Physicians and psychiatrists typically see themselves as true
professionals. But in the past, some displayed behavior far beneath
the confines of professionalism, including exploding at nurses, not
returning calls, or conducting insensitive interactions with
patients, that was usually tolerated and seldom disciplined. Today,
the rise of professionalism in medicine in general and psychiatry
in particular has prompted a quiet revolution in how doctors are
trained and how they are expected to behave in the workplace. The
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has
now advanced professionalism to be one of the core competencies all
emerging practitioners must have.
While almost all physicians believe in professionalism, the
movement toward making it a core competency has challenged doctors
everywhere to accept the practice of monitoring, observing and
assessing what is not always welcome in a field where autonomy is
so highly valued. In Professionalism in Psychiatry, the authors
identify and expand on professional behaviors, such as being a good
team player, being accountable, pursuing improvement in an ongoing
way, and behaving compassionately toward patients and families. The
importance of treating all co-workers with respect and of being
attuned to the management of healthcare resources in a way that
reflects fairness and integrity is also thoroughly reviewed.
Important features of this book are: - Tailoring professionalism
principles from medicine to the unique features of psychiatry in
order to enhance educators' teaching and improve the behaviors of
psychiatrists and residents in the work setting. - Development of
guidelines for professionalism in cyberspace to provide
psychiatrists with an ethical framework for dealing with patients
in the online realm.- Discussion of the ethical principles that
apply when academic departments approach donors.- Focus on cultural
competency and empathy in an effort to improve patient care through
greater understanding and sensitivity to ethnic, racial, gender and
sexual orientation issues encountered in clinical practice. - Use
of numerous clinical examples to articulate the new professionalism
in psychiatry, which illustrates the importance of going beyond
"one size fits all" thinking.
Professionalism in Psychiatry is an important contribution
toward beginning to characterize the ever-evolving professional
behaviors and clinical strategies of the contemporary psychiatrist
and place them in a systematic framework.
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