Rotation Director: Leslie Horton, M.D., Ph.D.
Telephone: 805-652-6729
Location:
Ventura County Medical Center, Inpatient Psychiatric Unit
200 Hillmont Avenue
Ventura, CA 93003
Clinical and Educational Work Hours:
M-F
7:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Monthly work hours will be submitted in the New Innovations software program.
Total hours
worked for that month will be compiled and the weekly average must not
exceed eighty hours
per week averaged over a 4-week period, inclusive of in-house night call.
Work hour violations
will be closely reviewed and addressed by the Program Director.
Residents shall not work in excess of 24 consecutive hours. Allowances
for already initiated
care, transfer of care, educational debriefing and formal didactic activities
may occur, but shall
not exceed 4 additional hours and must be reported by the resident in writing
with rationale to
the Program Director and reviewed by the GMEC for monitoring individual
residents and
programs.
Residents will have 48-hour periods off on alternate weeks, or at least
one 24-hour period off
each week and shall have no call responsibility during that time.
In addition to their initial rotation as PGY1 residents on the inpatient
unit, PGY2 residents will
rotate on the service for a total of six months, in three-month blocks.
Educational Purpose:
The goal of this year is to develop further the second-year resident’s
foundation of knowledge in
the diagnosis and treatment of acutely and seriously ill psychiatric patients.
This rotation is also a
“Resident-as-Teacher” experience, providing clinical and educational
oversight to PGY1s by
supervising, teaching, and coordinating daily activities. Residents also
complete a Quality
Improvement Project during the rotation.
Teaching Methods:
For each interaction, the resident will spend sufficient time with the
patient to perform an
appropriate psychiatric evaluation and then discuss the case with psychiatry
faculty. The learning
experience surrounding a patient interaction evolves from review of history,
mental status
examination, laboratory results and other diagnostic tests with faculty.
The resident will take
direction from faculty, and faculty will provide the resident with references
and/or other learning
materials to facilitate their independent study for subsequent review with
faculty. The resident
will also learn, under supervision, how to interact not only with patients
and families but also
with other members of the treatment team.
Disease Mix and Patient Characteristics:
Patients range in age from 18 to 65 years. The most common admission diagnoses include:
psychotic spectrum illnesses (Unspecified, Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective
Disorders),
major mood disorders (Bipolar and Major Depressive Disorder), Personality
Disorders,
especially Borderline Personality Disorder; and some exposure to Antisocial
Personality
Disorder. An overwhelming majority of patients suffer from co-morbid substance use
disorders. A significant portion have co-morbid physical health conditions.
The overwhelming majority of patients are covered by Medi-Cal or do not have
insurance coverage. Some patients do have Medicare and/or private insurance coverage.
Responsibilities/Procedures:
Residents will perform new admissions and see patients in follow-up daily
in the VCMC IPU.
Under the guidance and direction of the psychiatry attending, residents
will coordinate the
evaluation and initial management of a patient’s psychiatric illness.
Residents are expected to
communicate with all members of the treatment team involved in the patient’s care.
Admitting a patient includes writing admission orders, updating the problem
list and ensuring
accurate medication reconciliation. Psychiatric evaluations must be documented
within 24 hours
of the patient’s admission.
Residents are expected to complete all appropriate paperwork necessary
to facilitate the patient’s
stay in the hospital. This documentation includes, but is not limited to,
admission notes, progress
notes, consultation notes, discharge paperwork, and discharge summaries.
Progress notes must be timely and are an integral component of the patient’s
care. The resident
will be expected to document specific diagnosis and treatment recommendations
clearly in the
EMR.
Ideally, discharges should be completed so that patients can be discharged
early in the morning.
This timing improves hospital workflow and patient satisfaction. To facilitate
this process,
residents should complete discharge paperwork, follow-up appointments,
and medication
reconciliation the day prior and review it the morning of discharge with
the attending. Discharge
summaries are to be done on the day of discharge; if the resident cannot
complete the summary
on the day of discharge, they must notify the attending physician.
Medications must be properly reconciled. Discharge medication lists provided
to the patient must
match the discharge summary.
The residents are expected to notify the patient’s outpatient psychiatrist
prior to discharge to
relay information about the patient’s hospital stay. Pending studies
or future recommendations
should be relayed to the outpatient psychiatrist; these should be included
in the discharge
summary.
Residents are required to carry a cell phone with a HIPAA-compliant texting
program, in
addition to being available at their assigned work station for staff communication. This
procedure serves as the primary means of communication for staff in regard
to patient care.
Residents are expected to return calls within a timely manner to address
concerns regarding
patients.
Residents are expected to attend all didactic lectures, Morning Reports and Grand Rounds.
Education: Resident as Educator
The PGY2 resident will gain the necessary skills to become a more effective
teacher, improving
resident education and ultimately patient care. They will be taught using
scenarios and case
examples:
Quality Improvement Project
The goal is for the resident to reflect on the outcomes of clinical practice
and to understand the
principles of improving the processes of care. Quality improvement projects
are resident-directed
and may be related to quality or patient safety, to improvement in residents’ clinical
performance, or to curriculum innovations in quality management. The resident
will develop
expertise in making recommendations for improving quality of psychiatric
care through an
experience-based learning format.
Core Competencies:
Patient Care:
Medical Knowledge:
1. Develop clinical and scholarly familiarity with severe psychopathology such as
Schizophrenia, affective disorders, personality disorders, substance use
disorders,
neurocognitive disorders and delirium.
2. Become adept with the use of therapeutic modalities currently used in
inpatient psychiatry
especially psychopharmacological agents.
3. Be fully trained in treatment and infection control protocols and procedures
(e.g. personal
protective equipment [PPE]) and trained clinically to properly recognize
and care for
COVID-19 patients.
Systems Based Practice:
Practice Based Learning:
Professionalism:
Interpersonal and Communication Skills:
Transitions of Care:
A verbal check-out is required utilizing I-PASS. The checkout occurs between
the resident and
the on-call physician. Handoff occurs daily and at the end of month.
Residents are expected to attend all teaching activities, Grand Rounds and didactic sessions.
Evaluation Methods:
Supervising faculty will provide verbal feedback to the resident midway
through the rotation and
formally evaluate the resident at the completion of the rotation via New
Innovations. Evaluators
will assess the resident’s mastery of psychiatry core competencies
and are encouraged to
comment more specifically on the resident’s performance.
The supervising attending will receive the evaluation the last week of
the rotation. They must
complete the evaluation and discuss it with the resident prior to the completion
of the rotation. If
a resident receives an unsatisfactory score, the information is communicated
to the Psychiatry
Program Director to ensure additional resident education and informal or
formal remediation if
indicated.
Residents are also required to evaluate both their rotation and their preceptor
at the completion of
the month.
Duration:
PGY2 residents will be assigned to the VCMC service for a total of six
months, in three-month
blocks.
Residents will be assigned to one of the following faculty members or other
designated
psychiatrist:
Megha Miglani, M.D. (coverage)
Mounir Belcadi, M.D. (coverage)
Michael Locher, M.D. (coverage
Andrea Kornbau, M.D. (coverage)
Sanjay Masson, M.D (coverage)
Educational Materials/References:
Kaplan and Sadock’s Synopsis of Psychiatry
MacKinnon, Michels and Buckley, The Psychiatric Interview in Clinical Practice, Third Edition
Resident Resources:
Residents are provided with a resident workroom. This room includes adequate
space for the
residents. Each resident is provided with a desk and computer workstation.
This room is locked
and only administration and faculty/residents will have access.