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Published Online: 17 June 2011

New APA President's Four Focus Areas

John Oldham, M.D.
Credit: David Hathcox
Psychiatry is part of the house of medicine. Evidence for the mainstream medical nature of brain disorders is abundant and persuasive. Whether medical homes or accountable care organizations will be effective systems of care that help recapture the art of patient-centered care, or person-centered medicine, remains to be seen. But psychiatrists must be at the health care table as active participants, as new models of care are hammered out.
Psychiatric patients have a right to quality treatment. In extreme situations, psychiatrists must not shy away from active intervention when clearly indicated. Physicians do not hesitate to intervene actively when a brain disorder called epilepsy leads to a grand mal seizure, or when a toxic delirium produces combative behavior. There are many situations in which brain disorders known as psychiatric disorders are not recognized, and patients are blamed for "behaving badly" instead of being guided to appropriate treatment to help them overcome disruptive or distressing illness-driven behavior.
Fragmented care is not quality care. Too many patients have suffered at the hands of wasteful, ineffective, and poorly coordinated systems of care. Patients encounter one new treating clinician after another, and even if continuity of some kind of care is accomplished, continuity of meaningful treatment may not be. Psychiatrists need to lobby hard in support of quality, evidence-based, integrated treatment.
Research and education provide the best blueprint for our future. There is an explosion of knowledge about the brain, generating new ways to prevent and treat brain disorders. When the economy falters and money gets tighter, clinicians and researchers must stand side by side to defend continued support for research that will save money in the long run and improve the lot of patients.

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Published online: 17 June 2011
Published in print: June 17, 2011

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