Residency Training Program
in Psychiatry
Policies
Moonlighting
Psychiatric residents are permitted to moonlight. In accordance with
ACGME requirements, moonlighting activities are monitored to make certain
they do not conflict with training. There are many excellent moonlighting
opportunities in the New Haven area.
On-Call Responsibilities
PGY-II: During PGY-II residents provide coverage approximately
every 7th night. This call is for either Yale New Haven Hospital, the
Connecticut Mental Health Center or for the Yale Psychiatric Hospital.
PGY-III: During PGY-III residents are on-call in the Crisis Intervention
Unit of the Yale New Haven Hospital Emergency Room. Call is done by combining "night
float" rotations in which the resident works each night for one week
and is off during the day with sporadic additional on-call shifts. Each
resident completes his/her on-call responsibilities in a single 6 month
block and covers 26 on-call shifts. There are no other on-call responsibilities
in the PG-III year.
PGY-IV: There is no required on-call during the PG-IV year. Opportunities
for paid on-call are available in several of the DepartmentĂs affiliated
institutions. These moonlighting opportunities are completely separate
from the training experience or requirements.
Evaluation of Performance
The Yale Residency in Psychiatry is organized according to the guidelines
specified in the Directory of Graduate Medical Education Programs prepared
under the auspices of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
Education (ACGME) of the American Medical Association. Each resident
meets at least twice a year with a faculty member to review in depth
all aspects of his/her clinical work. These meetings bring together the
impressions of all supervisors and other training faculty having contact
with the resident. These sessions not only help the resident understand
which aspects of his/her work may need improvement, but also focus upon
his/her clinical aspects and potential. The resident reviews summaries of their performance, which are then forwarded to the Resident
Review Committee.
In accordance with ACGME requirements for residency programs, a written
examination is given each year in PG-II through PG-IV years and an oral
clinical examination is given in the PG-III and PG-IV years. It is departmental
policy that the results of these examinations are a distinctly secondary
factor in the evaluation of residents. Examination performance is used
as one source of information to guide the resident's education, and will
never be the deciding factor in the overall evaluation of a resident's
status in the Program.
Last modified:
May 4, 2006


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