Want to sharpen your diagnostic and clinical skills while recapturing some
of the excitement of your psychiatric training? Then head to the six clinical
case conferences being given each weekday morning during APA's 2006 annual
meeting in Toronto. A select group of the field's top educators will be
presenting their most intriguing and challenging cases. The format includes
actual case material to illustrate treatment dilemmas and solutions and
welcomes the audience to interact with expert panelists with their questions
and comments.
There will be two conferences on Monday, May 22. Susan Stabinsky, M.D.,
will chair "Honorable Discharge: Severe Brain Injury and Psychological
Symptoms in a Female Veteran," with a case in which attempts to treat a
war injury resulting in traumatic brain injury are complicated by multiple
psychiatric and other medical conditions. In a conference that both
illustrates clinical application and teaches its use, "Sealed With a
Kiss: Using the Sexual History in Psychodynamic Psychotherapy," chaired
by Jennifer Downey, M.D., reveals the dramatic results that can be obtained
when this technique becomes an integral part of the diagnostic workup.
The session on Tuesday, May 23, broadens the scope of clinical topics into
forensic psychiatry: "Rocking the Cradle: A Case of Postpartum
Infanticide," chaired by Nicole Wolfe, M.D. Discussion will move from
the specifics of this tragic case to identifying symptom clusters in
postpartum psychosis. Also, panelists from different jurisdictions will
explore the variety of approaches to sentencing and treatment
considerations.
This year's continuous clinical case conference will be held Tuesday and
Wednesday, May 23 and 24, from 9 a.m. to noon. Titled "20 Therapies
Later: Addressing Transference Resistance," this two-day presentation
will tackle one of the most difficult situations in psychotherapy: when an
unwillingness to understand or explore thoughts and feelings except at the
most realistic level stalemates treatment and puts pressure on the
psychiatrist to cross boundaries. The session will be chaired by R. Rao
Gogineni, M.D., with Robert Michels, M.D., and Richard Kluft, M.D., as
panelists.
During the final two case conferences, topics from the 2005 annual meeting
are back by popular demand. On Wednesday, May 24, Carl Greiner, M.D., will
once again lead a discussion of clinical, legal, and ethical concerns in"
Crossing the Line: Determining Your Patient Is too Dangerous to
Drive." Topics include road rage and the younger impaired driver with
severe and persistent mental illness.
On Thursday morning, May 25, Dimitri Markov, M.D., will chair the"
2006 Consult-Liaison Casebook Challenge: Strategies and Limitations in
Establishing Competency." A new case will be discussed illustrating
factors in clinical approaches to determining decisional capacity and
involuntary treatment in the context of acute hospital care. ▪