The training obtained during the third postgraduate year should provide residents with the clinical skills and knowledge relevant to the treatment of a wide variety of psychiatric disorders in the outpatient setting.
Residents will enhance their skills at conceptualizing illnesses in terms of biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors that determine normal and abnormal behavior. They are taught to gather and organize date, integrate these data within a comprehensive formulation of the problem to sup port a well-reasoned differential diagnosis, formulate a treatment plan, and implement treatment and follow-up as indicated. The training provides residents with the opportunity to develop knowledge, clinical skills, sensitivity to cultural diversity and professional principles.
PGY- III residents will work in both the VA and MCG psychiatric outpatient setting, with a variety of mental health professionals in a multidisciplinary setting. Educational objectives will include
Patient Care
A. Knowledge: Residents will learn to provide competent outpatient care to patients
                        with a broad range of psychiatric disorders that are commonly encountered in clinical
                        practice. Their patients will include at least 90% adults, at least 20% of whom will
                        be followed for the full year. Their patients will include patients of both sexes
                        and from various ethnic/minority groups. 
B. Skills: Residents will become adept at interviewing, history taking, mental status
                        examination, differential diagnosis, treatment planning, diagnostic testing, and recording
                        of findings. They will have experiences with a wide array of psychotherapies and psychopharmacologic
                        interventions. They will have roles both as direct providers of care and as consultants
                        to other healthcare providers and mental health professionals. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will consolidate their identities as psychiatrists and will
                        remain committed to the scientific and ethical values that underlie the doctor-patient
                        relationship.
Medical/Psychiatric Knowledge
A. Knowledge: Residents will expand their knowledge about the major theories and viewpoints
                        in psychiatry, together with a thorough grounding in the generally accepted clinical
                        facts. They will learn to diagnose and treat a wide range of psychiatric disorders
                        commonly encountered in adults. They will expand their knowledge of the etiologies,
                        prevalence, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of all major psychiatric disorders
                        in the DSM, including the biological, psychological, and sociocultural, and iatrogenic
                        factors that affect long-term course and treatment of psychiatric illness. They will
                        also enhance their ability to understand research methods and to critically appraise
                        the professional and scientific literature. 
B. Skills: Resident will become more skilled at applying their knowledge of psychiatric
                        illness to particular clinical problems, both as direct providers of care and as consultants.
                        They will develop excellent working knowledge of numerous psychotherapies and of somatic
                        treatments utilized in the outpatient setting. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will understand and appreciate the value and role of a strong
                        knowledge base in the provision of comprehensive psychiatric care and consultation.
Practice-Based Learning and Improvement
A. Knowledge: Residents will become familiar with the fundamentals of general psychiatry
                        so that they can engage effectively in life-long learning. 
B. Skills: Residents will practice their skills at dealing effectively with complex
                        psychiatric illness through clinical reading and expert consultation. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will develop an appreciation of the value of life-long learning
                        for competent patient care.
Interpersonal and Communication Skills
A. Knowledge: Residents will learn clinical techniques to insure respectful and ethical
                        interactions between patients and colleagues. 
B. Skills: Residents will have the opportunity to develop their interpersonal and
                        communication skills in didactic seminars, in supervision, and in the clinical setting. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will develop an appreciation of the value of interpersonal
                        and communication skills for assurance of ethical and effective patient care.
Professionalism
A. Knowledge: Residents will study and receive mentorship in professionalism and ethical
                        behavior in psychiatric practice. 
B. Skills: Psychiatric residents will develop their professional skills by interacting
                        with their colleagues and supervisors, and to learn to practice psychiatry in accordance
                        with professional norms. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will develop an appreciation of the value of professional
                        and respectful treatment of patients and colleagues in all clinical settings.
Systems-Based Practice
A. Knowledge: Residents will learn about the importance of approaching patient care
                           in a systems-oriented way, with particular attention to the challenges of promoting
                           access of patients (regardless of socioeconomic status) to high-quality mental health
                           services in both the public and private sectors. 
B. Skills: Residents will develop their skills at working ethically in various psychiatric
                           contexts by discussing and participating in clinical cases that raise issues related
                           to health-care systems. 
C. Attitudes: Residents will develop an appreciation of the value of thinking about
                           various systems (such as managed care) insofar as they relate to the provision of
                           ethical patient care in psychiatry.
