Rural Western North
Carolinians should have better access to mental health support over the next
few years thanks to a new, state-funded Psychiatry Residency at MAHEC that
started on July 1, 2017.
“The majority of counties
in our region don’t have any psychiatrists,” says Dr. Stephen Buie, MAHEC Psychiatry
Residency Program Director. “Primary care physicians try to fill the gap, but
we have a shortage of these physicians in WNC too.”
MAHEC’s new residency
program is an innovative approach to meeting the needs of high-risk, medically
underserved populations like ours. All 16 WNC counties have been designated as
Health Professional Shortage Areas. More than half are listed in the “most
distressed” category with higher-than-average rates of substance use disorders
and suicide.
Unlike traditional
residency programs, MAHEC residents will spend much of their clinical time consulting
with physicians and patients in primary care settings. The program includes
instruction in primary care medicine to ensure residents understand the
day-to-day challenges and constraints these physicians face.
Many residency
programs provide residents with only one 6-week rotation in a primary care
setting over the course of their 4-year residency. MAHEC’s program uses a
longitudinal approach in which residents spend 2-3 years in primary care
settings where they can develop meaningful relationships with primary care
providers and their patients.
MAHEC’s residency program
is designed to train psychiatrists who can collaborate and consult with primary
care physicians who are often the only doctors available to provide mental
health care in underserved rural areas. The
follow up rate for psychiatric care is better when it can be provided in a
primary care setting, notes Buie.
“The only way we
are going to solve our bigger, system-wide challenges is to work
collaboratively with primary care physicians to expand mental health
resources,” says Thomas Campbell, MD, first-year psychiatry resident at MAHEC.
“I love rural
communities and want to practice in one,” shares Campbell, who grew up in a
small town in the eastern part of Washington State. “It made sense to choose a
residency where I could get rural experience.”
MAHEC’s partnership
with hospitals, treatment centers and medical practices throughout the region
will provide residents with a wide variety of experiences working with adults,
adolescents, and children in inpatient and outpatient settings, treatment
centers, and rural primary care practices across WNC, where mental health support
is needed most.
“I didn’t realize
there was such a shortage of psychiatrists in this area,” explains first-year
resident Sheritta Carmichael, MD, who recently relocated from Georgia. “The
primary care physicians I’ve been working with are ecstatic to have someone to
consult with on their more challenging cases.”
Carmichael likes
that MAHEC’s residency emphasizes talk therapy not just medications and provides
training in a variety of therapeutic approaches including cognitive behavioral
therapy, interpersonal therapy, dialectical behavior therapy, and psychodynamic
psychotherapy. She also loves MAHEC’s community-based emphasis.
“Many of the
programs I looked at seemed to be more concerned with making a big name for
their medical school or hospital,” shares Carmichael. “Here the emphasis is on helping our patients
and letting our reputation grow from that.”
Historically, at least 50% of physicians stay
and practice within a 100-mile radius after completing their residency, which should
benefit WNC communities for many years to come.
For more information about the new Psychiatry
Residency at MAHEC, please visit www.mahec.net/psychiatry.
MAHEC
was established in 1974 and is a leader in healthcare, education and
innovation. Located in Asheville, MAHEC serves a 16-county region in Western
North Carolina. It is the largest Area
Health Education Center in North Carolina, which
evolved to address national and state concerns with the supply, retention and
quality of health professionals. MAHEC’s mission is to train the next
generation of healthcare professionals for Western North Carolina through
quality healthcare, innovative education, and best practice models that can be
replicated nationally. For more information on MAHEC, visit www.mahec.net.
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