SOMETIMES YOU JUST HAVE TO
SEE THINGS FOR YOURSELF.
As Dr. Psychobabble said, "Psychology is the bestest." Even though, yes, it is a biased opinion (she said so!), this week on the wards, I started seeing how it was the "bestest", exactly as I told you in my last entry. So far, my schedule on the wards has been pretty consistent. Each of my days are faced with an interesting juxtaposition: earlier in my day, I round with a Psychiatrist who is a consultant on the medicine floors, while later in my day I round with a Family Physician who is a consultant on the psychiatric floors. It provides two different perspectives on how to look at a psych patient.
However, to date five things have stood out about psychiatry that have made my first two weeks on the floors enjoyable:
1. Au contraire: psychiatry doesn't just deal with the extremes.
In my last entry, I described some of the more severe cases where my friends were physically "harmed" by a psych patient. However, although there's a chunk of patients that do present with danger, a majority of patients are not like that. Many of the medicine floor patients talk just like their non-psychiatric consult counterparts on the floor. The patients on the psychiatric floor have very cool personalities and backgrounds. Many of them are quite easy to talk to, which leads me to point two.
2. A psych patient is still a person.
During lecture last week, I heard in lecture that the best way to interact with a psychiatric patient is by starting a conversation just like any other in one's non-medical life. I totally enjoy getting away from the standard "conversation conformed to standard history taking" format, and being able to use the interview in another dimension to assess mental function is pretty cool. It was a concept I finally got a hang of this week and am trying to tweak.
3. Sometimes your imagination itself just has to fly.
A few days ago, I heard a patient down the hallway start to sing. Mind you, it wasn't emmy quality, but the few simple notes that the patient was singing were pretty catchy. I ended up looking out the room and saw the patient dancing a semi-two step to the same song. I was very tempted to go out there and dance with him, but I was still getting used to the psych ward. However, that moment really brought a smile to my face.
4. Psychiatry offers some really unique situations.
If I went to a cocktail party, I could actually ask the question, "How many med students does it take to cut a person's ring off?" and answer truthfully six. Our group spent 2 hours switching between each other with a manual ring cutter to cut this patient's ring off. It was grueling, but it was good to see our team pull together with each twist and grip of the ring cutter.
Although this situation could be seen in some other fields (ER for instance), I'll be honest, it was fun to hear our patient sing "Free at Last" when the ring finally came off.
5. A psych rotation offers skills to both future psychiatrists and non-psychiatrists combined.
Every doctor is going to run into psychiatric patients of different sorts throughout their career. Getting an opportunity to see how to interview these patients has been, so far, a great learning experience. To recognize different psychiatric conditions and how to handle them can help aid with not only treatments of the mental conditions but improved understanding of the patient and increased compliance with treatments for their own medical conditions.
I love having an open mind... it makes me enjoy more of what life has to offer. That's what has made me get through 10,000 miles... Here's to 10,000 more!
10.08.2010
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So very true! I promise you that you will use many of the things that you learn in 6 weeks of psych for the rest of your life, both in medicine and in daily life! "Crazy" people have a lot to share with the rest of the world. :)
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