低收入和中等收入国家的精神病学和精神卫生培训:来自泰国在COVID-19爆发前后的经验

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Rasmon Kalayasiri MD, Sorawit Wainipitapong MD
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引用次数: 3

摘要

自2020年3月COVID-19大流行开始以来,精神病学和精神卫生培训受到了很大影响。我们说明了泰国曼谷朱拉隆功大学的学术和临床精神病学住院医师培训程序的变化,泰国是一个位于东南亚的发展中国家,属于低收入和中等收入国家。培训机构设立了专门小组,负责制定应对新冠疫情的各种战略,即保持社会和身体距离措施,以维持对精神病人的标准护理和精神病人的教育体验。这些战略包括在线教育、服务团队分离和避免团队之间的接触、减少非紧急临床活动以及对精神病患者使用远程医疗。尽管在大流行期间面临培训困难,但所有老年居民都在国家考试中获得了资格和执照。居民报告说,大流行确实影响了学术活动和服务,也影响了生活质量和满意度。学术问题,包括网上学习的不便,是流行病期间精神科住院患者最关心的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Training of psychiatry and mental health in a low- and middle-income country: Experience from Thailand before and after COVID-19 outbreak

Since the start of COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, training of psychiatry and mental health has been impacted considerably. We illustrated the change of academic and clinical psychiatric residency training procedure at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand, a developing country situated in South East Asia which is categorized in the low and middle income category of countries. The training setting has set up a task force responsible to set various strategies in response to the COVID-19 measure of social and physical distancing to maintain standard of care for psychiatric patients and educational experience for psychiatric residents. The strategies include online education, service team separation, and avoidance of contact between teams, reduction of non-urgent clinical activities, and the use of telemedicine for psychiatric patients. Despite exposure to the difficulties of training during the pandemic, all senior residents were qualified and licensed at the national examination. Residents reported that pandemic did affect the academic activities and services and also the quality of living and satisfaction. Academic issues, including the inconvenience of studying online, were the most concerned problems among psychiatric residents at the time of pandemic.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Asia-Pacific Psychiatry is an international psychiatric journal focused on the Asia and Pacific Rim region, and is the official journal of the Pacific Rim College of Psychiatrics. Asia-Pacific Psychiatry enables psychiatric and other mental health professionals in the region to share their research, education programs and clinical experience with a larger international readership. The journal offers a venue for high quality research for and from the region in the face of minimal international publication availability for authors concerned with the region. This includes findings highlighting the diversity in psychiatric behaviour, treatment and outcome related to social, ethnic, cultural and economic differences of the region. The journal publishes peer-reviewed articles and reviews, as well as clinically and educationally focused papers on regional best practices. Images, videos, a young psychiatrist''s corner, meeting reports, a journal club and contextual commentaries differentiate this journal from existing main stream psychiatry journals that are focused on other regions, or nationally focused within countries of Asia and the Pacific Rim.
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