|
First osteopathic
psychiatry residency offered in Ohio
New
residency program a joint project of
Grandview, VAMC, OU-HCOM

|
Julius Paul Roberts, D.O.,
left, a first year
psychiatry resident, and
William Resch, D.O. (’99),
program director for the
CORE’s first psychiatry
residency program, counsel a
patient at the Veterans
Administration Medical
Center in Chillicothe. |
By Anita M. Manderfield
November 19,
2010
Passing
through a courtyard of the inpatient
ward at Chillicothe Veterans
Administration Medical Center,
William Resch, D.O. (’99), gets a
warm reception from his patients.
“Hi
there, good buddy!” shouts one, as
another chimes in: “Hey, doc! How are
you?”
Resch
is the program director for the CORE
system’s first psychiatry residency
program: the result of a partnership
between the residency’s sponsoring
institution, Grandview Medical Center in
Dayton, the Chillicothe VA Medical
Center and OU-HCOM. The four-year
program’s first residents, Sarah
Cullison, D.O., and Julius Paul
Roberts, D.O., began training in
July.
Resch’s
obvious patient rapport results in a
large part from the patient-centered
philosophy at the Chillicothe VAMC, says
Lisa Orr-Kingery, the center’s medical
education program coordinator.
Orr-Kingery earned a bachelor of
business administration degree from Ohio
University in 1992.
She
cites examples: flexible visiting hours,
patient-directed meal schedules, an
integrated medical-home style approach
to care. “We want our patients to be
comfortable and our physicians to treat
the whole person.”
Given
this approach, the osteopathic residency
program makes good sense. According to
Jeffrey Gering, M.H.A., F.A.C.H.E., the
VAMC medical director, patient-centered
care and osteopathic affiliations are
becoming more common for the Veterans
Association. What’s more unusual about
this partnership, he says, is simply
having a psychiatry residency at a VA
medical center.
There
are only nine psychiatry residencies in
the country accredited by the American
Osteopathic Association, and this is one
of the very few psychiatry
residencies—osteopathic or allopathic—to
be primarily based at a VA medical
center.
“The
trick is to find the right residents,”
Gering says. “A lot of psychiatry
programs train a parent-child patient
relationship. We want to make sure our
residents and physicians regard patients
as equal partners. I think that’s very
consistent with the osteopathic
philosophy.”
OU-COM
medical students have already been
rotating through the Chillicothe VAMC
for both geriatric medicine and
psychiatry. And in 2008, the VA center
hired OU-HCOM alum Jeffrey Hunter, D.O.
(’94), D.C., F.A.A.F.P., as their
associate chief of staff for clinical
and academic affairs. Hunter practices
geriatric medicine and OMM for the
center, directs the geriatric medicine
rotation and chairs a committee on
patient-centered care, among other
things.
The new
program grew out of this strong
relationship as well as the one between
OU-HCOM and Grandview Medical Center,
combined with a shared vision among
these institutions.
Robert
A. Cain, D.O. (’88),
F.A.C.O.I., director of medical
education for Grandview, explains that
Grandview was interested in offering
psychiatry training at resident and
student levels. Partnering with the VA
offered unique educational benefits.
“The VA
is ahead of us in their use of
electronic record management, and they
offer a very broad scope of psychiatric
issues,” Cain says. “Meanwhile, we gain
Dr. Resch as a passionate teacher on our
faculty.”
Resch
now travels to Grandview to deliver
psychiatry lectures to residents in
other programs—and Grandview hopes to
send residents from other programs for
psychiatry rotations at the VAMC.
Gering
underscores the broad educational scope
available at the VAMC. “Residents
appreciate the complexity of mental
disorders they can work with at the VA.
They see a wider breadth of disorders,
more co-morbidity, and older
populations.”
Roberts
adds that he was very interested in
being a part of the statewide CORE
system. “The CORE support and,
particularly, the affiliation with
Grandview was very attractive to me.”
Roberts
and his fellow resident, Cullison, will
receive most of their training at the
Chillicothe VAMC, but they travel to
Grandview Medical Center for regular
house staff meetings with other
residents, for their rotation in child
and adolescent psychiatry, and during
their last year, to serve in a
supervised consultation role for the
Grandview in-patient clinic.
The
program is certainly appealing; this
year 31 people applied for the first two
residency slots. And while residents
benefit from the innovative residency
training in Chillicothe, the region
stands to gain osteopathic physicians.
“Twenty
percent of doctors stay in the area of
their residency,” says Gering. “This
program can help attract quality
psychiatrists to the Southeastern Ohio
area.” |