For years, I supervised residents. They would come in each week and tell me about a patient in crisis. If no one was in crisis, they’d say all their patients were fine and they didn’t know what to talk about, even though I had told them to pick a patient they saw weekly and either audio-record the sessions or take detailed process notes. Psychotherapy, I would say, is a process that occurs over time; it’s not always about the latest crisis. I once inspired a resident to record some sessions, but they were difficult to hear, and another resident took process notes, but those two were the exceptions.
I thought it was me, so I asked some other psychiatrists for suggestions. A psychoanalyst told me the residents were anxious about having their work scrutinized and I should address the anxiety. It seemed like a great idea, but it didn’t work. Another colleague suggested I tell them if they didn’t bring process notes, I would tell their training director. This tactic just didn’t feel right. Even the residents who were interested in learning psychotherapy were not seeing patients weekly, and one told me they were just too busy for regular psychotherapy sessions.
I finally realized that it wasn’t me. The residents were not primed to understand or do psychotherapy, and I was catching them too far along in the process. Many have no interest in ever seeing a patient for psychotherapy, and they’ve bought in to the idea that psychiatrists “manage meds.”
I believe that people in general, and psychiatrists in particular, should do what they like doing. I don’t believe that every psychiatrist in every setting needs to practice psychotherapy, and even if I did, no one would listen. I do, however, think that every resident should learn to do traditional (and I suppose that means psychodynamically-based) psychotherapy, even if they never plan to see another therapy patient after their training is complete. Let me tell you why I believe that:
| Feb 22 - 26 Naples, FL | American College of Psychiatrists: Annual Meeting |
| Feb 23 - 25 Miami, FL | American Psychosocial Oncology Society (APOS): Annual Conference |
| Mar 3 - 6 Prague, | European Psychiatric Association (EPA): European Congress of Psychiatry |
| Mar 14 - 16 Athens, | American Psychosomatic Society (APS): Annual Scientific Meeting |
| Mar 16 - 19 Washington, DC | American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry (AAGP): Annual Meeting |
| Mar 21 - 24 New Orleans, LA | American Neuropsychiatric Association (ANPA): Annual Meeting |
| Mar 29 - 31 Chicago, IL | American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists (AACP): Annual Meeting |
| Mar 29 - 31 Chicago, IL | Society of Sex Therapy & Research (SSTAR): Annual Meeting |
| Apr 11 - 14 New Orleans, LA | Society of Behavioral Medicine (SBM): Annual Meeting |
| Apr 12 - 15 Arlington, VA | Anxiety Disorders Association of America (ADAA): Annual Conference |
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