Morris Nathaniel P
Dr. Morris is a Resident in Psychiatry, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA.
J Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 2018 Sep;46(3):351-358. doi: 10.29158/JAAPL.003770-18.
American general psychiatry residents are significantly involved in legal hearings related to mental health. Training to become a psychiatrist involves considerable exposure to medicolegal matters, and psychiatry residents frequently participate in high-stakes legal hearings concerning their patients. Although psychiatry residents are physicians, residents are also trainees who may lack full medical licensure, board certification, or basic preparation to testify in legal settings. Legal hearings are important educational experiences for psychiatrists-in-training, but these proceedings can upend traditional patient-doctor relationships and pose ethics challenges to trainees. In this article, I examine ways in which residency programs can prepare budding psychiatrists for legal testimony. This is an overlooked topic deserving more attention, since the participation of physicians in training in legal hearings carries profound implications for mental health care in the United States.
美国普通精神病学住院医师大量参与与心理健康相关的法律听证。成为一名精神科医生的培训涉及大量接触法医学事务,并且精神科住院医师经常参与有关其患者的高风险法律听证。虽然精神科住院医师是医生,但住院医师也是实习生,可能缺乏完整的行医执照、委员会认证或在法律环境中作证的基本准备。法律听证对正在接受培训的精神科医生来说是重要的教育经历,但这些程序可能会颠覆传统的医患关系,并给实习生带来伦理挑战。在本文中,我探讨了住院医师培训项目可以如何让初露头角的精神科医生为法律证词做好准备。这是一个被忽视的话题,值得更多关注,因为接受培训的医生参与法律听证对美国的心理健康护理有着深远的影响。