by
Akane Naka, Project Manager | May 08, 2007
The curriculum of the
Psychiatry and Behavioral Science
Residency Program integrates
clinical rotations with seminars.
Scott & White Psychiatry and Behavioral Science Residency Program
Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine addresses the illnesses that affect our most human qualitiesdisorders of thinking, feeling and behaving. Achieving fulfillment in life is difficult for patients with psychiatric disorders since these disorders disrupt internal functioning and interpersonal relationships. The task of clinicians and researchers is to assist patients and their families overcome these illnesses.

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Education of residents, both through clinical and didactic training, is a priority in our program. Throughout their training, residents are required to attend a weekly four-hour seminar with the other members of their residency class. Staff physicians conduct lectures during this time, and residents follow a curriculum of reading assignments. Seminars are "protected time" for the residents, during which clinical duties are suspended and covered by staff.
In addition the residents, with the help of staff, conduct a review course for the annual Psychiatry Resident In Training Exam (PRITE). Residents meet with a staff member weekly in the three months prior to the exam. Exams from previous years are reviewed and discussed.
The program has multiple training sites, including Scott & White Hospital and Clinic, the Central Texas Veterans Health Care System, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center (a part of Ft. Hood), and the Texas MHMR system.
Curriculum
For each training year, there are two tables. One shows the clinical rotations with the duration during the year; the other table shows the seminars taken during the year. Each row of the seminar tables represents a one-hour block of time for the year (or, in PGY-1, for the six months spent on Psychiatry). Only formal courses are shown in these diagrams; case conferences and other teaching conferences are scheduled separately and are not shown. Supervision is two to three hours per week for PGY-1 through PGY-2. During PGY-3, supervision increases to three to five hours per week. The PGY-4 year usually contains three to four hours per week of supervision.
To see more detail:
Curriculum
Conferences
Department of Psychiatry Grand Rounds:Clinical issues, research topics/projects, mental health policy issues and psychopharmacology are some of the topics presented.
Ethics Meeting:During the meeting the ethical and moral issues and questions that underpin the movie and their applications to the practice of psychiatry are discussed.