Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T05:36:57.176Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Undergraduate learning in psychiatry: can we prepare our future medical graduates better?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2020

Vincent Russell*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
Linda O’Rourke
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
Kieran C. Murphy
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
*
*Address for correspondence: Prof Vincent Russell, Department of Psychiatry, RCSI Education and Research Centre, Smurfit Building, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin 9, Ireland. (Email: vincentrussell@rcsi.ie)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Irish medical schools attract an increasingly diverse student population and produce graduates who will practise in many parts of the world. There are particular implications in this for the planning and delivery of the undergraduate psychiatry curriculum. In all countries, mental health services struggle for equitable resourcing, and mental health care within general medical services remains relatively neglected. The traditional undergraduate psychiatry offering has been justifiably criticised for being excessively oriented towards secondary care when the vast majority of medical graduates will pursue careers in primary care or in specialties other than psychiatry. Recently published articles in the Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine address the current challenges and opportunities in providing an undergraduate experience that better prepares students for the mental health aspects of medical practice in a global context. We summarise and discuss these contributions and the recent Royal College of Psychiatrists publication Choose Psychiatry: Guidance for Medical Schools.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© College of Psychiatrists of Ireland 2020

Medical education has become a global industry. Established medical schools in high-income countries, including Ireland, have benefitted from the demand for undergraduate training from countries with recently developed economies. This has enabled our universities to mitigate the impact of cuts in third-level public funding and, in some instances, to establish international campuses. The associated emphasis on recruitment within a competitive international market can be seen as an economic necessity. However, in addition to ensuring that students have acquired essential clinical skills and professional competencies, medical schools should also be socially accountable in producing graduates who are likely to contribute to redressing the enduring problem of global healthcare disparities (Woolard, Reference Woolard2006). There are particular implications in this for those of us involved in planning and delivering the undergraduate curriculum in psychiatry.

The enormous societal burden associated with mental disorders has received belated recognition and the recent addition of mental disorders to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals 2030 is a positive development (Izutsu et al., Reference Izutsu, Tsutsumi, Minas, Thornicroft, Patel and Ito2015). Meanwhile, however, countries from which we draw our student population are at various stages of evolution in addressing the historical neglect of mental illness in both primary and secondary care. Major deficits persist in the available numbers of psychiatrists, while mental health training of front-line health professionals remains minimal or absent, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) (Thornicroft et al., Reference Thornicroft, Deb and Henderson2016). Only a small minority of our medical graduates will pursue a career in psychiatry. However, many will work in geographic regions in which people with mental illness experience particularly high levels of stigma and discrimination, sometimes within healthcare settings and sometimes in the absence of mental health legislation to protect human rights (Ito et al., Reference Ito, Setoya and Suzuki2012). Faced with these challenges, the undergraduate experience in psychiatry should nurture the development of a core professional identity in which values of patient-centred care, equity, and social justice are internalised.

Several recent articles published in the Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine (IJPM) dedicated to the medical education in psychiatry, and including several articles dedicated to the undergraduate curriculum seem timely, all the more so in light of the recent publication by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, “Choose Psychiatry- Guidance for Medical Schools” (RCPSYCH, 2019).

Byrne et al.’s comparison of the methods of delivery and assessment of undergraduate psychiatry across the six medical schools in the Republic of Ireland presents a useful national profile (Byrne et al. Reference Byrne, Murphy, O’Rourke, Cotter, Murphy, Guerandel, Meagher, Sweeney, Gill, Campbell, McDonald and Hallahan2016). It reveals certain strengths, including the adoption of newer pedagogies such as small-group teaching and the use of e-learning platforms, reflecting the natural preference of current students as digital natives. However, there is persisting evidence that interest in psychiatry as a career choice often decays in the final medical year (Lyons, Reference Lyons2013, Hor et al., Reference Hor, Russell, Vasudevan and O’Brien2020). In this context, the authors rightly emphasise the importance of the spiral integration of learning and assessment in psychiatry from year one through to graduation. Here they found significant variation among the six medical schools and notable individual weaknesses. Integrating psychiatry is key, in large part, because the vast majority of students will not choose psychiatry as a career. They must be able, therefore, to recognise and respond to psychiatric presentations at an appropriate level in their day-to-day clinical work, irrespective of the setting in which they practise. The traditional undergraduate psychiatry curriculum has been criticised in the past for delivering content that has limited salience outside specialist psychiatric settings (Lake, Reference Lake2008). More recent evidence from focus groups among UK medical students revealed the widely held view that there remains an insufficient emphasis on the early introduction of psychiatry and its integration across the curriculum (RCPSYCH, 2019). Efforts to redesign the undergraduate curriculum to better integrate psychiatry appear to improve the students’ learning experience as well as their attitudes to the specialty (de Cates et al., Reference De Cates, De Cates, Singh and Marwaha2019). Similarly, the teaching of brief clinical assessment methods for common mental disorders and opportunities to learn psychiatry in non-specialist healthcare settings have been shown to be viable and to provide added educational value (Russell et al., Reference Russell, Clarke, Loo, Bharathy, Vasudevan, Byrne and Smith2018).

