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Resident Editorial Board
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
Resident Editorial Board for Number 7, Issue 1, 1989 issue of Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry.
In The Beginning...Phylogeny In Freud's Overview Of The Transference Neuroses: A Review-Essay, Emanuel E. Garcia, Md
In The Beginning...Phylogeny In Freud's Overview Of The Transference Neuroses: A Review-Essay, Emanuel E. Garcia, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
A PHYLOGENETIC FANTASY
I. Grubrich-Simitis, editor
A. Hoffer and P. T. Hoffer, translators
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass.
1987
Book Review: A Portrait Of The Analyst, Michael B. Knable, D.O.
Book Review: A Portrait Of The Analyst, Michael B. Knable, D.O.
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
A MIND OF HER OWN: THE LIFE OF KAREN HORNEY
Susan Quinn
New York , Summit Books
Book Review: Lessons Of War, Ronald J. Koshes, Md
Book Review: Lessons Of War, Ronald J. Koshes, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
MILITARY PSYCHIATRY: A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Richard A. Gabriel, editor
New York, The Greenwood Press 1986, 170 pages
In Response: The Ideal Psychiatry Residency Training Program, Allan Tasman, Md
In Response: The Ideal Psychiatry Residency Training Program, Allan Tasman, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
There is little to be added in the way of specifics to James Deming's review of the necessary ingredients for an ideal Residency Training Program (1). He not only reviews the specific issues which must be addressed regarding the "nuts and bolts" of training, but also emphasizes the need for phase specificity of both clinical and didactic experiences and the need to view residency training from a developmental perspective. Rather than comment specifically on the points Deming raises, I would like to address other ingredients in residency training which are to be valued in the ideal program.
The Role Of The Resident On The Psychiatric Inpatient Unit: A Systems Perspective, E. Michael Kahn, Md
The Role Of The Resident On The Psychiatric Inpatient Unit: A Systems Perspective, E. Michael Kahn, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
A resident in psychiatry is customarily assigned to inpatient duty for the first year of training. The resident's tasks in this setting are complex, and he' is rarely prepared to perform all of them well (1,2,3). The stress on the resident in this situation is great. Most often, these challenges and their mastery are discussed in terms of intrapsychic conflicts; the traditional remedy is the assignment of a supervisor. Little consideration has be en given to the interpersonal and systems matrices in which these events occur, and the coping techniques and conceptual tools which the resident may use to meet …
Uses Of Carbamazepine For Psychiatric Disorders: A Review, Edward Kim, Md
Uses Of Carbamazepine For Psychiatric Disorders: A Review, Edward Kim, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
Carbamazepine, first synthesized in 1953, was initially marketed in Europe as an anticonvulsant. In 1971 Dalby reported the drug's psychotropic effects, most notably mood stabilization, in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) (1). Other psychiatric applications such as the treatment of affectively and behaviorally labile patients are being explored. These studies are yielding data relevant to the treatment and understanding of the neurobiology of mental illness. For this reason, familiarity with carbamazepine is becoming increasingly important to psychiatrists.
Dysmorphophobia In A Diastrophic Dwarf: A Psychiatry-Dermatology Liaison Approach, Donald J. Kushon, Md
Dysmorphophobia In A Diastrophic Dwarf: A Psychiatry-Dermatology Liaison Approach, Donald J. Kushon, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
This is a case study of a 30-year-old male diastrophic dwarf who complained of hypertrichosis on his back and nose of 3 years duration. He had no previous psychiatric history, and although the distortion he described on his back was not apparent to others, there was a minimal amount of dark hair growth on his nose. He had unresolved conflicts concerning his disproportionate arms and legs and had sought surgical correction for many years from many orthopedic surgeons to no avail. After a diagnosis of dysmorphophobia was made by a psychiatric consultant, weekly visits with the dermatologist were arranged for …
Transparency And Termination In Group Psychotherapy: A Resident's Perspective, Althea Donovan, Md
Transparency And Termination In Group Psychotherapy: A Resident's Perspective, Althea Donovan, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
Termination has been seen as a difficult and complex process in group psychotherapy. Although termination of group members has be en explored, little is written on the subject of the therapist's termination; i.e., in the case of a group which continues after the therapist departs. This circumstance must occur frequently, however, especially since 91% of psychiatric programs, (Yalom (1985) citing Pinney) have at least one year of group psychotherapy training. This implies that group therapist termination must occur on a regular basis at some training programs. Even so, there are no specific guidelines or more general exploration of an inexperienced …
Psychotherapy And Mental Retardation: What's The Use?, Jolyn Welsh Wagner, Md
Psychotherapy And Mental Retardation: What's The Use?, Jolyn Welsh Wagner, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
The lack of adequate treatment opportunities for mentally retarded people with emotional disturbances has been well documented (11,14,9,16,8,2 1,10,19). A high prevalence of psychopathology, estimated at 4- 5 times that of the non-retarded population (8,10) identifies a population extremely vulnerable to emotional problems. Although advocates from many disciplines, including psychiatry, (15) have worked diligently since the early 20th Century to eliminate massive institutionalization, sterilization, and isolation of the retarded from society's defensive arsenal, the mental healthfield, especially psychiatry, has failed to meet current needs with appropriate clinical services.
