Curriculum
Fellows have 3-4 individual education sessions each week, during which they focus on a series of curricular modules throughout the year. The modules are developed or adapted based on the clinical interests and scope of practice of each fellow. An example curriculum for a family practice provider is included below:
- Integrated and Primary Care Psychiatry in the Context of Historical and Ongoing Racism and Structural Oppression
- Principles of Psychiatric Care in the Community
- The Primary Care-Based Psychiatric Interview and the Mental Status Exam
- Suicide and Violence Risk Assessment
- Psychotherapy in Primary Care
- Major Depressive Disorder
- Treatment-Resistant Depression
- Other Depressive Disorders
- Bipolar Disorders
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder
- Other Anxiety Disorders
- Trauma-Informed Care
- Trauma- and Stressor-Related Disorders and Dissociative Disorders
- Alcohol Use Disorder and Tobacco Use Disorder
- Other Substance Use Disorders
- First-Episode Psychosis
- Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
- Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders
- Geriatric Psychiatry
- Neurocognitive Disorders
- Perinatal Psychiatry
- Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
- Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Disruptive, Impulse-Control, and Conduct Disorders
- Autism Spectrum Disorder, Neurodevelopment Disorders, and Elimination Disorders
- Feeding and Eating Disorders
- Personality Disorders
- Sleep-Wake Disorders, Sexual Dysfunctions and Paraphilic Disorders
- Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders, Pain Psychiatry, Psychological Factors Affecting Medical Illness and Other Mental Disorders
- LGBTQI+ Psychiatry
- Cultural Psychiatry and Global Mental Health
- Practicing Culturally- and Linguistically-Humble Psychiatric Care
- Toward the Praxis of an Anti-Oppressive and Structurally-Subversive Primary Care Psychiatry