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Central Michigan University - Physician Assistant Program COURSE OBJECTIVES for CLINICAL CLERKSHIP in PSYCHIATRY The mission of the Central Michigan University Physician Assistant (PA) Program is to produce well-educated and highly-skilled Physician Assistants who provide evidence-based medical services within the interdisciplinary primary care environment, with an emphasis on diversity and service to medically underserved populations in rural or urban communities. PROGRAM GOALS 1. Medical Skills & Competence: PA students will know and explain the differences between good health and states of illness, and in collaboration with their supervising physicians be able to screen for and diagnose, formulate care plans, and treat the common health problems of individuals across the lifespan, and their families and communities. 2. Evidence-Based Learning: Students will demonstrate their understanding of the importance of medical research as it relates to clinical practice, in order to utilize evidence based medical literature to formulate patient management plans. 3. Systems-Based Learning and Interprofessional Education: PA students will understand how patient care relates to the healthcare system as a whole. Graduates will be prepared to work effectively in interprofessional healthcare teams to improve patient care outcomes. CLINICAL CLERKSHIP COURSE DESCRIPTION: This clinical clerkship is designed to Students will develop the skills necessary to evaluate and manage patients with a variety of psychiatric problems. The clerkship will provide students the opportunity to develop an understanding of the role of psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and nurses in the care of the psychiatric patient. Students will learn the appropriate use of selected psychoactive pharmaceuticals. There will be ample opportunity for the student to practice the skills necessary to perform a psychiatric interview and mental status examination and make referrals for specialized psychiatric treatment. COURSE FORMAT: The methods of learning will come from observation, participation in direct inpatient and outpatient care, demonstration, case presentations and interaction with the team of health care professionals on staff in the clinic. The student is responsible for the material in the required texts as well as readings assigned by the preceptor. COURSE GOALS: Upon completion of this clerkship students will have the skills necessary to; evaluate and manage patients with a variety of psychiatric problems. The student will be familiar with the indications, contraindications, side effects and dosing guidelines for the medications commonly used in Psychiatric practice and be able to use selected psychoactive pharmaceuticals appropriately. Additionally, students are expected to perform a psychiatric interviews and mental status examinations. The student will learn and understand the role of AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 1 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and nurses in the care of the psychiatric patient and learn when to make referrals for specialized psychiatric care to the appropriate specialists. DSM-5 PUBLICATION As a result of the 2013 publication of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) criteria, the PAEA End-of-Rotation examination effective September 2014 and the NCCPA (http://www.nccpa.net/ExamsContentBlueprint) will "adapt its content blueprints, disease and disorder lists, and test questions to conform to DSM-5 classifications and diagnostic criteria for all of our examinations beginning in 2015, according to the following timeline" • PANCE and PANRE administered in 2015: In these examinations, test questions will include the DSM-5 terminology followed by the DSM-4-TR terminology in parentheses. Example: illness anxiety disorder (hypochondriasis) • PANCE and PANRE administered in 2016 and beyond: In these examinations, only the DSM-5 terminology will be provided. Example: illness anxiety disorder PSYCHIATRY CLERKSHIP GOALS The aim of the core or embedded psychiatry clerkship* is to: a. Achieve a level of competency in psychiatry to be able safely carry out the duties of a PA in any domain of medicine. b. Promulgate respect and understanding of psychiatry as a medical discipline and its importance to other medical specialties. c. Dispel attitudes which result in stigmatization of patients with psychiatric disorders. *The CMU PA Program’s core and embedded clinical rotations provide comparable experiences over the course of the program. Each clinical site has different resources, culture, philopsphy, and patient casemix; these factors coupled with the service setting (whether in-patient or outpatient), patient throughput processes and the types of communities served, all impact patient access to care, patient volume, and the types of patients seen on a weekly basis. As a result, the program assesses student exposure to the various domains of medical education for each clinical rotation and over the course of the clinical year through student data management in our clinical tracking database and extensive monitoring by faculty of student outcomes performance including patient casemix, interventions and procedures, case presentations, formative reviews, and formal summative assessment. REQUIRED READINGS (coursework textbooks from first year studies) • Introductory Textbook of Psychiatry (6TH edition) by D. W. Black and N. C. Andreasen. Publisher: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2014 (ISBN-13: 978-1585624690) The sixth edition of the Introductory Textbook of Psychiatry has been reorganized and rewritten to reflect the reformulated DSM-5® diagnostic classes, rendering all other texts obsolete. No other introductory psychiatry text incorporates up-to-date information on all of the major disorders, arranged by DSM-5® diagnostic class, along with current treatment information. • A Comprehensive Review For the Certification and Recertification Examinations for Physician Assistants, by C.B. O'Connell, S. F. Zarbock. Publisher: Wolters Kluwer. • Step-Up to Medicine, by S. Agabegi & E. Agabegi. Publisher: Wolters Kluwer. AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 2 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation ADDITIONAL REQUIRED READINGS (Physician Assistant Education Association, 