For this week's blog, I will focus on the area of management - of yourself, your career, your team and wider service. I have also thrown in some random images of key figures from the history of psychiatry, all of whom did groundbreaking work leaving lasting imprints within our profession. The range of work of these different individuals is interesting from a historical and scientific perspective while also serving to highlight the rich and varied nature of our profession, from the very 'biological' neuropsychiatric work of Alzheimer and Pick through to the psychotherapy and psychoanalysis of Yalom and Storr. Furthermore, scanning over the achievements of any one of them should be enough to fill you with stunned admiration and inspire you to make the most of your career.
But back to the topic at hand. First and foremost, 'management' is not just for senior
clinicians. You should be developing personal self-management and general management and leadership skills from your earliest days as a Trainee.
So always consider the ‘big picture’ in your
everyday clinical work, e.g. ‘Why is this clinic so busy?’, ‘Why are there
always people waiting to be seen here?’, ‘Are there ways in which we can
improve the system to make things better for patients and clinicians?’, ‘What
is the purpose of this clinic?’, etc. Asking and answering these questions will
help motivate you to optimize your work performance and to make changes to
ineffective and redundant practices, thus improving the service for your
patients and improving the work experience for you and your colleagues.
Ugo Cerletti (1877-1963), the Italian neurologist
who first developed electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
for use as a psychiatric treatment
for use as a psychiatric treatment
Think also in terms of doing small quality
improvement (QI) projects that are focused, feasible and with a clear end point
and try and generalize the principles to other areas of a service. Think in
terms of ‘bottom up’ and ‘top down’ perspectives, e.g. how does a small project
relate to national strategy and, vice versa, how can we harness national
strategy (e.g. clinical programmes) to develop local initiatives. For any
management initiative, big or small, try and write it up, publish it and add it
to your CV.
Think broadly in getting support and input from senior colleagues (e.g. Clinical Director)
and from allied healthcare professionals; ‘early adaptors’ will jump in and
help and their enthusiasm can be infectious and help mobilize others to get
involved.
Also consider a formal management course
at e.g. Diploma or Masters level, with a group of colleagues. Working with a
group will help ensure that you complete the project, that you get the
qualification and that the project is feasible and relevant to your particular
service.
Alois Alzheimer (1864-1915), the German psychiatrist who first described,
in a case of presenile dementia, the neurodegenerative
process that would be named after him
in a case of presenile dementia, the neurodegenerative
process that would be named after him
As with teaching and research skills, management skills are developed constantly throughout one’s medical career and vary in terms of scope and complexity depending on your level on the medical career ladder and your personal levels of ambition and initiative.
Effective
management skills begin and end with good self-management. Unless you can safely and effectively manage
your everyday clinical workload, you cannot move on to even consider leading a
team, supervising junior doctor colleagues or developing and improving the
service you provide for your patients.
Management of everyday
clinical work should involve the development of one or two key review and new
patient clinics during the week during which time maximum energy and resources
are applied. Other parts of the week
should be assigned to inpatient work and don't forget to block off protected time for administrative work, teaching, clinical audit, research and service development.
An advertisement campaign
in the US for Maytag washing machines used to present the Maytag repair man as
someone who (because of the high quality of the product) was never busy or
overwhelmed but always ready and alert to respond to crises. Likewise, you
should plan your clinical working week as if you were ‘the Maytag man’, i.e. in
control, alert and vigilant but never overwhelmed by the volume of problems. (I
owe this analogy to Dr. Declan Murray and Dr. Pat Devitt and, I guess, to Maytag washing machines).
And now some for some more history:
The Maytag Man - ready, equipped and waiting
for the next problem (but never overwhelmed)
for the next problem (but never overwhelmed)
And now some for some more history:
Arnold Pick (1851-1924), Czech psychiatrist whose name
is associated with a variant of frontotemporal dementia
and some of the underlying pathology
is associated with a variant of frontotemporal dementia
and some of the underlying pathology
As outlined above, the weekly timetable should be designed to allow for prioritizing inpatient ward rounds, outpatient clinics (for new, review and emergency assessments) and also leaving time for administration (paperwork, telephone calls, etc.) and clinical and educational supervision time between the Consultant and Junior Doctor.