The Missed Appointment: A Resident's Journal Through Activity To Introspection, Marcia J. Kaplan, Md
The Missed Appointment: A Resident's Journal Through Activity To Introspection, Marcia J. Kaplan, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
There was one experience during my medical school psychiatry rotation that I could not forget. In a classroom on the cardiology ward, I listened, transfixed like a child at a magic show, as a psychiatrist interviewed a man who was recovering from a heart attack. Initially the man denied any stresses in his life that might have affected his health, but as he went on, a different story unfolded. He spoke of his recent retirement, his wife's dissatisfactions and hostility, his disappointment with his children, his growing sense of failure and futility, and the recurring tightness in his chest that …
The Potential Role Of Psychiatry Residents' Councils, J. Thomas Pichot, Md
The Potential Role Of Psychiatry Residents' Councils, J. Thomas Pichot, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
There are numerous books and articles within the scientific literature that deal with issues of training psychiatry residents and the characteristics of that milieu. Those authors that deal primarily with stress usually discuss the sources of the stress and the resultant behavioral changes that are manifested by the trainees. Typically, are relatively small portion of the discussion is devoted to how these problems are, or might be, addressed. This paper, while not itself intended to be an overview of stress in residency; will concentrate on a literature review of some specific aspects of the residency training process, primarily role definition …
The Physical Examination In Psychiatry, Scott Patten, Md
The Physical Examination In Psychiatry, Scott Patten, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
The physical examination is a neglected aspect of the psychiatric assessment. For example, a survey of ninety-eight practicing psychiatrists, conducted by Patterson (1) in 1978, found that none of them routinely performed physical examinations on their patients. More than one-half of these psychiatrists reported that they no longer felt competent to do so. One situation in which psychiatrists do often perform physicals is while admitting patients to hospital. However, the quality of these examinations is often poor (2 ,3).
An indifferent attitude toward the physical examination has persisted in psychiatry despite numerous publications emphasizing the importance of medical assessment (2-8). …
Some Comments On The Concept Of The Ego-Ideal, Gurmeet Kanwal, Md
Some Comments On The Concept Of The Ego-Ideal, Gurmeet Kanwal, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
In a review of the literature on the ego-ideal my impression has been that this concept has been placed in the position of a stepchild of the structural model of the mind, falling somewhere between the ego and the super-ego, and yet remaining loosely linked to both. Authors such as Jacobson (1954), Hartmann and Lowenstein (1962), Sandler (1963), and Schafer (196 7), have regarded the ego-ideal as a substructure of the super-ego. Others like Annie Reich (1953, 1954), Lampl de-Groot (1947), Peter Bios (1972), and Chasseguet-Smirgel (1975), have tended to view the two as being separate structures.
The purpose of …
Resident Editorial Board
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
List of Resident Editorial Board for Volume 6, Number 2, 1988 issue of Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry.