2012) • The Psychiatric Medicine topic list, as referenced in Appendix A and available at http://endofrotation.org/exams/blueprints-and-topic-lists/psychiatry-topic-list.pdf, outlines the medical conditions students need to understand in order to prepare for their end-of-rotation (EoR) case presentations and examinations; • The Psychiatric Medicine Skills Competency Blueprint List - In order to build competence in addressing various medical conditions, students are to understand and gain the following clinical skills (as referenced in Appendix B and available at http://www.paeaonline.org/index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/140865). • PAEA Learning Supplement to the skills competency blueprint, http://www.paeaonline.org/index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/153610 detailing the learning objectives pertaining to: o History Taking and Physical o Health Maintenance Examination Skills o Clinical Intervention o Diagnostic Studies o Clinical Therapeutics o Diagnosis o Scientific Concepts SUPPLEMENTAL RECOMMENDED READING (optional) • Examination Content Blueprint, http://www.nccpa.net/Upload/PDFs/Content%20Blueprint.pdf • First Aid Clinical Clerkship Series, http://www.usbmis.com/faid/ • Dynamed, http://catalog.lib.cmich.edu/record=b2506547 OBJECTIVES GENERAL PSYCHIATRIC OBJECTIVES Student learning outcomes have been developed for general psychiatric skills and for selected presentations/diagnoses. By the end of the psychiatry clerkship it is expected that the student will be able to: • Obtain, document, and present an age and gender-appropriate problem-oriented psychiatric history and physical examination, assessment and plan. • Perform and document a complete psychiatric history and mental status examination with identification of normal and abnormal findings. • Identify suicidal and homicidal ideation, across the lifespan. • Demonstrate differential diagnosis skills using specific history and physical exam findings. • Identify appropriate diagnostic and laboratory tests and interpret results. o Describe the indications for the use of the following neuroimaging procedures in psychiatry: MRI, C-T, SPECT, and PET scanning • Distinguish the co-morbidities of other chronic illnesses that often accommodate the most common mental disorders (depression, anxiety, and substance abuse) and their impact course, severity, and clinical outcome. • Demonstrate effective communication skills with patients and families using sensitive, • non-judgmental language, and recognize the emotional impact of illness on patients and families. • Construct an appropriate treatment plan (medication and/or therapy) and, if necessary, refer to specialty care. AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 3 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation State the indications, contraindications, major side-effects/adverse reactions and correct dosing schedules for medications commonly used in psychiatry, including (but not limited to): Antidepressants, Anxiolytics, Antipsychotics, Sedatives o State the indications, contraindications, major side-effects/adverse reactions and correct dosing schedules for medications commonly used in emergency psychiatry, including (but not limited to): Oxygen, Dextrose, Naloxone, Thiamine, Flumazil, Haldol, Cogentin, and Diphenhydramine o Demonstrate familiarity with the utilization of traditional community resources available for patients with psychiatric disorders and psychosocial problems. Develop skills for enhancing treatment adherence. Identify the legal requirements of civil commitment and competency evaluations. o • • AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 4 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation SPECIFIC LEARNING OUTCOMES Learning outcomes have been developed for selected diagnoses and clinical settings. Depression: 1. Acknowledge the high prevalence of depression in medical patients. 2. Identify various presentations of depression across the life span. 3. Select and monitor appropriate psychiatric medications used in treating depression. 4. Determine an individual patient's potential risk for subsequent depression. 5. Determine the presence or absence of possible co-morbidities including, dementia, anxiety disorder, adverse drug effect, substance abuse, and grief in any patient suspected of having depression. 6. Discern a patient's risk for suicide. 7. Determine the impact of depression upon the patient's level of function. 8. Ascertain that depression may be a potentially life-threatening illness; however, uncomplicated depression can be diagnosed and treated by non-psychiatrists. 9. Demonstrate that treatment of depression is interdisciplinary. Anxiety Disorders: 1. State of the etiology, pathophysiology and epidemiology of generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social phobia, agoraphobia and other specific phobias 2. Identify elicit psychiatric symptoms and signs of a patient with an anxiety disorder or obsessive compulsive disorder 3. Discern when and how to use anxiolytic drugs and know their side effects 4. Identify the treatment, both pharmacological and psychotherapeutic, for each of the anxiety disorders 5. Describe the diagnosis and management of panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia and specific phobias 6. Differentiate between fear and anxiety and the importance of this distinction Substance Abuse & dependence: 1. Describe the impact of alcohol and drug misuse and dependence on the family and society 2. Describe the psychological effects of the misuse of alcohol and other illicit drugs 3. Identify the range of individuals and services that are available to help the problem drinker and drug user and how to match the individual with the most appropriate service 4. Identify the community resources required for the optimum rehabilitation and management of substance misuse and dependence 5. Recognize the investigations undertaken in cases of alcohol and substance misuse 6. List the social and behavioral associations of alcohol and drug misuse and dependence 7. Describe the pharmacological and metabolic effects of alcohol and other drugs of misuse. 