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Comments & Controversies

Current Psychiatry. 2011 August;10(08):4-30
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Forget about judges and lawyers “telling us how to practice.” What about “Big Pharma” manipulating us and advertising on television, urging viewers to “talk to their doctor” about medication X? Dr. Nasrallah is preaching to the choir here. What we need is less breast-beating and more constructive action.

Edward W. Darell, MD
Psychiatrist, Private Practice
New York, NY

Managed care woes

Regarding Dr. Nasrallah’s insightful editorial (“A skeptical view of ‘progress’ in psychiatry,” From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, June 2011, p. 18-19): Since the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Employment Retirement Income Security Act, has enabled managed “care” to exist, with failed attempts to repeal or limit the act. Managed “care” has worked hard to change our language, such as “primary care physician” instead of physician or doctor and “behavioral health” instead of psychiatric or mental health care. These changes minimize our importance, influence, and reimbursements as well as the medications and treatments we use. When it was obvious what was happening, we abdicated our responsibility and control to the kind of people Dr. Nasrallah described.

There will be more cuts on reimbursements and limits on us unless we say “no.” We are not allowed to organize, physicians in Congress have not helped, and our elected professional organization leaders have little influence. We can give in and accept the “inevitable,” but the Hippocratic Oath seems to preclude such irresponsibility. We can refuse to treat anyone, except in emergencies, unless we choose to do so in good conscience. We need to change and the law has to change. The people who control our health care are evil, immoral, and venal; why should they be dictating care?

Gerald A. Shubs, MD
Butler Behavioral Health Services
Hamilton, OH

Insidious progress

I love Dr. Nasrallah’s editorials, but none more so than his commentary in the June issue, “A skeptical view of ‘progress’ in psychiatry” (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, June 2011, p. 18-19), in which he deftly highlights factors hindering the advancement of our profession. Clearly, his arguments come from the heart and speak directly to many psychiatrists’ concerns about what is happening in clinical settings.

I believe managed care has contributed to the proliferation of irrational polypharmacy. This is a consequence of clinicians who find themselves under unrealistic time pressures and cost constraints to come up with an expedient, “magical” treatment for acute hospitalized patients.

In reference to the comments about the phrase “behavioral health,” I have always objected to the pejorative term “providers” to refer to physicians. The designation “behavioral health providers” lumps psychiatrists and all other workers in the mental health field under the same umbrella, blurring the roles and identities of the different professions. Insurance companies further dismiss our psychiatric follow-ups as “medication management,” which ignores the broader, more specialized nature of our work with patients for the purpose of slashing fees. We often take these terms for granted, accepting them as nothing more than semantics or corporate jargon, but they are not so innocuous. We all should be aware of how these labels limit psychiatric practice and allow us to be subjugated by parties with financial motives.

On behalf of all of us who see the insidious side of the so-called progress being made in psychiatry, thank you for this insightful, well organized, and well written editorial.

Radwan F. Haykal, MD
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
University of Tennessee Health Science Center
Memphis, TN

To tell the truth

I loved Dr. Nasrallah’s editorial in the June 2011 issue (“A skeptical view of ‘progress’ in psychiatry,” Current Psychiatry, June 2011, p. 18-19). It’s calling a spade a spade. This should be published as an op-ed piece in the New York Times or another national newspaper so the public can see the reality of the situation.

Royal Kiehl, MD
Psychiatrist, Private Practice
Anchorage, AK

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Thanks to all my colleagues who took the time to read and express their views, to agree or to challenge the tenets in my editorial that lamented the lack of progress in certain practice aspects of psychiatry. Current Psychiatry is a marketplace of updates, ideas, suggestions, critiques, and rebuttals. It is interesting psychiatrists who have worked for a long time with seriously mentally ill patients in hospitals or the community seem to feel the pain of the lack of steady progress and/or the slippage in some areas, while those who identify with the managed care model of care see things differently— ie, managed care is, in fact, progress.

We psychiatrists evaluate and treat patients in very diverse settings and perceive things through different prisms, which is why we have disparate views. No one has a monopoly on the truth, but we all have important common ground: we all share an intense loyalty to our suffering patients, and we all share pride in our noble profession regardless of its ups or downs. We know in our hearts psychiatry remains indispensable for the well-being of all citizens. Pass it on…