Byrne et al. also acknowledge that the psychiatry clerkship exerts a major influence on the individual medical student’s future attitudes to people with mental illness and on the likelihood of considering psychiatry as a career (Byrne et al. Reference Byrne, Murphy, O’Rourke, Cotter, Murphy, Guerandel, Meagher, Sweeney, Gill, Campbell, McDonald and Hallahan2016). Their survey highlights the need for greater understanding of the hidden curriculum within the service settings in which our students are placed, the impact of which is not always positive. Agyapong et al., in their related study from Ghana, address the particular challenge of attracting medical students to a career in psychiatry in LMICs (Agyapong et al. Reference Agyapong, Owusu-Antwi, Ritchie, Agyapong-Opoku, Khinda, Hrabok, Ohene, Ulzen and Osei2019). Their findings mirror those of previous surveys in LMICs, suggesting that stigma per se may have less influence in reducing the appeal of psychiatry than the prospect of relatively lower incomes and poorer working conditions endured by psychiatrists (Kumar et al., Reference Kumar, Mitra, Nagarajan and Poudel2014).

The article by Mc Manus et al. provides a complementary perspective on the student learning experience at the emotional level (McManus et al. Reference McManus, Killeen, Hartnett, Fitzgerald and Murphy2019). While reflective learning is now recognised as an essential lifelong activity for physicians, reflective writing predominates at an undergraduate level and elicits a mixed reaction from students (Birden and Usherwood, Reference Birden and Usherwood2016). McManus et al. describe an initiative whereby fourth year medical students actively participated in a Balint group during their psychiatry clerkship. Their qualitative evaluation suggested positive effects in promoting student empathy and increased self-awareness. These findings demonstrate that reflecting in an interactive peer group can be viable and well received by students. If adequately resourced and supported, Balint groups, already well established within post-graduate psychiatric training, could enhance undergraduate reflective learning as an alternative or in addition to reflective writing (Omer and McCarthy, Reference Omer and Mccarthy2010).

A further opportunity to improve the undergraduate psychiatry learning experience lies in the involvement of patients and carers as educators. In their comprehensive review, Miller et al. present the theoretical argument that higher levels of learning, as articulated in Bloom’s taxonomy, are more likely to be attained when the teacher has had personal experience of mental illness (Miller et al. Reference Miller, Pradeep, Mohamad, Izmeth, Reynolds and Gulati2016). Their article summarises the limited research in the area and usefully addresses the inherent ethical and administrative challenges. The authors’ generally positive conclusions serve as a prompt for curriculum planners to introduce and evaluate service user-facilitated learning experiences within undergraduate psychiatry (Feeney et al., Reference Feeney, Jordan and Mccorran2013) (Bharathy et al., Reference Bharathy, Foo and Russell2016).

In the introduction to Choose Psychiatry: Guidance for Medical Schools, the Dean of the RCPsych recalls how she was inspired to pursue psychiatry as a career by the teachers she encountered and the learning placements she experienced as a medical student. Many of us who also chose psychiatry will have similarly positive memories. The Guidance was based on the questionnaire surveys and qualitative findings from focus groups with medical students and information sought from faculty leads in medical schools across the UK. It sets out to advise medical schools on how to enhance medical students’ experience and identifies four key areas for action: 1. That medical schools should review their psychiatry curriculum to ensure it reflects students’ experience and integrates psychiatry into the curriculum as early as possible. 2. That in providing high-quality clinical placements, feedback on the student experience should inform curriculum design. 3. That the profile of psychiatrists in undergraduate medical education should be raised. 4. That medical schools should design and implement a range of enrichment activities to enhance students’ exposure to and experience of psychiatry.

