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Postgraduate Education
Ronald O. Rieder, M.D., Director, Residency Training
Lisa A. Mellman, M.D., Associate Director, Residency Training
Jules Ranz, M.D., Director, Public Psychiatry Fellowship
Mark Sorenson, M.D., Director, Columbia University Program for Creedmoor
Residency Training
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The Department of Postgraduate Education’s primary mission is directing the
Adult Psychiatry Residency Training Program. It also sponsors a variety of
fellowship programs for both M.D. and Ph.D. graduates, and Department-wide
educational activities such as Grand Rounds.
The New York State Psychiatric Institute has a long and distinguished record of
support of psychiatric education. Its residency program is one of the oldest in
the United States. These educational programs are very often conducted in
conjunction with the other institutions at the Columbia Presbyterian Medical
Center – Columbia University and New York Presbyterian Hospital. For example,
the residency training program in adult psychiatry is jointly sponsored by all
three institutions, and is headquartered on the first floor of NYSPI where the
offices of the directors of the program, and the residents’ offices, are
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Residency Program
The quality of residents recruited into the program for 2001 remains superior as
the Department continues to attract the top applicants nationally. First year
residents (PGY I) who began in July 2001 represent diverse backgrounds, have a
broad spectrum of clinical and research interests, and have demonstrated
significant achievement. The department’s ability to recruit outstanding
residents is a reflection of excellent faculty and residents’, educational
program, resources and departmental reputation. The excellence of the residency
is also evident by the notification in 2001 from the ACGME of reaccreditation
without any citations for 5 years. Tireless efforts of faculty and residents on
the Residency Selection Committee play an essential role in recruitment.
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The variety of residency tracks offered by the Department continues to provide
special areas of development within an integrated residency program. All tracks
continue to recruit and graduate outstanding clinicians, teachers, and
administrators. Research track residents who initiated the track in 1994 are now
graduates pursuing research interests. The affiliation in 1998 between
Presbyterian Hospital and Stamford Hospital resulted in the addition of a
community hospital internship in medicine and psychiatry, now in its 4th year of
operation, for our PGY I residents.
There are 44 psychiatry residents in the adult psychiatry program: 11 PGY I
residents who will be joined by one PGY II entry resident next year, 12 PGY II,
12 PGY III, and 9 PGY IV residents. Twelve residents graduated from the Adult
Psychiatry residency in June of 2001. Many of the graduates remain affiliated
with the department in some capacity. Their careers continue to reflect the
diversity of departmental activities and of the educational program. Four
graduates entered research fellowships at NYSPI and one joined the research
faculty at Washington University; three are continuing in the Child Psychiatry
residency at Columbia; one is a Psychopharmacology Fellow and is in
Psychoanalytic Training at Columbia; one became a Forensics Fellow at Columbia;
one joined faculty at New York University and another is in practice in San
Francisco. Many graduates opened part-time private practices.
During 2001 the Residency Training program continued to enjoy its
state-of-the-art quarters in the new Psychiatric Institute. Our new home
provides office and teaching space for residents and staff in a conveniently
located education wing with easy proximity to conference rooms and teaching
equipment. Each resident office is equipped with a new computer and web access.
The psychopharmacology Listserv, implemented in 1998 for residents and teaching
faculty to address pharmacology questions that arise, has continued to thrive.
This has been a boon to our educational process and is well utilized by
residents and staff who both pose and answer questions.
A case conference on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and a Comparative
Psychotherapies course were added to the curriculum in 2001.
The PGY I year for the clinical track newly includes a three month elective
experience on the Eye-6 general psychiatry service, directed by Stan Arkow, M.D.
Three interns selected this rotation and join medical students and Creedmoor
residents already being trained there. Research track residents rotate for three
months on the Schizophrenia Research Unit, directed by Roberto Gil, M.D.
PI residents have continued to perform in an outstanding fashion nationally. On
the PRITE exam, an annual national written exam in psychiatry, the resident
classes performed in the 91st – 97th percentile.
PI residents continue to receive national fellowships and to be recognized
nationally. The following residents received fellowships and awards in 2001:
Jean Marie Bradford – APA Minority Research Training Fellowship; Susan Turner –
APA/Bristol-Myers Squibb Fellowship; Joanna Steinglass – APA/Glaxo Wellcome
Fellowship; Susan Stern – American Psychoanalytic Association Fellowship; Dianna
Dragatsi – APIRE Research Colloquium Award; Britta Ostermeyer – National
Consortium of Residents Fitzhugh Mullen Award for Resident Leadership and
American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Rappaport Fellowship; Arielle
Stanford and David Sherman – APIRE Janssen Scholars Award; Serena Volpp –
Trainee Consultant APA/CMHS Fellowship Program; Suzanne Yang – APA Lilly
Psychiatric Research Fellowship Award, Honorable Mention. The graduating
residents honored Eve Caligor, M.D. as Teacher of the Year.
