Literature DB >> 3666697

Psychiatric residency training and the changing economic scene.

J Yager1.   

Abstract

Efforts to contain the cost of medical care are having a profound impact on psychiatric residency training programs, which must cope with diminishing levels of funding from both federal and private sources. The programs are also being buffeted by other forces that help shape psychiatry's manpower needs, such as the corporatization of American medicine, new models of health care delivery, the regulation of medical care, the trend toward subspecialization, a perceived oversupply of physicians, and the growing number of mental health professionals who are not physicians. The author discusses how these developments are impinging on residency training programs and what the programs can do to meet the challenges they pose. He believes psychiatry will be best served by resisting tendencies to compromise on the quality of training for its future practitioners.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3666697     DOI: 10.1176/ps.38.10.1076

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hosp Community Psychiatry        ISSN: 0022-1597


  3 in total

1.  Longitudinal exposure to the seriously mentally ill: a halfway house affiliation.

Authors:  A Santos; B Julius
Journal:  Acad Psychiatry       Date:  1989-03

2.  Clinical ethics teaching in psychiatric supervision.

Authors:  L W Roberts; T McCarty; B B Roberts; N Morrison; J Belitz; C Berenson; M Siegler
Journal:  Acad Psychiatry       Date:  1996-09

3.  Social and economic influences on psychiatric education: a commentary.

Authors:  P Rodenhauser
Journal:  Psychiatr Q       Date:  1991
  3 in total

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