Ranjbar Noshene, Villagomez Amelia, Brooks Audrey J, Ricker Mari, Lebensohn Patricia, Maizes Victoria
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
The Center for Integrative Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
Glob Adv Health Med. 2019 Jan 4;8:2164956118821585. doi: 10.1177/2164956118821585. eCollection 2019.
Research on incorporating integrative medicine (IM) into medical training is increasing. Programs and organizations around IM have been established, but there has not previously been a needs assessment focused on integrating IM into psychiatry training.
The results of a needs assessment of training directors and faculty, focused on interest and priorities for developing an IM curriculum for psychiatry training programs, are described.
Psychiatry Training Directors and faculty were invited to participate in a detailed electronic survey. Areas of inquiry included (a) IM content areas to include in training; (b) IM approaches to specific medical conditions; (c) existing IM content; (d) importance, interest, and strategies for IM training; and (e) availability of wellness programs for trainees.
Thirty-six respondents from psychiatry training programs completed the survey. Of the training programs represented by the respondents, 50% indicated that they currently had IM content in their curriculum; only 11.8% of them rated their programs' existing IM content as sufficient. Content areas rated most highly for inclusion in a psychiatry IM curriculum included sleep health, motivational interviewing, and self-care. Respondents indicated incorporating IM into the psychiatry training curriculum (47%) or as an elective (44%) as the desired implementation strategy, with experiential onsite activities demonstrating IM topics (67%) and online modules supplemented by local faculty (58%) as the 2 most desirable learning formats. Significant barriers identified were time constraints, lack of faculty expertise in IM, current lack of curricular requirements for IM competencies, and budgetary limitations.
Responses to the survey suggest that faculty need support and additional education in implementing IM training. A standardized, online curriculum could help meet that need. Our results also indicate that wellness programs for residents are currently inadequate; bolstering them could help address burnout and increase the knowledge psychiatrists have of IM modalities. The types of institutions represented by faculty interested in further developing IM offerings vary considerably, as do their current efforts to integrate IM into training programs.
将整合医学(IM)纳入医学培训的研究正在增加。围绕整合医学的项目和组织已经建立,但此前尚未有针对将整合医学纳入精神病学培训的需求评估。
描述一项针对培训主任和教员的需求评估结果,该评估聚焦于为精神病学培训项目制定整合医学课程的兴趣点和优先事项。
邀请精神病学培训主任和教员参与一项详细的电子调查。调查领域包括:(a)培训中应包含的整合医学内容领域;(b)针对特定医疗状况的整合医学方法;(c)现有的整合医学内容;(d)整合医学培训的重要性、兴趣点及策略;(e)为学员提供的健康促进项目的可用性。
来自精神病学培训项目的36名受访者完成了调查。在受访者所代表的培训项目中,50%表示其课程目前已有整合医学内容;其中只有11.8%认为其项目现有的整合医学内容足够。在精神病学整合医学课程中最被看重纳入的内容领域包括睡眠健康、动机性访谈和自我护理。受访者表示将整合医学纳入精神病学培训课程(47%)或作为选修课程(44%)是理想的实施策略,以体验式现场活动展示整合医学主题(67%)和由当地教员补充的在线模块(58%)是最理想的两种学习形式。确定的重大障碍包括时间限制、教员缺乏整合医学专业知识、目前缺乏整合医学能力的课程要求以及预算限制。
调查结果表明教员在实施整合医学培训方面需要支持和额外教育。标准化的在线课程有助于满足这一需求。我们的结果还表明,目前针对住院医师的健康促进项目不足;加强这些项目有助于解决职业倦怠问题,并增加精神科医生对整合医学模式的了解。对进一步开展整合医学课程感兴趣的教员所代表的机构类型差异很大,他们目前将整合医学纳入培训项目的努力也各不相同。