Dr. Mellman was appointed as Chair, APA Committee on Psychotherapy by
Psychiatrists and to the APA Council on Quality; selected as Master Educator for
the 2002 APA Annual Meeting and appointed as Program Chair, 2003 AADPRT Annual
Meeting. Dr. Rieder was appointed to the ACNP Study Group on Research Training.
Psychotherapy research progressed in the PI Psychotherapy Clinic under the
direction of Dr. Mellman. One-year follow-up in the outcome study of
twice-weekly psychodynamic psychotherapy is completed, and data analysis is in
progress. Drs. Mullen, Rieder and Glick developed a psychodynamic psychotherapy
test, the first of its kind that has been administered to over 900 residents
nationwide. The validity study supports its use as a measure of psychodynamic
psychotherapy skills among residents.
Research Fellowship Programs
Three fellows in the fellowships directed by Postgraduate Education completed
research training in 2001: Drs. Ilise Lombardo, Cheryl Corcoran and Steven
Hamilton. Drs. Lombardo and Corcoran are continuing in research at Columbia. Dr.
Hamilton has taken a position as Director of the Genetics Laboratory in the
Department of Psychiatry at University of California, San Francisco. In July
2000 there were 15 research fellows beginning or continuing in the research
training programs conducted in this department.
Of the eight in the NIMH Fellowship in Affective, Anxiety, and Related
Disorders, four are focusing on anxiety disorders, one on affective disorders,
one on eating disorders, one on health services research, and one on stress.
Seven are in the Schizophrenia Research Fellowship. The specific areas of
research of these 15 fellows vary widely and reflect exciting basic and clinical
research topics, for example, imaging of brain biochemistry using PET, MRI and
MRS, neuropathological investigations, animal models of schizophrenia and
addiction, and epidemiological studies of perinatal or childhood exposures that
might contribute to severe mental illnesses. Former fellows, now Columbia
faculty, who have gone on to receive substantial research funding include Drs.
Michael Liebowitz, Jack Gorman, Steven Roose, Devangere Devanand, Laszlo Papp,
Franklin Schneier, Jennifer Downey, Jonathan Javitch, James Knowles, Alan Brown,
Michael Devlin, Brian Fallon, Dolores Malaspina, Mitchell Nobler, Edward Nunes,
Kathleen Pike, Zafar Sharif, Jeremy Coplan, Margaret Spinelli, Sarah Lisanby,
Randall Marshall, Jay Gingrich, Lawrence Kegeles, Pamela Collins, Ramin Mojtabai.,
Ramin Parsey, Diana Martinez, Laurel Mayer, Stuart Seidman, and Blair Simpson.
Other fellowship graduates have been similarly successful at other universities.
Public Psychiatry Fellowship
The Public Psychiatry Fellowship continued to attract outstanding Fellows as the
premier Fellowship of its type in the country. Applicants in the past few years
have come from New Jersey, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maryland, Washington DC,
Florida, Texas, California, Oregon, Washington State and Canada. The 2002 class
includes two graduates of Harvard residencies, two from PI, three from NYU, one
from PW, one from Downstate and one from San Mateo County MH Center in
California.
Fellows continue to work in non-traditional community settings in increasing
numbers. Of the 10 Fellows in the present class, 5 are working in such settings:
one at the Fort Washington Shelter CTI program, a second at Pathways to Housing
(a nationally prominent program providing mobile services and permanent housing
to the homeless mentally ill), a third working for the Department of Homeless
Services (under the supervision of the agency’s medical director, a former
Public Psychiatry Fellow, one in the St. Vincent’s Community Medicine Program
and one at the Callen Lorde Health Center (for gay and lesbian adults and
teens).
The other five Fellows in the class work in hospital settings, all in unusual
programs: Long Island Jewish Hospital (see below), Maimonides Hispanic Day
Program , NY Presbyterian’s Hispanic Clinic, NY Presbyterian’s IOP Program
(working on developing the program for the NYPD) and Gouverneur Hospital’s Asian
Bicultural Clinic.
Over the past five years the Fellowship has noted an increasing number of
applicants who want to work in primary care psychiatry. This is an area still
underserved by C/L Fellowships, which continue to be mainly focused on inpatient
C/L. Presently, four Fellows work in such settings: one at Long Island Jewish
Hospital (jointly enrolled in their C/L Fellowship, in an ambulatory track), a
second placed in the St. Vincent’s Hospital Community Medicine Program (which
provides services in many community settings), a third at the Callen-Lorde
Health Center (see above) and a fourth placed part-time at the NY Presbyterian
ACNC network.
