Content area

Abstract

The authors compare and contrast psychiatry residency training in the United States to that in Canada and selected countries in South America, Europe, and Asia.

Nine individuals who are intimately familiar with psychiatry residency training in the United States (primarily chairs, training directors, associate training directors, or residents) and who trained in other countries describe their past training programs in terms of clinical experiences, didactic structure, supervision, evaluation, and major differences from U.S. training.

Medical education and psychiatry training vary considerably in different regions in terms of the duration of training, structure of clinical experiences, level of responsibility and autonomy of trainee, amount of classroom teaching, national examinations, and credentialing. Some are much less structured than training in the United States (e.g., Sweden) while others are somewhat more structured (e.g., Korea), but differences appear to be lessening.

Although similarities outweigh differences between programs in various continents and countries, training programs around the globe have much to learn from each other.

Details

Title
Psychiatry Residency Training Around the World
Author
Zisook, Sidney; Balon, Richard; Björkstén, Karin S; Everall, Ian; et al
Pages
309-25
Section
Special Article
Publication year
2007
Publication date
Jul/Aug 2007
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10429670
e-ISSN
15457230
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
196533721
Copyright
Copyright American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. Jul/Aug 2007