Overview
The first year of the four-year training program consists of a categorical psychiatry internship (PGY1 residency) at Cambridge Health Alliance. Eight Intern positions are available. These PGY-1 residents work closely with eight PGY-1 Primary Care medicine residents and seven Transitional Year interns. The Department of Psychiatry is responsible for curriculum, oversight, and support for the psychiatry Interns. Since a number of the rotations take place within the Department of Medicine, the Adult Residency Training program directors collaborate closely with the Internal Medicine and Transitional Year program directors to design and implement a well-integrated experience. Cambridge Health Alliance is also home to a Family Practice Residency affiliated with Tufts Medical School, providing opportunities for psychiatry trainees to work in consultation with the community family practice program.
PGY-1 residents start orientation week with a team building day followed by ACLS and other preparatory sessions before starting clinical duties. Sessions on resident health and safety, work hours, sleep, creation of an Intern’s Oath and discussions of well being set a tone for the residents from all departments who share in the care of Cambridge Health Alliance patients. Psychiatry residents are fully integrated with primary care, family practice, transitional and podiatric interns in the first year of training.
During the first year, PGY-1 residents develop their identity as a physicians and gain familiarity with Cambridge Health Alliance and the communities it serves. Interns are given considerable responsibility for patient care to foster competence in general medicine. Residents rotate on the general medical teaching service, with a protected four-hour didactic block on Tuesday afternoons. This creative didactic seminar helps prepare interns for step three of the USMLE.
Rotations
Half of the PGY-1 year focuses on primary care in a community hospital setting. Rotations include medical wards, the ICU, ambulatory care, and/or pediatrics. The remainder is devoted to psychiatric rotations. These include one month each of general neurology, behavioral neurology, addiction medicine, child psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, and rehabilitation / community psychiatry.
On neurology rotations, PGY-1 residents provide inpatient and outpatient assessment and treatment under the supervision of attending neurologists and behavioral neurologists. General neurology training at the Cambridge Health Alliance can be enhanced with a focus in one of the specialty neurology services, such as the headache, seizure or cognitive disorders clinics. The behavioral neurology month at the McLean Hospital provides residents an experience learning about neuro-imaging, and assessment of psychiatric patients with neuro-behavioral symptoms.
On the community rotation residents contribute to the intensive care of chronically and severely mentally ill patients on our Ambulatory Care Service and see patients needing psychiatric emergency services. PGY-1 residents work with senior residents, nurse clinicians, social workers and faculty to care for psychotic patients living in the community who access shelters and drop-in centers.
Med Psych Integration: On this two-week rotation, residents spend time on services at the interface between the medical and psychiatric care of patients. One week will be spent in the Medical ED, as a medical ED provider, to learn about care of patients in this environment prior to serving as a psychiatric consultant to the Medical ED in the later years of residency. Interns will also spend time with the Behavioral Health Communications Center, to gain an increased systems-level appreciation of the process of finding appropriate placements for acutely ill psychiatric patients.
The second week will be spent at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), where interns will have a one-week immersion in TMS and ECT, under the guidance of BIDMC faculty.
On the child rotation, residents can choose to work either on the Child Assessment Unit (CAU), or the Adolescent Assessment Unit (AAU). During this rotation they learn about child psychopathology, family structures and pediatric psychopharmacology. Residents observe intakes and groups, child play therapy, and have a designated child psychiatrist as an additional supervisor. Residents also have an experience on the outpatient child psychiatry teams, observing intakes and assessments of children and adolescents.
On the geriatric psychiatry rotation, residents care for patients with delirium, dementia, intractable depression and chronic psychosis. Supervision by a geriatric psychiatrist includes learning about psychopharmacological issues in the medically ill, and older population with psychiatric issues.
The addiction rotation introduces residents to outpatient care of patients with chronic, acute and intermittent substance use disorders. They participate in intakes, group therapy and learn about Motivational Interviewing and psychopharmacological treatments as well as the underlying neuropathology of addiction. Residents have an opportunity to learn about methadone treatment in the Associated Methadone Maintenance Treatment Program, and about the outpatient use of buprenorphine for opioid addiction.
Electives
Each PGY-1 psychiatry resident has a two-week and a four-week block of elective time. Residents design a learning experience with the Training Directors that range from academic projects, clinical experiences at other institutions or community agencies. Residents have created exciting opportunities to work on issues of international mental health, community advocacy programs, academic research, scientific writing, and intensive clinical rotations in areas of interest. Examples of resident initiated electives include Palliative Care, Eating Disorders, and school based mental health.
Psychiatric Call
In the second half of the PGY-1 year, residents in psychiatry begin "buddy call" in psychiatric emergency services. This allows for the learning of basic emergency psychiatry skills for after hours care in an extremely busy emergency service. PGY-2 and 3 residents work side by side with the PGY-1's, teaching and monitoring the work to prepare residents to begin solo call at the beginning of the PGY-2 year.
As a transition to PGY2, Interns begin didactic seminars on Wednesdays from April through June that provide an introduction to the topics below: