About John's Project

House: South

Topic: Psychiatry

EQ: What are the best ways to becoming a successful psychiatrist?

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Blog #13: Answer 1

 EQ: What are the best ways to becoming a successful psychiatrist?


1) What is answer 1 to your EQ? Be specific in your answer and write it like a thesis statement.


Always conduct your business with a sense of empathy, humbleness, and humility–professionally and personally.


2) What possible evidence do you have to support this answer?


-Through my interviews, I  was able to come much closer to answering my EQ. I learned from my interview with Dr. Owen K Tsuchiya that “It’s [psychiatry] uniquely personal and yet detached; it’s a curious balance." My service learning mentor chose the field of psychiatry because it is such a humanistic and personal sub-specialty of medicine. He explained to me that in order to succeed in psychiatry, you can't treat your patient from a strictly scientific point of view; you must be empathetic to truly understand a mental illness.


-Through my endeavors in my service learning and research, I took great strides towards answering my EQ. I learned that a successful psychiatrist should have awareness that a psychiatric diagnosis is the most unique way of diagnosis because it is so subjective -- there is no definitive diagnostic blood or imaging (CT scan, MRI, etc) test that can confirm a diagnosis.  Knowing this, a psychiatrist should always know that no matter how confident they are of their initial diagnosis of a patient, the diagnosis will always be provisional and subject to change. You must also be able to consider the fact that many common treatment don’t really suit a particular patient.
Personal humility, I have learned, is practiced when a psychiatrist approaches patient with the constant awareness that the patient, even in his worst stage of mental illness, is an equal to him as a human being. "That but for an accident of birth in a family with different genetic risks, and different social, economic or cultural background, he could very well be suffering from any of the illnesses that afflict his patients."
3. What source(s) did you find this evidence and/or answer?
Service learning at Kaiser LAMC and with Psychiatrist Owen Tsuchiya, and interviews with Dr. Shahin and Dr. Tsuchiya.
 


Thursday, January 12, 2012

Blog #12: Service Learning

Q:Where are you working for your service learning?

A: For my service learning I am working at Kaiser Los Angeles Medical Center: Emergency Room. The head honcho in charge of my service learning is:
 
Kathy McIntire
Director, Volunteer & Chaplain Services
Kaiser Permanente, LAMC

Q: What is your contact?
A: Phone: 323.783.8991

Q: Services performed?

A: For my service learning I shadow doctors who do their rounds in the Emergency Room. So I basically follow them as they go from room-to-room. By shadowing these professionals, i learn many things such as medical procedures, techniques when dealing with patients, and I am even allowed to do hands on medical assistance since i received my basic first aid training from Red Cross. That means that I am allowed to take blood pressure and blood oxygen, place EKG machines on patients (and decipher the patients condition), and I help with bandaging. I watch as Doctors and nurses do surgical procedures in the ER (I have seen 4 penile catheters being inserted), and i learn how and why each procedure is done. Other than that, I chat with doctors, nurses, and EMT's and get a basic feel of the medical and helping profession.

Friday, January 6, 2012

ESLR Blog

Through this senior project, I believe I have grown significantly on many levels. The skills that I have been gained can be described through Ipoly's ESSLR's listed below.

1) Effective learner: Through my 12th grade project, I have demonstrated great skills in learning effectively. I had to take responsibility for my own personal learning such as good quality research, finding a service learning mentor, and learning independently for the sake of bettering my understanding for the world around me.

2) Effective communicator: Through senior project, I have bettered myself in the ways of communication. From my 5 minute presentation to my two different interviews with professional, I have gained valuable skills in terms of being an effective communicator.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Blog #11: Third Interview Questions

1) What form of treatment is best in the treatment of patients with mental illness?  
2) "What are the best ways to becoming a successful psychiatrist?" (EQ)
3) What is a "rough day at work" for you?
4)What influenced you to become a psychiatrist?
5)What makes a bad psychiatrist?
6) Do you need above average "people skills" in order to succeed as a psychiatrist?
7) Can you acquire or improve these skills over time through training or practice?
8) Do you believe that the pharmaceutical industry is a corrupt, capitalist industry?
9) What do you say to those that say that psychiatrists are just "pill pushers?"
10) Do you treat a certain demographic of patients?