A Personal Journey, Shimon Waldfogel, Md
A Personal Journey, Shimon Waldfogel, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
MAUS A SURVIVOR'S TALE
Art Spiegelman
New York Pantheon Books 1986.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Reconsidered, Christopher J. Mcdougle, Md
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Reconsidered, Christopher J. Mcdougle, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE DISORDERS: THEORY & MANAGEMENT
Edited by Michael A. Jenike, Lee Baer, William E. Minichiello
Littleton, Mass, PSG Publishing Company, In c.1986. 196 pages, $24.50
In Response: The Usefulness Of Neutrality, Paul A. Dewald, Md
In Response: The Usefulness Of Neutrality, Paul A. Dewald, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
The term "neutrality" as used in psychoanalysis has multiple meanings, each carrying major emotional significance. In that sense "neutrality" is a term which evokes the metaphor of the "Six Blind Men and the Elephant."
In her paper, "The Usefulness of Neutrality," Julia Jones Zawatsky uses the term to express a variety of issues related to a complex and difficult clinical situation. Neutrality includes the therapist taking an equidistant position from the various forces involved in the compromise formation used to solve psychic conflict. She also uses the term to acknowledge the multiple facets of the therapist's conscious and unconscious …
Brief Communication: A Resident Elective Abroad, P. Conlon, M.B.
Brief Communication: A Resident Elective Abroad, P. Conlon, M.B.
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
Elective study abroad during a residency is unusual, although this is not uncommon for medical students and fellows. There may be several reasons for this. Resident training programs are structured to last three or four years in North America and traditionally are under the auspices of specific university departments. This is a relatively short period of training compared to European countries, and consequently there tends to be less flexibility, and therefore less mobility, in training. Residencies also tend to be a combination of education, training and service requirements, and as programs have a specific allocation of positions for each year …
A Psychiatric Perspective On Erectile Dysfunction, Syed Ahmed, Md
A Psychiatric Perspective On Erectile Dysfunction, Syed Ahmed, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
Erectile impotence is a common family health problem, with exact incidence unknown, that adversely affects both men and their female partners. It is classified as "inhibited sexual excitement" in DSM-III and is defined as the inability to attain or maintain a penile erection until completion of the sexual act. It had been stated formerly, without supporting evidence, that 90% of erectile disorders were "psychogenic. " Today, however, only about one-third are so classified (1). In Kinsey's (2) series, the prevalence of impotence was less than 2% until the age of 40 years; it increased to 6-7% at age 55 …
The Use Of Maintenance Electroconvulsive Therapy For Relapsing Depression, Ted A. Matzen, Md, Ronald L. Martin, Md, Tim J. Watt, Md, Douglas K. Reilly, Md
The Use Of Maintenance Electroconvulsive Therapy For Relapsing Depression, Ted A. Matzen, Md, Ronald L. Martin, Md, Tim J. Watt, Md, Douglas K. Reilly, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
It is generally accepted that electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective treatment of major depressive episodes in patients with both unipolar and bipolar affective disorders (1). Yet, repeated relapse of depression occurs in some patients, even with vigorous maintenance therapy on antidepressant drugs (2-4). This often necessitates rehospitalization for ECT. In past decades, several authors suggested that periodic outpatient ECT was efficacious as a maintenance therapy (5-7). Recently, maintenance ECT was recommended by Fink (8), and Maletzky (9), but barely mentioned in two reviews (10,11), and discouraged in another (12) . However, a recent nationwide survey has disclosed that such …
The Effect Of Acute And Chronic Ethanol On Dopamine Turnover In The Caudate Nucleus Of The Rat, Rif S. El-Mallakh, Md
The Effect Of Acute And Chronic Ethanol On Dopamine Turnover In The Caudate Nucleus Of The Rat, Rif S. El-Mallakh, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
It is generally believed that acute and chronic ethanol (EtOH) administration alters the activity of catecholamines in the brain, however, the specific effects of EtOH on the dopaminergic system are disputed (I). Acute EtOH administration has been variously reported to decrease (2,3), increase (4,5), and cause no change (6 ,7) in dopamine (DA) synthesis and turnover. Likewise, chronic EtOH treatments have been reported to decrease (2,8) and increase (9, 10) DA synthesis and turnover. Many of these apparently conflicting results are explained by the use of different animal models (rat (2, 3,6,7,10), rabbit (6), and mouse (4,5,9)), different methods of …