A helpful feature of the RCPsych Guidance is that at the end of each section it provides checklists containing specific actions required to achieve each of the four recommendations. This could assist medical schools in reviewing their psychiatry curriculum and in identifying specific deficits. Prominent within the qualitative feedback from the students was the request for more mental health content to be included in other medical school courses to prevent the perception of psychiatry being separate from what is perceived as “real” medicine. Other suggestions included that students should be better prepared before placements in psychiatry to address their potential fears and negative perceptions of the specialty. This resonates with findings from the literature, and indeed those from Agyapong et al. Reference Agyapong, Owusu-Antwi, Ritchie, Agyapong-Opoku, Khinda, Hrabok, Ohene, Ulzen and Osei2019, as well as the present authors’ experience (Agyapong et al. Reference Agyapong, Owusu-Antwi, Ritchie, Agyapong-Opoku, Khinda, Hrabok, Ohene, Ulzen and Osei2019). International students, especially, often seem to commence their psychiatry placements with added anxiety because they strongly associate mental illness with violence (Vasudevan et al., Reference Vasudevan, Bharathy, Min, Panikulam, Saleem, Hassali and Russell2015). Another suggestion in the Guidance is that medical schools seek opportunities to work with placement providers to allocate sessions to the range of professionals within the multidisciplinary team. Reassuringly, however, the Guidance emphasises that students continue to value the unique traditional strengths of the psychiatry clerkship, particularly in providing opportunities to talk to patients at length and in-depth about their symptoms and their lives.

One area in which the RCPsych Guidance could be more ambitious is in opportunities for students to contribute to the clinical service. The traditional psychiatry clerkship remains limited in scope, insofar as students are typically exposed to rather than actively involved in the delivery of clinical care. This deprives them of an important sense of agency as adult learners and implicitly overlooks their potential contribution to service quality (Taylor and Hamdy, Reference Taylor and Hamdy2013). A significant percentage of our current medical students are graduate entrants with considerable life experience and often with interesting educational backgrounds and unique skill sets (Pillay et al., Reference Pillay, Sundram, Mullins, Rizvi, Grant, Boohan and Murphy2013). Curriculum planners and medical educators would do well to consider clinical electives, student-run clinics with close faculty supervision and entrusted clinical activities that normalise the mental health aspects of their future clinical role (Thornhill and Tong, Reference Thornhill and Tong2006) (Murzl et al., Reference Murzl, Durns, Mowrey, Tubbs and Boeve2017).

In their conclusion, Byrne et al. call for greater liaison and sharing of resources in delivering the undergraduate psychiatry curriculum more effectively across the six Irish medical schools. Competitive market forces at work in third-level education may frustrate this worthwhile goal. However, it would seem feasible to achieve greater collaboration between our respective departments of psychiatry in educational research and evaluation. Specifically, the College of Psychiatrists of Ireland, in collaboration with a full representation of faculty from our university medical schools, could develop an Irish guidance document informed by and responsive to local challenges and opportunities. In offering our future graduates a truly transformative undergraduate educational experience in psychiatry, our combined efforts could have a sustained impact beyond the boundaries of our specialty and our country.