A diary - get one and use it every day
(either electronic or an old fashioned paper version)
(either electronic or an old fashioned paper version)
Monday
a.m. Multidisciplinary community team meeting
p.m. Inpatient ward round
Tuesday
a.m. Outpatient clinic (reviews)
p.m. Outpatient clinic (new patients)
Wednesday
a.m. Outpatient clinic (new patients)
p.m. Administration work
Thursday
a.m. Emergency outpatient assessments
p.m. Inpatient ward round
Friday
a.m. Teaching and clinical/educational supervision - include time for audit, research, involvement in service development
p.m. Administration
Once you have established a
stable bedrock of self-management you can then move on to managing and leading
junior doctors and members of the multidisciplinary team, depending on your level of
clinical seniority. At a junior doctor
level the key challenge is to work as a member of the team in an effective way,
while also leading out on medical related issues. At a Consultant level there is an expectation
to act as the Clinical Team Leader and also in most cases as the manager
and overall leader of the team.
Standard advice for those at Higher Specialist Trainee (HST)/Senior Registrar level is to attend management meetings that look at service wide issues and developments. Approach such meetings with a critical eye and a degree of caution and disentangle yourself early if the group is inefficient, poorly led or dysfunctional in other ways. Avoid the pitfall of attending dysfunctional management meetings just for the sake of attendance. An effective meeting/group should have clear terms of reference, useful and achievable goals, a strong chairperson and a membership that is active and takes responsibility. The meeting/group should also have a place in the overall context of service planning and delivery, with clear reporting and feedback lines to all management levels.
And a few final points...
Standard advice for those at Higher Specialist Trainee (HST)/Senior Registrar level is to attend management meetings that look at service wide issues and developments. Approach such meetings with a critical eye and a degree of caution and disentangle yourself early if the group is inefficient, poorly led or dysfunctional in other ways. Avoid the pitfall of attending dysfunctional management meetings just for the sake of attendance. An effective meeting/group should have clear terms of reference, useful and achievable goals, a strong chairperson and a membership that is active and takes responsibility. The meeting/group should also have a place in the overall context of service planning and delivery, with clear reporting and feedback lines to all management levels.
And a few final points...
Remember that individual management styles vary depending on the personality of the individual doctor and I would advise
that you become aware of your strengths and weaknesses as early as
possible in your career. You may then need to e.g. increase your levels of
assertiveness or, at the other end of the spectrum, tone down the intensity of
your interactions with colleagues. Try and identify your core values and
characteristics and remain as true as possible to these in your dealings with
all colleagues, regardless of discipline or level of seniority.
Furthermore, some important
basic principles include starting and finishing early, leading by setting a
good example, being enthusiastic and open to new ideas and supporting team
members in as much as possible. A simple rule to managing paperwork is that you
should touch a document only once before it is either disposed of or filed;
this simple strategy will help you avoid accumulating anxiogenic piles of paper
on your desk (and that general principle applies to management of emails too).
Gerald Russell (1928-2018), British psychiatrist
who first described Bulimia Nervosa
Once you are confident that your own self-management and team management is optimized you may then consider interactions with other services and outside agencies and you may start to see how your particular service fits in with regional and national strategy and developments.
And finally, some more historical figures, this time from the psychotherapy sphere:
Anthony Storr (1920-2001), British psychiatrist and psychoanalyst and author of 'The Art of Psychotherapy', my very first book on that particular topic
Irvin Yalom (born 1931), American psychiatrist, early pioneer of Group Psychotherapy and author who is still with us and is as productive as ever, his latest book being published in 2017.
Next week, for the last planned blog posting, I will focus on postgraduate qualifications.
But after that, thanks to the contributions of two Trainees, I will have guest bloggers for the following two weeks, who have written their own personal reflections on how to make the most of your years as a Trainee in Psychiatry.
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