
Psychiatr News April 20, 2007
Volume 42, Number 8, page 18
© 2007 American Psychiatric Association
Neither Wind nor Water Halted N.O. Residency
Mark Moran
One of the worst natural disasters ever to hit this
countryHurricane Katrinadidn't drown the psychiatry residency
program at Louisiana State University.
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Left to right, top row: Dean Hickman, M.D. (Ochsner program director),
Kelly Guidry (program coordinator), Han Soe, M.D., Yukiko Linszky, M.D.,
Margaret Baier, M.D. (LSU program director), Candice Hunter, M.D., Arwen
Adams, M.D., Mohammad Anwar, M.D., John Wells, M.D. Middle row: Jose
Rodriguez, M.D., Julie Ceasar, M.D., Sham Johnson, M.D., Lyad Gozal, M.D.,
Larry Warner, M.D., Pavan Pancholy, M.D. Bottom row: Howard Osofsky M.D.,
Ph.D. (LSU chair), Angela Green, D.O., Ross Deleonardo, M.D., Majid Khan,
M.D., Nick Ramandi, M.D., John Fenton, M.D., Bart Vereb, M.D., Alvin Rouchell,
M.D. (Ochsner chair). Not shown (due to Katrina logistics): Ben McAllister,
M.D., Will Collins, M.D., Matt Gamble, M.D., Desiree Morrell, M.D., Nicholas
Pejic, M.D., Shaheena Virani, M.D., Victor Bush, M.D., Kim Law, M.D., Robert
Durant, M.D., Isaac Isaac, M.D., Jeffrey Simon, M.D., Brandi Gilmore, M.D.,
Jamie Hanna, M.D., Jatin Patel, M.D., Paula Wilt, M.D., and Indira Adapa,
M.D.
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More than a year and a half after being in the path of the most devastating
hurricane in American history, the adult psychiatry training program at
Louisiana State University (LSU) Health Sciences Center School of Medicine is
"100 percent."
Actually, like much else in New Orleans, the LSU/Alton Ochsner Adult
Psychiatry Residency Program is still recovering from the effects of Hurricane
Katrina. But the program is the latest to join APA's 100% Club honoring
training programs in which all residents have signed on as members of APA.
A photo of each program that joins the 100% Club is turned into a poster
and mailed to every medical school in the United States and Canada to
encourage medical students to join APA. In addition, programs in the 100% Club
receive a major textbook from American Psychiatric Publishing Inc. and a free
online subscription toFocus: The Journal of Lifelong Learning for
each year that all of their residents are APA members.
For residents at LSU/Ochsner, the distinction is especially important in a
time when signs and symbols of unity and cohesion have been critical. Since
the storm that closed Charity Hospital, the large public hospital where much
of LSU/Ochsner's training took place, patients and residents have been placed
at hospitals throughout the greater New Orleans area, sometimes as far as 60
or 70 miles away.
At the same time, the residency programlike much of its
cityhas been busy reinventing itself.
"We've never closed," training director Margaret Baier, M.D.,
told Psychiatric News. "So it has sometimes been a little
messy, like remodeling your house while you are still living in it. But it has
been very rewarding, and residents have had a lot of input in all kinds of
things. The residents feel very involved, and some of them say they have
become much more politically active as a result of the storm, advocating for
their patients.
"Our residents have had to advocate for themselves for their
continued training and for their patients, to open public psychiatric
beds," Baier said. "So many of them have become very involved and
are still involved in town-hall community meetings about reopening of
beds."
Twenty months after Katrina, Baier said the biggest challenge remains
matching patients with clinicians and resources.
"Administratively it has been exhausting, but an education in itself
in learning on the job how to move patients into a new hospital, get residents
credentialed, and build cohesion with a new team of doctors and nurses and new
policies and procedures."
And Baier said the push to get all the residents to become members of APA
has been viewed by residents and faculty alike as a demonstration of unity
amid disarray and a commitment to the future.
"There is a lot of misinformation out about New Orleans and about
psychiatry and individual programs in the city," Baier told
Psychiatric News. "The desire to be part of the 100% Club is a
way of saying that we are here and we are healing."
Baier said that the psychiatry residency's partnership with the Ochsner
Foundation Clinic, which began in 1999, was critical in helping the program
weather the storm.
"Ochsner is a community hospital in the suburbs, one parish over but
worlds apart in terms of the background of the patients," Baier said.
"Generally speaking, we see the same psychiatric illnesses but with very
different comorbidities, different resources, and a different
presentation."
When the public hospital closed after flooding, Ochsner remained open,
allowing patients to be transferred and residents to continue their training
there.
Baier said that because of the geographic dispersal of the training
program, residents and faculty have learned to rely more on telepsychiatry,
video conferencing, and text messaging than ever before.
"We are continuing to rebuild," she said. "The way our
program looks today is not the way it will look tomorrow."
But those who have remained after the calamity of Hurricane Katrina are a
hardy lot, and the challenges of life after the storm have engendered a
pioneering spirit.
"The people who are here are here by choice," Baier said.
"They have a vision and are working hard to put that vision in place.
It's a good opportunity to build a new, excellent health care system and a
chance not to rebuild the same old problems."
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