Enhancing forensic exposures in residency training

Author:

Wasser TobiasORCID,Chandra Saksham,Michaelsen Katherine

Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to review the impact of a new, brief forensic rotation for general psychiatry residents on the variety of residents’ forensic exposures. Design/methodology/approach The authors surveyed residents who trained before and after the implementation of the new rotation to assess the impact of the rotation on the residents’ forensic experiences during training across a variety of domains. Findings Even in a highly clinical forensic setting, residents participating in the required rotation reported significantly greater variety of forensic experiences than those who had not completed the required rotation, including types of settings and assessments, Rotation completers reported greater exposure to various types of settings and assessments, and courtroom-related experiences, as well as the overall number of forensic exposures. The two groups did not differ in their forensic exposures in general psychiatry settings, civil-forensic evaluations or diverse forensic populations. Secondary analyses showed that increased exposure to court-based experiences and multiple forensic settings was associated with forensic fellowship interest. Originality/value This study demonstrates that a brief, mandatory forensic clinical rotation may increase residents’ exposure to forensic settings, assessments and courtroom-related experiences and that increased exposure to courtroom-based experiences in particular may increase interest in forensic fellowship. While not surprising, the results demonstrate that residents were not otherwise having these forensic experiences and that even time-limited forensic rotations can enhance the breadth of residents’ forensic exposures. Further, the rotation achieved these outcomes without using typical forensic sites but instead highly clinical sites, which may be particularly encouraging to residency programs without ready access to classic forensic rotation sites. This study contributes to the small but expanding body of the literature describing the value of increasing psychiatry residents’ training in clinical forensic psychiatry.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Health Policy,Education,Pshychiatric Mental Health,Health (social science)

Reference13 articles.

1. ACGME (2017), “Program requirements for graduate medical education in psychiatry”, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, Chicago, IL, available at: www.acgme.org/Portals/0/PFAssets/ProgramRequirements/400_psychiatry_2016.pdf (accessed March 10, 2017).

2. Shaping attitudes of psychiatry residents toward forensic patients;Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law,2016

3. Important forensic issues in psychiatric education;Psychiatric Annals,1986

4. Council of State Governments (2002), “Criminal justice/mental health consensus project”, available at: www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/197103.pdf

5. Evidence for greater forensic education of all psychiatry residents;Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law,2016

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