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Psychology Internships in the Treatment of Severe Mental Illness: Implications for Training in Academic Medical Centers

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Abstract

Despite an increasing focus over the past 2 decades by federal and state governments on the care of persons with severe mental illness, psychologists remain underrepresented among behavioral health professionals working with this population. Within the discipline there is growing concern about the need to adequately train, recruit, and retain psychologists in this specialty. This is a particular concern in academic medical settings where the overall severity of illness among those receiving psychiatric services continues to increase. The purpose of this qualitative research study was to intensively examine the experience of predoctoral interns engaged in treating individuals with severe mental illness in an academic medical center in order to identify the professional developmental experiences and training needs of those learning to care for this population. This analysis, conducted with semistructured interviews at four points during the internship year, yielded a series of recommendations for improving internship training and recruiting psychologists to this specialty.

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Hoge, M.A., Stayner, D. & Davidson, L. Psychology Internships in the Treatment of Severe Mental Illness: Implications for Training in Academic Medical Centers. Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings 7, 213–222 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009580413935

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