“Most psychiatrists
are working in toxic practice environments that were designed by business
administrators and politicians. As a result, psychiatrists are expected to see
large numbers of patients for limited periods of time and spend additional
hours performing tasks that are basically designed by business administration
politicians and have no clinical value.” ~ George Dawson, MD
With the exception of those who are in “concierge”
practices who do not take insurance and treat only those who can pay
significant fees, very few psychiatrists—even in private practice—are doing any
psychotherapy at all—other than being supportive with their patients. As
mentioned in Dr. Dawson’s quote, some don’t do it because, simply put, they aren’t
given the necessary time. They have to see several patients per hour, and are also too busy filling out completely useless symptom
checklists on electronic medical records.
Others are not interested in
psychosocial issues and see everything in the DSM, the profession’s diagnostic
manual, as a brain disease in need of medication – even “adjustment disorders,”
which by their very definition have strictly psychological and social
etiologies and do not require medication. Still others won’t do therapy because it
doesn’t pay well. (Even psychologists are doing less and less long-term psychotherapy
because insurance companies will not authorize it and keep ratcheting down
fees, and they have been advocating for prescribing privileges. However, that
is not the subject of this particular post).
Medical and psychiatric newspapers are
filled with stories of physician “burnout” - being exhausted or depressed over
their unpleasant work situation. Business and insurance companies work hard to
convince these cases that the problem resides with their stress tolerance,
rather than with their stressful working situation, and that they need to
practice more mindfulness.
Meanwhile, hospital beds for the
chronically mentally ill – those who do have actual brain diseases and are in desperate
need of medication – have started to disappear. Along with that, the Community Mental Health Centers which once treated them with close follow up have been defunded by the states and the federal government. These two developments have resulted in many
of these people living on the streets or languishing in jails, which
have become de facto mental hospitals.
So who’s to blame for all this? Surely
tax phobic politicians and greedy business interests share the lion’s share of
the responsibility. Dr. Dawkins in his blog, from which the quote at the start
of the post comes, seems to think that psychiatrists have no responsibility
here, because they have all been forced to conform to the whims of businessmen with
zero knowledge of medicine dictating how they should practice. But don't they
really?
I think one of the main problems with the
psychiatrists is that many of them are really a bunch of wimps who are too friggin’
chicken to band together and say “no” to their task masters. Of course, a lone
doctor who tries to do that by himself or herself can be fired or made an
example of. I recall my own experience at the VA when I had the nerve to
protest in the patient’s chart that I had to prescribe a drug I knew would not
work for a patient with both chronic pain and depression, before I could
prescribe the more expensive medication which had been shown to be the most
effective for that (while the rheumatologists could use the more expensive drug
first line). I was offered an “anger management” seminar to treat me because I
was angry that veterans were being screwed!
But can the business interests fire every one of their docs if they all refused to go along? Hell no!
There is a national shortage of
psychiatrists. When you are in demand like that, they need you way more than
you need them. In fact, as a member of the professional networking site LinkedIn,
I have been asked to be part of their network by 22 different recruiters in just the
last two months alone! And that was pretty much representative of the numbers of
recruiters trying to snag me for a position every two months for the last
several years. BTW, my profile clearly
states that I am retired.
What a bunch of wimps these doctors are. You’d think it would take a lot of
willpower and self esteem to get into and through medical school and residency
training, and it does. But
doctors-in-training are also bullied, hazed, and forced to submit to the
medical school hierarchy even when they know that their superiors are in the
wrong.
Until it was prohibited a few years ago, medical interns routinely worked 36 hours straight several times per month. (This was justified by the powers that be as being necessary because, they said, if there is an epidemic, doctors have to be able to work until they drop. The only problem with this rationalization was that the last major epidemic in the United States was the flu epidemic of 1918. By the time the next one rolls around, the doctors will be out of practice for 36 hour shifts, not to mention out of shape. No, this practice was hazing, pure and simple).
Until it was prohibited a few years ago, medical interns routinely worked 36 hours straight several times per month. (This was justified by the powers that be as being necessary because, they said, if there is an epidemic, doctors have to be able to work until they drop. The only problem with this rationalization was that the last major epidemic in the United States was the flu epidemic of 1918. By the time the next one rolls around, the doctors will be out of practice for 36 hour shifts, not to mention out of shape. No, this practice was hazing, pure and simple).
In other words, doctors are trained to
act like sheep, and after they finish training many still act like sheep. Psychiatrists are no exception. How
irritating. So my answer is yes, we psychiatrists are indeed part of the
problem.
Hi Dr Allen,
ReplyDeleteI recently came across your blog and appreciate your perspective. I am a psychiatric NP as well as a person who experiences anxiety and depression, so I appreciate both your professional expertise as well as your healthy skepticism and honest appraisal regarding the pharmaceutical industry and some of the professionals who work in the industry. It's nice to read a perspective that isn't 100% meds are the answer but also isn't meds are the devil, and it seems hard to find that middle perspective these days. I will keep reading, thanks for posting!
I love your writings. You put the funny into psychiatry and mental disorders. I have broke out laughing while reading many of your articles. I am a fan of yours!
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