8. Demonstrate a non-judgmental attitude towards patients with substance misuse problems AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 5 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation Psychotic disorders: Schizophrenia 1. Name the features that distinguish schizophrenia from a mood disorder with psychotic features 2. Summarize the current knowledge concerning aetiology, pathogenesis and epidemiology of schizophrenia 3. Describe an appropriate course of treatment for a patient with schizophrenia including pharmacotherapy and psychosocial support 4. Summarize the clinical features and course of schizophrenia Personality Disorders: 1. Elicit psychiatric symptoms and signs of a patient with a personality disorder 2. Explain the basics of how personality traits and disorders are defined and classified 3. Identify the community resources required for the optimum rehabilitation and management of severe personality disorders 4. Outline the clinical features common to all personality disorders and the features which distinguish them 5. Defend the moral difficulties posed by serious personality disorder for the care of those so affected Mood disorders: 1. Define the classification of mood disorders and distinguish between unipolar depression and bipolar disorder 2. Describe the signs and symptoms, differential diagnosis, course of illness, co-morbidity, prognosis and complications of mood disorders 3. Identify the features that distinguish schizophrenia from a mood disorder with psychotic features 4. Screen for depressive symptoms 5. Screen for suicidality and to identify and manage suicide risk in a general medical setting 6. Discern when and how to use antidepressants and know their side effects 7. Screen for manic and hypomanic symptoms 8. Report the treatment for major depression and bipolar disorder (manic and depressive phases) for acute episodes and longer term maintenance 9. Discern when and how to use antimanic agents and know their side effects 10. Differentiate between depressive symptoms and depressive disorders and why the distinction is important 11. Differentiate between sadness and grief associated with life events and depressive disorders Bi-polar Disorder 1. Classify mood disorders and distinguish between unipolar depression and bipolar disorder 2. Screen for manic and hypomanic symptoms AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 6 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation In addition, 1. Relative to care provided by the physician assistant, counsel patient/patient’s family on issues dealing with: Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Chronically ill patients Parenting skills Crisis intervention Stress reduction techniques Death and dying Observe Perform Discuss Perform Discuss Legal issues and notification This may be used as a study guide for the student 2. Relative to care provided by the physician assistant, manage selected psychiatric emergencies, including: Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Acute psychotic disorder Suicidal/homicidal risk Hypermania Violent behavior Observe This may be used as a study guide for the student 3. Define the basic concepts & considerations for use of the following nonpharmacologic therapeutic interventions. Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Behavioral Therapy Neurosurgery Electroconvulsive Shock Therapy Psychoanalysis Hypnotherapy Psychotherapy Observe Perform Discuss Inpatient vs Outpatient treatment This may be used as a study guide for the student 4. Relative to the care provided by the physician assistant, identify and refer patients with the personality disorders below. Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Antisocial Narcissistic Avoidant Obsessive-Compulsive Borderline Paranoid Dependent Schizoid Histrionic Schizotypal Observe Perform Discuss This may be used as a study guide for the student 5. Understand and know indications and interpretation of results for the following testing tools. Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Beck Depression Scale MMPI Bender Gestalt Rorschach Denver Developmental Screening Test Thematic apperception Test DSM IV Wechlser Adult Intelligence scale Manic State Scale Geriatric depression scale Observe Perform Discuss This may be used as a study guide for the student AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 7 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation 6. Identify the emotional impact of sexual abuse/rape, spouse abuse, child abuse, trauma, disasters and war on immediate victims, family and caregivers. 7. For patients presenting with the conditions listed below: A. Perform a psychiatric interview and physical examination when indicated and communicate the results in written and oral form B. List related differential diagnoses C. Determine a tentative diagnosis D. Direct a primary care diagnostic evaluation E. Determine the impact of existing medical illness on diagnosis F. Order a primary care-level clinical treatment plan, which includes: • Pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic interventions (side-effects of major psychotropic medications), management of acute psychosis • Patient education • Further diagnostic studies • Appropriate referrals or consultation; and • Follow up Read Observe Perform Discuss Read Adjustment disorder Memory loss Anxiety Mood swings Delirium Neglect of a child Delusions Panic attacks Dementia Physical abuse Depression (major and minor) Psychological factors affecting medical conditions Difficulty concentrating Schizophrenia Eating disorders Sexual abuse Excessive sleep Factitious disorders Sexual dysfunction and disorders Somatiform disorder Fatigue Spouse abuse Hyperactivity Stress disorder (PTSD) Hypermania Suicidal/violent behavior risk Insomnia Substance abuse disorder; Recognition of withdrawal symptoms of common drugs of abuse, opiates, ETOH, ect.; Observe Perform Discuss Pain management in a drug dependent patient Loss of appetite Tourette’s disorder This may be used as a study guide for the student. AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 8 of 9 Central Michigan University PA Program Psychiatric Medicine Clinical Rotation Appendices A – Physician Assistant Education Assocation (PAEA) Clerkship Topic List, retrieved Aug. 21, 2014 from http://endofrotation.org/exams/blueprints-and-topic-lists/psychiatry-topic-list.pdf B – PAEA Skills Competency List Blueprint, retrieved Aug. 21, 2014 from http://www.paeaonline.org/index.php?ht=a/GetDocumentAction/i/140865 AH’12/Sept’14 (with DSM-5 & updated textbook references), rev [email protected] Page 9 of 9