Psychiatry Residency at UK
The art of high quality clinical care
resting on a foundation of academic excellence
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ARE YOU INTERESTED IN RESEARCH?
IF YOU ARE A RESIDENT INTERESTED IN RESEARCH, WE SUGGEST THAT YOU:
- Look for a mentor at your institution
- Ask your training director for suggestions
- Or, your Chairman (don’t be worried, Chairs usually like to be asked)
- Ask a “Vice Chair for Research” if there is one in your Department
- Ask other residents in your program who are doing research, and postresidency
fellows doing research.
- Find someone to read journals with
- A journal club
- An interested faculty member
- Explore opportunities to do research
- Ask your training director if there is elective time available to do research
- If any resident has received time off of clinical duties to do research, ask
how it was arranged.
- Find out about ways that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and
the National Institute of Mental Health support young researchers
- Contact Ernesto Guerra at the APA to sign up for the Psychiatric
Research Report eguerra@psych.org
- Explore the APA website about research training and funding:
http://www.psych.org/MainMenu/Research/ResearchTrainingandFunding.aspx
- If you are in a racial or ethnic minority category, be sure to find out about
the PMRTP (Psychiatry Minority Research Training Program) from Ernesto.
- Look at the NIMH research training website.
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/research-funding/training/timetable-of-nimhtraining-
and-career-development-programs.shtml. You could write an F
Award, or there may be a T32 award in your institution, even in another
department, that might support you as a research fellow.
- Attend the APA annual meeting and go to talks on subjects that interest
you. Ask the speaker after the talk if you could come to work with him/her
after residency, and if he/she knows of any funding that would support
that.
- Attend Michele Pato’s course at the APA on how to do research without
much in the way of research support.
- Try to decide what type of research you want to pursue
- Some like a type of research, such as genetics, epidemiology, clinical trials, brain
imaging. Some like an illness focus, such as Autism, Schizophrenia, Alcoholism,
Borderline Personality Disorder. You will find that each of these areas is likely to
have a meeting of psychiatric researchers sometime during the year. Use the
internet to explore such meetings, and see if your program will let you attend.
Some groups even sponsor travel awards to come to the meeting.
- Think about research-related activities such as writing case reports, literature
reviews, quality improvement projects, or leading educational activities related to
research such as journal clubs and Evidence Based Medicine sessions. Do
them with a faculty member who will guide you.
- Prepare a poster about your work, or of work on which you were a
collaborator. See if there is a poster session at your institution. Also submit it for
the APA Young Investigator Sessions at the Annual Meeting.
- Get a “Primer” on research. One we can recommend is the “Research
Manual: A Primer for Basic Research Competencies and a First Research
Project” by Alan Podawiltz, Chair of Psychiatry at the University of North Texas
Health Science Center, Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (write to ask for
it). Also excellent is “Scientific Integrity” by Francis Macrina, with chapters on
mentorship, authorship and peer review.
- Pay attention to the research-oriented lectures/seminars in your department
and medical school. There are usually online calendars or email lists to
announce such events.
- See the list of national research awards and fellowships.
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Page last updated Tuesday, May 03, 2011
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