
Psychiatric News December 3, 2004
Volume 39 Number 23
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association
p. 50
INFORMATION ON THE CANDIDATES
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CANDIDATES FOR MEMBER-IN-TRAINING TRUSTEE-ELECT
Lysiane A. Ribeiro, M.D., M.P.H., Member-in-Training (Member Since 1997)
Psychiatry Resident, Mount
Sinai School of Medicine, New York, 2003-
PGY-2 Resident Representative, Executive Education Committee, Mount Sinai
School of Medicine, 2004-
Assistant Administrator of ASO Health Insurance Programs, Group Insurance
Commission, 1999-2000
Chapter President, Student National Medical Association, Yale School of
Medicine, 1995-96
M.D., Yale University School of Medicine, 2003
M.P.H., Harvard School of Public Health, 1998
Today's psychiatrists, in order to be effective practitioners, are required
to be multifaceted. On a daily basis psychiatrists must be biologically, as
well as psychotherapeutically, oriented. If not actual researchers, they must
be capable of gathering and distilling the latest research findings. They must
possess effective teaching skills in order to effectively and accurately
educate not only patients and their families, but also the next generation of
practitioners.
More than ever before, psychiatrists must also be aware of the financial,
legislative, and public opinion pressures imposed on their patients and the
profession as a whole. Mental health parity laws are still the exception and
not the rule. Managed health care companies' payment structures, as well as
psychologists' legislative efforts to win prescription privileges, are leading
to a shift away from psychiatrists providing medically based treatment to
patients. Psychiatrists must know the practical applications of HIPAA rules,
in addition to knowing how to properly document patients' visits so they will
not be requested to pay back prior payments after audits by health insurers.
Finally, psychiatric patients, and psychiatrists themselves, are still
stigmatized and marginalized.
Obviously for a solo practitioner to process, and more importantly
influence, all the factors necessary to become proficient in the
above-mentioned requirements is nearly impossible. It is for this reason, in
addition to providing fellowship, that APA exists. I seek to have the
opportunity to be your representative and directly aid APA in its mission as I
believe that I offer a uniquely diverse skills set.
My work experience as an administrator of psychiatric and indemnity
insurance plans for Massachusetts state employees, as well as my clinical and
public health training, has provided me with a system-oriented skills set that
allows me to not only comprehend health care reimbursement issues, but also
analyze said issues from both the payer and payee perspective, thus
envisioning recommendations and initiatives that are clinically appropriate
and acceptable to patients, psychiatrists, and insurers. My experience as my
medical school's Student National Medical Association chapter president has
taught me how to be an informed voting representative for a national
organization. My commitment to shaping education at the trainee level is
evidenced by my positions as my medical school's first-year-class Education
Policy and Curriculum Committee representative, fifth-year-class Yale Medical
Student Psychiatric Association representative, and currently my residency
program's PGY-2 Executive Education Committee representative. My belief that
one must not only influence what is being taught, but also learn how to
effectively disperse information is evidenced by my currently being a
co-author on a chapter on antidepressant therapy, as well as having
co-published a nutrition guide for medical students. As an instructor for high
school minority students in a research exposure program, I have had the
satisfaction of fostering the development of research skills in the next
generation of potential physicians. Finally, my recognition of the power of
public stigma and legislative action on the perception of psychiatric patients
and psychiatrists is evidenced by my medical school thesis that analyzed the
effect of the anti-psychiatric backlash of the John W. Hinckley Jr.
not-guilty-by-reason-of-insanity verdict, which ultimately led to the Insanity
Defense Reform Act of 1984, on the cinematic portrayal of forensic
psychiatrists and the criminally insane, and my current involvement with the
NIH Reducing Mental Illness Stigma and Discrimination grant. I look
forward to having the chance to put my skills to work as your representative
to the American Psychiatric Association.
PRIMARY PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES AND SOURCES OF INCOME
Professional Activities
- 100%Clinical inpatient psychiatry
- 50%Mount Sinai Medical Center
- 50%Bronx Veterans Administration Medical Center
Income
100%Mount Sinai Medical Center
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