PsychEd Episode 17: The Psychiatric Interview with Dr. Juveria Zaheer

PsychEd: educational psychiatry podcast - A podcast by PsychEd

Categories:

Welcome to PsychEd, the psychiatry podcast for medical learners, by medical learners. In this episode of our miniseries on psychiatric skills, we review the core content areas of a psychiatric assessment and look at techniques to improve interviewing efficiency, accuracy and alliance building. Our expert for this episode is Dr. Juveria Zaheer, a clinician-scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, and an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, in Toronto, ON.    Learning Objectives: By the end of the episode you, the learner, should... Have a clear understanding of the goals of a complete psychiatric interview and the general structure and content that should be covered Feel comfortable to begin to use techniques that will help you conduct a professional, compassionate, empathic, efficient, and accurate interview Be familiar with techniques you can use to facilitate information gathering in more challenging interviews  Episode Timepoints 3:15 - Purpose of the psychiatric interview  6:30 - First content areas of the interview; introduction, ID, RFR, CC, HPI, ROS, Past Psych Hx 19:00 - Techniques and Strategies for Organized and Efficient Psychiatric ROS 26:00 - Details of Past Psychiatric History  29:30 - Past Medical History 31:00 - Substance Use History 33:30 - Medications 34:20 - Family Psych History 36:25 - Personal and Developmental History (Content & Process discussion) 44:00 - Commonly missed areas including Legal/Forensic history 45:00 - Shift from content to process discussion “how to best manage a psychiatric interview” 49:00 - Self-care and monitoring  52:00 - Building rapport, therapeutic alliance, empathy  53:30 - Alex and Lucy reflect on their growth as interviewers over 4 years in residency  73:00 - Managing challenging interviews References and Resources1) Shea, S. C. (1998). Psychiatric Interviewing E-Book: The Art of Understanding: A Practical Guide for Psychiatrists, Psychologists, Counselors, Social Workers, Nurses, and Other Mental Health Professionals 2) Carlat, D. J. (2016). The psychiatric interview: A practical guide. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.   CPA Note: The views expressed in this podcast do not necessarily reflect those of the Canadian Psychiatric Association.   For more PsychEd, follow us on Twitter (@psychedpodcast) and Facebook. You can provide feedback by email at [email protected]; For more information visit our website: psychedpodcast.org

Visit the podcast's native language site