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Recruiting Researchers in Psychiatry: The Influence of Residency vs. Early Motivation

Silberman, Edward K; Belitsky, Richard; Bernstein, Carol Ann; Cabaniss, Deborah L; Crisp-Han, Holly; Dickstein, Leah J; Kaplan, Alan S; Hilty, Donald M; Nadelson, Carol C; Scheiber, Stephen C
BACKGROUND: The declining numbers of clinician-researchers in psychiatry and other medical specialties has been a subject of growing concern. Residency training has been cited as an important factor in recruiting new researchers, but there are essentially no data to support this assertion. This study aimed to explore which factors have influenced motivation to conduct research among senior psychiatry residents. METHODS: The authors surveyed senior residents, inquiring about their level of interest in research, demographics, background, research experiences, and factors influencing motivation for research. The authors had confirmed participation from 16 of 33 residency programs with a class size of 10 or more. They received 127 responses, a 67% response rate, from participating programs. RESULTS: Residents with high stated interest in research differed from those with low and moderate interest in their research-intense post-residency plans. They were more likely to have graduate degrees. Those planning research careers had a consistent pattern of interest and involvement in research, starting well before residency. The majority of residents had had research exposure in college, but research involvement of those with very high versus lower interest diverged sharply thereafter. Those with high research interest were overwhelmingly male and tended to have lower debt than those with less interest. CONCLUSION: The great majority of residents appear to have decided whether or not to pursue a research career by the time they reached residency, and few of those with less than the highest research interest were enrolled in research tracks. Efforts to increase recruitment into research should center on identifying early developmental influences, eliminating barriers specific to women, and ensuring adequate funding to provide secure careers for talented potential researchers.
PMID: 22532195
ISSN: 1042-9670
CID: 166901

Recruiting and rewarding faculty for medical student teaching

Pessar, Linda F; Levine, Ruth E; Bernstein, Carol A; Cabaniss, Deborah S; Dickstein, Leah J; Graff, Sarah V; Hales, Deborah J; Nadelson, Carol; Robinowitz, Carolyn B; Scheiber, Stephen C; Jones, Paul M; Silberman, Edward K
OBJECTIVE: Finding time to teach psychiatry has become increasingly difficult. Concurrently, changes in medical student education are elevating demands for teaching. Academic psychiatry is challenged by these pressures to find innovative ways to recruit, retain, and reward faculty for teaching efforts. To address this challenge, the authors recommend a multifactorial approach to meeting the medical student educational mission of psychiatry departments. METHODS: This approach includes a variety of efforts including having Chairs serve as role models, enforcing the service requirements of volunteer faculty, expanding teaching venues, providing faculty development, elevating the status of teaching through academies, attending to promotion of faculty educators, establishing and nominating faculty for teaching awards, and using medical center resources to provide rewards for teachers. CONCLUSION: Academic leaders must acknowledge the inherent value of teaching to the academic enterprise and delegate sufficient resources to recruit, retain, and reward educators for the essential work that they perform
PMID: 16609118
ISSN: 1042-9670
CID: 64756

Intimate partner violence: homicides followed by suicides in Kentucky [Letter]

Dickstein, Leah
PMID: 15816657
ISSN: 0023-0294
CID: 4950562

The mental health of women: an overview

Nadelson, Carol C; Dickstein, Leah
PMID: 12438892
ISSN: 0009-9201
CID: 4950552

Toward optimal health: the experts discuss depression. Interview by Jodi Godfrey Meisler [Interview]

Dickstein, Leah J; Leibenluft, Ellen
PMID: 11988131
ISSN: 1524-6094
CID: 4950542

Primary prevention and practical techniques to encourage mental wellness

Dickstein, Leah J
Women patients must be made aware that they need to train and perhaps readjust their attitudes and minds to handle and improve their mental wellness. Being their own person, with awareness of whom and how they want to be, strengthens their sense of self and simplifies their lives with awareness and understanding of the choices unique to them as individuals.
PMID: 11856667
ISSN: 0095-4543
CID: 4950532

Practice guideline for the psychiatric evaluation of adults

Chapter by: Fogel, Barry S; Shellow, Ronald; Binder, Renee; Bonner, Jack 33; Dickstein, Leah; Flamm, Gerald; Galanter, Marc; Lehman, Anthony; Lu, Francis; Popkin, Michael; Wilson, George
in: American Psychiatric Association practice guidelines for the treatment of psychiatric disorders: Compendium 2002 by
Washington DC: APA, 2002
pp. 1-28
ISBN: 0890423202
CID: 3028

Treatment of sexually abused children and adolescents

Chapter by: Dickstein, Leah J; Hinz, Lisa D; Eth, Spencer
in: American Psychiatric Press review of psychiatry, Vol by Tasman, Allan; Goldfinger, Stephen M [Eds]
xvii, 675 pp, 1991
pp. 345-366
ISBN: 0-88048-436-5
CID: 5402