Of note over the past few years, there has been a significant increase in the
number of psychiatrists applying to the Fellowship after having worked for
several years post-residency. A common theme among applicants is having
experienced the well-known dissatisfactions that can occur while working in the
public sector, which include feelings of isolation, lack of professional
affiliation and marginalization within their organizations. The applicants have
learned that the Fellowship has had considerable documented success in helping
Fellows and alumni deal with these problems. It does so by providing them with a
conceptual orientation and by offering the ongoing support necessary to sustain
productive careers in the public sector. In most cases, the Fellow’s field
placement becomes the first year of a public sector job. Ongoing support is
achieved by continued involvement in Fellowship activities after completing the
one-year Fellowship, and includes individual presentations to subsequent
Fellows, ongoing consultations with the faculty, group meetings and an e-mail
network. The faculty believes this ongoing support to be crucial to the success
of the Fellowship.
The Fellowship continues to investigate the role of the psychiatrist as medical
director in public agencies. In 2001 Dr. Ranz conducted a follow-up survey of
members of the AACP, assessing the changes they have experienced in the public
sector over the past five years. The results of this survey will be presented at
a special lecture at the Institute for Psychiatric Services October 2002.
Activities and Awards of Alumni
Paula Panzer is Chair of the Scientific Program Committee of the Institute on
Psychiatric Services, Avrim Fishkind is president-elect of the American
Association of Emergency Psychiatry, Jorge Petit is president-elect of the New
York Chapter of the American Association of Psychiatric Administrators, Hunter
McQuistion has been elected Treasurer, Tony Ng (Jorge Petit) Area II
representative, and Pamela Weinberg Representative at Large of the American
Association of Community Psychiatrists. Intikhab Ahmad is currently a Fellow in
the APIRE/Janssen Public Policy Leadership Program. Linda Chokroverty has been
chosen as a Fellow in this program for next year. Drs. Ahmad and Chokroverty are
the fourth and fifth Public Psychiatry Fellowship alumnus to be appointed to the
prestigious Janssen Fellowship in its first four years of operation, Stephanie
LeMelle continues on the Scientific Program Committee of the APA Annual Meeting.
Creedmoor Psychiatric Center Program
The Columbia-Creedmoor Residency Education and Training Affiliation continued
into its nineteenth year. There are sixteen residents in the Creedmoor
Psychiatric Center Residency Program: 4 PGY–Is, 4 PGY-IIs, 4 PGY-IIIs and 4
PGY-IVs. The Columbia portion of the curriculum provides comprehensive education
and training in psychodynamic psychotherapy, human development,
psychopharmacology, and human sexuality, and other areas. There are extensive
clinical rotations at the New York Presbyterian Hospital’s Columbia Presbyterian
Campus including the Harkness-7 Adult Psychiatry Evaluation Clinic and Adult
Outpatient Psychiatry Clinic, the Eye-6 Inpatient Psychiatry Service, the
Comprehensive Emergency Psychiatry Program, and the Psychiatry
Consultation-Liaison Service. Creedmoor PGY-I and II residents are assigned to
the Psychiatric Rehabilitation and Research Unit at Creedmoor, a joint endeavor
of Creedmoor and Columbia. For ten years now, Columbia 3rd year medical students
have been assigned to Creedmoor’s Intensive Treatment Unit. Creedmoor faculty
supervise these students at the Harkness-7 Clinic, providing continued evidence
of Columbia’s confidence in Creedmoor. Some 20 Creedmoor staff hold Columbia
faculty positions, and various faculty are actively involved in Columbia
resident supervision as well as teaching at the Columbia University Center for
Psychoanalytic Training and Research. Recent graduates have gone into fellowship
training in Geriatric and Child Psychiatry at Long Island Jewish, Child
Psychiatry at Dartmouth, and Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry at Downstate
Medical Center and Baylor. In December 2001 the residency program received
notice of continued full accreditation for five years by the ACGME. The
Columbia-Creedmoor affiliation has been a major factor in achieving this welcome
result.
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Psychiatric Residents 2001-2002
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| PGY II |
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Alves, Jean Marie
Robert Berman
Alex Dranovsky
Mark Eldaief
Michael Friedman
Jeffrey Friend
Adam Goldyne
Elizabeth LeQuesne
Bijoy Mathew
Alycia McGill
Andrew Ramsey
Daniel Richter |
Dianna Dragatsi
Sylvia Emmerich
David Leonardo
Amir Levine-Almog
Alan Liu
Richard Nathanson
Ankur Saraiya
David Sherman
Arielle Stanford
Joanna Steinglass
Susan Turner |
William Olcott
Britta Ostermeyer
Steven Rudin, Chief Resident
Aneil Shirke
Susan Stern
Serena Volpp, Chief Resident
William Wu
Suzanne Yang
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| PGY III |
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PGY IV |
| Elizabeth Bromley |
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Mark Groves, Chief Resident
Jordan Karp
Pamela Maskara
Benjamin McCommon |
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