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The Royal College of Psychiatrists Improving the lives of people with mental illness

Career info for school leavers

 

Why become a Psychiatrist?

Psychiatrists are medically qualified doctors who look after patients with mental health problems, such as depression, schizophrenia, eating disorders, anxieties, phobias, and drug and alcohol abuse. Psychiatrists work in a number of different places including hospitals, people’s own homes, residential centres for older people and people with special needs, and even in prisons.
 
Did you know that one in four of the population suffers from mental health problems? This kind of illness ranks with heart problems and cancer among the nation’s biggest health problems.
 
Psychiatry is one of the most varied, interesting and rewarding specialties in medicine. There are excellent opportunities for those who wish to progress to the most senior positions. As a career, psychiatry attracts as many women as men and it can particularly appealing for those interested in flexible (part-time) work.
 
“I have never once regretted my decision to train as a psychiatrist.
The combination of different scientific disciplines covering areas as diverse as neuroscience, psychology, and social science, all brought together within a person-centred approach, is hard to beat within medicine. In psychiatry you can really make a difference to people struggling with the most devastating illnesses and can help them to return to satisfying and fulfilling lives. No two people with mental health problems are the same and the privilege of being trusted with the most intimate aspects of a person’s experience and being able to offer real and lasting help is uniquely satisfying. Psychiatry may be frustrating and utterly challenging at times, but it is never boring, and a day rarely ends when you do not feel you and your team have done something both fascinating and amazingly worthwhile. If you want to treat people as individuals and use the best of scientific knowledge to help them make a massive difference to their lives, then psychiatry might be for you.”
Alan Lee, Consultant Psychiatrist
 

How do I become a psychiatrist?

All psychiatrists are qualified doctors, so first you must first gain a place at medical school.
 
Academically, you will need good passes in 3 A Levels, at least one of which must be a science subject (chemistry is compulsory at some medical schools). There is a lot of competition for places at medical school. Successful candidates need:
 
• good academic qualifications
• enthusiasm with good interpersonal skills
• a wide range of outside interests
• some interest in a caring profession.
 
You will find general information and advice on becoming a doctor, as well as a list of medical schools, on the following website of the British Medical Association. There are many other careers in mental heath that do not involve having a medical degree. These include psychology, counselling and social work. You can find more information about careers in these fields by contacting the British Psychological Society, the United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy, Mind and the General Social Care Council.
 

What is the career pathway of a psychiatrist?

Medical degree (usually 5 years)
This provides students with some exposure to the different specialties within medicine.

Foundation Year 1 and Foundation Year 2 (2 years)
After medical school you will spend 2 years working in a hospital as ‘foundation programme trainee.’ This will extend the knowledge and skills you have gained as a medical student. The foundation programme will help you understand the important qualities that you will need to develop to be a successful doctor. The second year of foundation programme will extend your knowledge and give you opportunities to experience working within different specialties.

Specialty training (usually 6 years)
Once you have completed the foundation programme you will be able to apply for specialty training in psychiatry. This will last for around 6 years and will include assessments through out the six years.
 
On successful completion of speciality training, you will be able to apply for a consultant post.


What makes psychiatry special?

As a doctor specialising in this area, you really could make a difference to someone’s life, and help them regain their self-respect and happiness. Psychiatry is an excellent career choice for anyone interested in how the mind works, and someone who enjoys working as part of a team. There is real variety in psychiatry. Every day can be different and every person you see will be unique. Psychiatrists work across a person’s lifespan, from childhood to old age. There are a number of different areas in which you can specialise, including child and adolescent psychiatry (working with young people up to school-leaving age), forensic psychiatry (working with people with mental illness who commit crimes), psychotherapy (using ‘talking treatments’, rather than prescribing medicines, to help people) and the psychiatry of learning disability (what used to be called ‘mental handicap’).


Psychiatric Specialties

General adult psychiatry

This involves looking after working age adults with a wide variety of mental health needs. These problems include depression, schizophrenia and anxiety disorders. Treatment involves using medication as well as trying to influence psychological and social factors.
 

Old age psychiatry

This involves working with adults over the age of 65. They may have any of the mental health problems encountered in general adult psychiatry. In addition, a major part of the work involves the diagnosis and management of dementia.
 

Child and adolescent psychiatry

Psychiatrists who work in this specialty assess and manage emotional and behavioural problems of children and adolescents to school leaving age. This involves team work between different professionals such as social workers, psychologists and education specialists.
 

Psychotherapy

Commonly psychotherapy involves working with people with personality disorder, interpersonal problems, depression and anxiety. It is about using talking treatments rather than medication. A key component is building a therapeutic relationship between doctor and patient.
 

Forensic psychiatry

This specialty covers the interaction between psychiatry and the law. It involves treating people who have committed crimes whilst mentally ill or people who become unwell in prison. Forensic psychiatrists also write court reports and give evidence in court. They work in secure hospitals and prisons.
 

Learning disability

People with learning disability may have conditions such as Down’s syndrome. Psychiatrists who work in this area are involved in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of mental health problems which occur in people with learning disability.


Would you make a good psychiatrist?

  • Are you a ‘people’ person, with a genuine interest in how other people think and feel?
  • Would you make a good detective and enjoy investigating complex situations?
  • Are you bright, patient and tactful?
  • Do you want to put your science into practice?
  • Are you interested in finding out what ‘makes people tick’?
  • Do you have the personal strength to face the difficult problems people tell you about?
 
If the answer to these questions is ‘yes’, then psychiatry could be the medical specialty for you


Try being a psychiatrist

You are called to A+E to assess a 70 year old man who has taken 50 paracetamol and his supply of antidepressants. He has had depression for many years. He had been saving the tablets for some time and left a suicide note. He tells you he does not want to go on since the death of his wife from cancer. He is medically stable following his overdose.
 
