00             A Recovery-Oriented Approach                     Will Torrey, MD

                        to Community Mental                  

                        Health Services for Adults with

                        Severe and Persistent Mental

                        Illnesses

 

2-10-00           The Importance of Work                             Will Torrey, MD

 

2-17-00           The Skills Psychiatrists Need to                     Kim Mueser, PhD

                        Effectively Serve Family Members

 

2-24-00           Issues in Medication Adherence              Will Torrey, MD

 

3-2-00             Consumer Perspectives                             George Ross and consumers

                                                                                               

3-9-00             Community Psychiatry as a                                      Will Torrey, MD and guests

                        Career of First Choice.                                    

 

3-16-00           Family Perspectives on Care                            George Ross and

                                                                                                local families

 

3-23-00           A Rehabilitation Approach to                                 Diane Roston, MD

                        Adults Disabled by PTSD and                         Wendy Barros, MD

                        Borderline Personality Disorder                 Annmarie McDonagh-                                                                                                                  Coyle, MD

                                                                                                           

3-30-00            Treatment Approaches to Adults               Doug Noordsy, MD

                        with Severe Mental Disorders and

                        Substance Abuse Disorders