Addressing race and racial trauma within psychotherapy supervision is increasingly important in psychiatry training. A therapist's ability to discuss race and racial trauma in psychotherapy supervision increases the likelihood that these topics will be explored as they arise in the therapeutic setting. The authors discuss the contextual and sociocultural dynamics that contributed to their own avoidance of race and racial trauma within the supervisory relationship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This letter to the editor describes how psychiatry residents' confidence in delivering population based care improved after working within a collaborative care system.
Methods: An anonymous online survey was delivered to 24 psychiatry residents who matriculated through Cambridge Health Alliance residency from 2012 to 2014 and participated in the collaborative care rotation. During the rotation, residents provided direct and indirect consultations, used measurement-based care (MBC) and took a population approach to patient management.