Residency Training Program
in Psychiatry
Facilities
Yale New Haven Hospital (YNHH)
YNHH is the major teaching and clinical research facility of the Yale
University School of Medicine. It is a 900 bed general hospital with
a large ambulatory service division. The Department of Psychiatry at
YNHH has five major clinical components:
The Yale-New Haven Psychiatric Hospital (YNHPH) provides inpatient
services for acutely ill psychiatric patients. Treatment includes a comprehensive
diagnostic evaluation which may include medical, neurological, psychometric,
family, and vocational assessments.
Patients also receive intensive short-term treatment with the goal of
alleviating symptoms and rapidly returning them to the community. Treatment
is based on individual treatment plans and includes individual, group,
family and milieu psychotherapy together with psychotropic medication.
The average length of stay is approximately 10 days.
The Inpatient service includes:
The General Adult Inpatient Treatment Unit treats patients 18
years and older, and a specialized Geriatric Treatment Unit focuses
on treatment of the elderly. The patients generally present with complex
combinations of disorders reflecting psychotic, affective, cognitive,
neurological and medical components. Treatment in the short-term setting
focuses on rapid comprehensive diagnosis, symptom reduction, and pharmacological
treatments. Psychosocial treatments emphasize individual and family crisis
intervention. The Unit has developed considerable expertise in treating
patients with previously treatment-refractory psychotic and affective
illnesses.
The Dual Diagnosis Program is designed to evaluate and treat
patients with both psychiatric and substance abuse disorders. Detoxification,
pharmacotherapy, relapse prevention, social problem-solving, stress management
and family education are important components of the program.
The Adolescent Inpatient Treatment Unit conducts short term
treatment of adolescent and young adult patients with a wide range of
diagnoses including affective disorders, psychoses, developmental disorders,
conduct disorders, and psychiatric disorders combined with substance
abuse. Comprehensive neuropsychiatric assessment and treatment, intensive
family consultation and crisis intervention are the core treatment modalities.
After discharge, some patients continue to be followed in a brief (2
to 4 week) after-school partial hospital program, which is designed to
help patients make the transition from inpatient treatment to their home
environments. Throughout the course of treatment clinical interventions
are carefully integrated with the patient's educational program.
The Consultation Service provides psychiatric consultation for
all adult medical, surgical, and obstetrical/gynecological services at
YNHH. Each psychiatric consultation consists of a thorough assessment
and the formulation of a treatment regimen based on a careful differential
diagnosis, an understanding of relevant psychosocial factors, and a knowledge
of psychopharmacology.
The Psychiatric Emergency Service is known as the Crisis Intervention
Unit. Located in the Emergency Department on the first floor of the hospital,
staff provide emergency evaluation and crisis management for approximately
4,000 patient visits per year. The CIU does rapid diagnostic assessments
and formulates disposition plans for patients with a wide variety of
diagnoses.
The Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic receives many referrals from
other YNHH clinics for psychiatric consultation. It provides several
treatment modalities: diagnostic evaluation, individual psychotherapy,
group therapy, family therapy, and psychopharmacologic treatment.
The Adult, Adolescent, and Dual Diagnosis Partial Hospital Programs are
designed to provide partial hospital treatment for patients with a variety
of psychiatric disorders. The Partial Hospitals provide crisis intervention
and rehabilitation programs. Each offers strong programs in group and
family therapy.
The Community Work Adjustment Programs provide individually
tailored rehabilitative treatment with an emphasis on the development
of social, vocational and living skills for adult patients with severe
and prolonged psychiatric disorders.
Though the units and programs described above vary in focus and responsibilities,
the faculty share the view that clinical experience is the foundation
for learning and professional development. Intensive work with patients
manifesting more severe forms of pathology refines knowledge and skills
that will ultimately apply to any specialization area within psychiatry.
Last modified:
June 18, 2004


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