Conflict of interest

Vincent Russell has no conflict of interest to disclose

Linda O’Rourke has no conflict of interest to disclose

Kieran C. Murphy has no conflict of interest to disclose

Ethical standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

References

Agyapong, VIO, Owusu-Antwi, R, Ritchie, A, Agyapong-Opoku, G, Khinda, H, Hrabok, M, Ohene, S, Ulzen, T, Osei, A (2019). Psychiatry as a specialization: influential factors and gender differences among medical students in a low- to middle-income country. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 17. doi: 10.1017/ipm.2019.38Google Scholar
Byrne, F, Murphy, R, O’Rourke, L, Cotter, D, Murphy, KC, Guerandel, A, Meagher, D, Sweeney, E, Gill, M, Campbell, A, McDonald, C, Hallahan, B (2016). A comparison of undergraduate teaching of psychiatry across medical schools in the Republic of Ireland. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 112. doi: 10.1017/ipm.2016.22Google ScholarPubMed
Bharathy, A, Foo, PL, Russell, V (2016). Changing undergraduate attitudes to mental illness. The Clinical Teacher 13, 5862.10.1080/0142159X.2019.1602253CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birden, HH, Usherwood, T (2016). “They liked it if you said you cried”: how medical students perceive the teaching of professionalism. Medical Journal of Australia 199, 406409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Cates, AN, De Cates, P, Singh, SP, Marwaha, S (2019). Can curriculum design influence medical students’ attitudes to psychiatry? A comparison of two different approaches. Medical Teacher 41, 939948.10.1007/s11845-019-02064-xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Feeney, L, Jordan, I, Mccorran, P (2013). Teaching recovery to medical students. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 6, 766768.10.1002/j.2051-5545.2012.tb00129.xGoogle Scholar
Hor, ESL, Russell, V, Vasudevan, U, O’Brien, F (2020). Changing attitudes to psychiatry and interest in the specialty as a career choice during clinical undergraduate years at a medical school in Penang, Malaysia. Irish Journal of Medical Science 189, 253259.10.1016/S2215-0366(15)00457-5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ito, H, Setoya, Y, Suzuki, Y (2012). Lessons learned in developing community mental health care in East and South East Asia. World Psychiatry 11, 186190.10.4103/1947-2714.128473CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Izutsu, T, Tsutsumi, A, Minas, H, Thornicroft, G, Patel, V, Ito, A (2015). Mental Health and wellbeing in the sustainable development goals. Lancet Psychiatry 2, 10521054.10.3200/BMED.34.3.101-118CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kumar, A, Mitra, K, Nagarajan, S, Poudel, B (2014). Factors influencing medical students’ choice of future specialization in medical sciences: a cross-sectional questionnaire survey from medical schools in China, Malaysia and regions of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation. North American Journal of Medical Sciences 6, 119125.10.1176/appi.ap.11110204CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lake, R (2008). How academic psychiatry can better prepare students for their future patients, Part 11: course in ultra-brief initial diagnostic screening suitable for future primary care physicians. Behavioural Medicine 34, 101116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyons, Z (2013). Attitudes of medical students toward psychiatry and psychiatry as a career: a systematic review. Academic Psychiatry 37, 150157.10.1017/S0790966700001269CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McManus, S, Killeen, D, Hartnett, Y, Fitzgerald, G, Murphy, KC 2019. Establishing and evaluating a Balint group for fourth-year medical students at an Irish University. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 17. doi: 10.1017/ipm.2019.28Google Scholar
Murzl, CA, Durns, TA, Mowrey, LT, Tubbs, AS, Boeve, SA (2017). A medical student-run child and adolescent psychiatry clinic: one institution’s experience. Academic Psychiatry 41, 582586.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miller, C, Pradeep, V, Mohamad, M, Izmeth, Z, Reynolds, MTP, Gulati, G (2016). Patients and carers as teachers in psychiatric education: a literature review and discussion. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, 18. doi: 10.1017/ipm.2016.45Google ScholarPubMed
Omer, S, Mccarthy, G (2010). Reflective practice in psychiatric training: Balint groups. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 27, 115116.10.3109/0142159X.2013.828153CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pillay, SM, Sundram, F, Mullins, D, Rizvi, N, Grant, T, Boohan, M, Murphy, KC (2013). Non-graduate and graduate entry medical students attitudes to psychiatry. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 30, 245254.10.1176/appi.ap.30.1.23CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
RCPSYCH (2019). Choose Psychiatry: Guidance for Medical Schools. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.10.1002/wps.20349Google Scholar
Russell, V, Clarke, M, Loo, C, Bharathy, A, Vasudevan, U, Byrne, E, Smith, S (2018). Medical Student perceptions of the value of learning psychiatry in primary care settings in Penang, Malaysia. Academic Psychiatry 110.10.1177/1039856214568221Google ScholarPubMed
Taylor, D, Hamdy, H (2013). Adult learning theories: implications for learning and teaching in medical education. Medical Teacher 35, e1561e1572.10.1111/j.1365-2929.2006.02416.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thornhill, JT, Tong, L (2006). From Yoda to Sackett: the future of psychiatry medical student education. Academic Psychiatry 30, 2328.10.1017/ipm.2019.28CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thornicroft, G, Deb, T, Henderson, C (2016). Community mental health care worldwide: current status and further developments. World Psychiatry 15, 276286.10.1017/ipm.2016.45CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vasudevan, U, Bharathy, A, Min, KJ, Panikulam, JJ, Saleem, F, Hassali, A, Russell, V (2015). Malaysian medical students’ perceptions of a film to promote psychiatry as a career. Australasian Psychiatry 23, 173176.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Woolard, RF (2006). Caring for a common future: medical schools’ social accountability. Medical Education 40, 301313.10.1017/ipm.2016.22CrossRefGoogle Scholar