Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
338063 Psychosomatics 2008 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundBecause psychosomatic medicine (PM) is increasingly practiced in outpatient settings, the scope of practice needs to be delineated from community psychiatry and inpatient psychiatry work.ObjectiveThe authors sought to address the question of whether outpatient activities are a definably part the scope of practice of PM.MethodThree clinical groups were compared: 200 PM outpatients, 200 consultation–liaison (CL) inpatients, and 200 communitypsychiatry (CP) outpatients.ResultsThe groups differed significantly in 49 of 112 demographic and clinical comparisons (43.8%). Analysis of individual measures validated the concept that PM outpatient practice requires traditional PM/CL expertise with medical-psychiatric differential diagnosis, unexplained physical symptoms, pain, and psychopharmacological management in medically ill and geriatric patients.ConclusionOutpatient PM experiences may also enhance training opportunities, given an expanded case-mix.

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