Saturday, January 31, 2009

psychiatry board exam

/written exam


/oral exam
pass rate 55%, less on repeats


/$ for boards
$1600 written
$1600 oral exam
Kaufman board review $850 neurology + $500 psychiatry = $1100 both; 15% discount (722.5 + 425 = 935)
$2100 recertification

/books
Massachusetts General Hospital Comprehensive Clinical Psychiatry: Expert Consult - Online and Print
$191.20


/board review courses
www.beattheboards.com
4/22-4/26 Chicago, 1097.00

/recertification
every 10 years
5-6 hour computerized

/look up?
MR Lipp
Experiences of psychiatry board exam casualties: a survey report
Am J Psychiatry 1976; 133:279-283

Thursday, January 01, 2009

change

/regarding new year's resolutions
1. “start with big changes, not small ones,” a strategy likely to yield immediate, noticeable benefits that inspire more positive change.

2. to act like the kind of person you are trying to become; even if you hit the jogging trail with 30 pounds of flab, think of yourself as the jock you want to be.

3. to “reframe” the situation. Recovering alcoholics, for example, have a higher chance of success if they reframe their sober life as a divorce from a tumultuous love affair with drinking, because they can then look back at their old life as a romantic adventure, rather than a sinkhole of regret.

4. “don’t do it alone” advice that is the bedrock of 12-step programs.

Many resolutions fail, she said, because people assume they have to be ready for a change before they make it. In reality, she said, “the only thing that convinces the brain that it is O.K. to change is to see it change.”

“Don’t listen to your feelings,” Dr. Jacobs said. “Feelings lie.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/01/fashion/01change.html?pagewanted=1&8dpc&_r=1