Bioethical Issues In The Management Of Gender Dysphoria, George R. Brown, Md
Bioethical Issues In The Management Of Gender Dysphoria, George R. Brown, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
The term "gender dysphoria" ( I) describes a heterogeneous group of individuals who express varying degrees of dissatisfaction with their anatomic gender (hence "gender dysphoria"), and the desire to possess the secondary sexual characteristics of the opposite sex. Only a minority o f these patients can be considered on the extreme end of a spectrum of subjective dissatisfaction with assigned anatomy and societally sanctioned gender role (i.e., "transsexual"). The number of such patients presenting to psychiatric clinics has greatly increased subsequent to the 1966 publication of Harry Benjamin's seminal work, The Transsexual Phenomenon (2), and extensive media coverage of individual …
Presentation And Differential Diagnosis Of Hyponatremia In A Schizophrenic Adult Male, Michael J. Sedlacek, Md
Presentation And Differential Diagnosis Of Hyponatremia In A Schizophrenic Adult Male, Michael J. Sedlacek, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
The diagnosis o f hyponatremia can prove to be a challenging task since initial symptomatology may mimic psychiatric illness. Accurate diagnosis and subsequent treatment is essential as this disorder can progress to seizures, coma and death if not recognized. Neither the true incidence nor the etiology of hyponatremia in the schizophrenic population has been established, but a definite association has been shown to exist. A recent retrospective study involving over 20,000 hospital admissions found a 5.8% incidence of hyponatremia in the schizophrenic population as compared with a 0.36% incidence for all admissions (1). The following case illustrates the features of …
Accepting Dependence, Julia Zawatsky, Md
Accepting Dependence, Julia Zawatsky, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
There is an increasing emphasis on short term treatment in Psychiatry. Short term treatment may not provide the time necessary to permit the regression and foster the dependence necessary for successful treatment.
Supervising Residents Treating Multiproblem Patients: Transformations Of Therapeutic Narcissism, Susan J. Olson, Md, Valerie A. Westhead, Md, Jean M. Goodwin, Md, Mph
Supervising Residents Treating Multiproblem Patients: Transformations Of Therapeutic Narcissism, Susan J. Olson, Md, Valerie A. Westhead, Md, Jean M. Goodwin, Md, Mph
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
While much of the literature on psychotherapy supervision focuses on teaching psychotherapeutic techniques, most residents and supervisors realize that there is another agenda: making the often drained and narcissistically injured therapist feel better. The beginning therapist's self-esteem is especially vulnerable to injury because most psychiatric residents have "heavily committed themselves to a field of endeavor for which ... they are relatively untested" (I). Coupled with this, they are often assigned the most difficult and demanding patients, those with narcissistic disorders who are unable to soothe themselves. Both Searles (2) and Balint (3) describe the barrage of counter transferences usually experienced …
Resident Editorial Board
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
List of Resident Editorial Board for Volume 6, Number 1, 1998 of Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry.
Book Review: The Soft Voice Of Reason, Emanuel E. Garcia, Md
Book Review: The Soft Voice Of Reason, Emanuel E. Garcia, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
FREUD AS AN EXPERT WITNESS
K. R. Eissler
Madison, Connecticut, International Universities Press 1986, 449 pages.
Book Review: Towards A Practical Guide To The Therapy Of The Borderline Patient, Gregory B. Sullivan, Md
Book Review: Towards A Practical Guide To The Therapy Of The Borderline Patient, Gregory B. Sullivan, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
EFFECTIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH BORDERLINE PATIENTS:CASE STUDIES
Robert J. Waldinger, M.D .John G. Gunderson, M.D.
New York, Macmillan 1987, 232 pages
Book Review: Adapting Psychotherapy For An Underserved Population, Lorna Clark-Rubin, Md
Book Review: Adapting Psychotherapy For An Underserved Population, Lorna Clark-Rubin, Md
Jefferson Journal of Psychiatry
PSYCHOTHERAPY IN THE COMMUNITY:A PSYCHOANALYTICALLY BASED GUIDE TO THE TREATMENT OF THE ADULT
Eric Lager, M.D., Israel Zwerling, M.D.with Joseph Slap, M.D., Samuel Bullock, M.D. Warren Smith, M.D.Warren H. Green, Inc., St. Louis
1983. pp. 190.