What is his risk of a further suicide attempt?
a)       low risk
b)       high risk
c)       no risk
 
 
Which of these factors contribute to an increased risk of suicide?
a)       depression
b)       male gender
c)       older age
d)       all of the above
 
 
What would you do?
a)       give him another supply of antidepressants
b)       send him home and write to his GP
c)       admit him to the psychiatric ward
 

Answers

 

1. The risk is high

2. His risk is increased by:

  • being male
  • being an older adult
  • having a diagnosis of depression
  • having suffered a recent bereavement
  • having planned his suicide attempt (saving the paaracetamol)
  • having thought he would succeed in killing himself (leaving a suicide note)

 

3. The best course of action would be to admit this gentleman to the psychiatric ward for assessment and further management. You should not give him another supply of antidepressants to take home as he could overdose with them again. He should not be sent home as he could harm himself before you can contact his GP.

 


 

You are asked to visit a 76 year old lady at home who is having problems with her memory. Her memory has been deteriorating for several months and she is forgetting important dates and names. Sometimes she gets lost when she is walking back from the shops.

 
What is the likely diagnosis?
a)       old age
b)       anxiety
c)       dementia
 
 
What information would you like to confirm the diagnosis?
a)       history from a relative or friend
b)       memory testing
c)       physical examination and blood tests
d)       all of the above
 
 
What other professionals may be involved in assessment and management?
a)       social worker
b)       community psychiatric nurse
c)       psychologist
d)       all of the above
 
Most people with dementia live:
a)       at home
b)       in a residential home
c)       in a nursing home
 
 

Answers

 

1.  The most likely diagnosis is c. dementia. People can become more forgetful in old age but this is much less severe than in dementia. Anxiety can make it difficult to concentrate and therefore make people feel that their memory is terrible but it would be unlikely for them to lose their way home.

 

2.  d. It is important to do all three. Information from a relative or friend of the patient is important as they may have noticed additional symptoms or may remember things that the patient has forgotten. A formal memory test should be carried out to determine the nature and degree of the memory loss. A physical examination and blood tests are important as physical conditions can cause or have an influence on dementia, for example a stroke can affect people’s memory.

 

3.  d. Assessment and management of a patient with dementia involves the whole multidisciplinary team. A psychologist may perform special memory tests. A social worker may be involved in assessing whether the patient needs to move to more suitable accommodation. A community psychiatric nurse may monitor the patient in the community and help educate their family about dementia.

 

4.  a. The majority of patients with dementia live at home. However, when some patients deteriorate it is necessary for them to have more support and help and this can be provided in a nursing or residential home.

 

 


You are a recently qualified doctor, and are currently in your Psychiatry rotation. You are asked by the staff in Accident and Emergency to see a 20-year-old woman, who has taken an overdose of paracetamol, though has no significant physical complications as a result.

 
When you arrive in A and E you are told she has recently split up with her boyfriend and drank a bottle of vodka before taking the overdose.
 
How do you approach the situation?
 
  1. Tell her everything’s going to be alright and arrange for her to go Home: this is just a “cry for help”
  2. Immediately arrange for her to be admitted to hospital after spending 10 minutes talking to her
  3. Tell her that she has wasted the doctors’ time, and that she should behave better in future
  4. Take a full history of events prior to the overdose
  5. Take a medical history and personal history, trying to understand how she copes with life stressors
  6. Ask about symptoms of psychiatric illness, eg depression and further thoughts of suicide
 
Answers
 

1. A number of healthcare staff have this attitude regarding self harm, and though this may be a cry for help, and a direct result of her getting drunk in he context of a life stressor, it is important to rule out any evidence of psychiatric illness (eg underlying depressed mood) that pre-dated the overdose. She may have done this before, and is at a considerably higher risk of committing suicide than other members of the population (up to 50 times)

 

2. Arranging for her to come into hospital may well be necessary, but bear in mind that it may be equally detrimental. You need to take a good history from her to see if this would be useful, and if you are going to admit her to hospital what are you going to offer her?

 

3. Believe it or not, this is still a response of some staff. Do you really think this is going to help her, or help in the doctor-patient relationship?

 

4. This is useful: did she take the overdose in secret, did she write a will, did she regret taking the overdose afterwards, was she intoxicated, was she hearing voices telling her to kill herself?

 

5. Again, this would aid you in finding out precisely why she took the overdose, does she react to all life stressors in this way, has she had a difficult upbringing, has there been a recent bereavement, does she have a medical condition that would predispose her to depression, eg epilepsy?

 

6. Yes, this is necessary: is she suffering from a depressive illness that has resulted in her feeling low in mood, made her energy levels lower and meant that she couldn’t enjoy things she used to? Did this cause her relationship to end? Does she have plans to commit suicide at the moment, and does she have the necessary means?

 

She tells you she has felt low since the death of her grandmother a year ago, who brought her up following her parent’s messy divorce, her father being an alcoholic. She recently lost her job as a hairdresser, feels “low” most of the time and does not enjoy things she used to, like playing tennis. Her energy levels are low, she does not eat and has dropped down 2 dress sizes to an 8. She feels “silly” about the overdose, which she took after her boyfriend left her. Her boyfriend turns up, and explains how she has become more irritable, but now wants her to come back home. She relates well to him, and says she does not want to come into hospital but would happily go to an outpatient appointment.

 

There are no other symptoms of psychiatric illness.

 
 
What do you do?
 
  1. Give her an antidepressant prescription and arrange an out patient follow-up
  2. Detain her under the Mental Health Act and bring her into hospital against her will?
  3. Arrange counselling for her at her GP practice
  4. Ask her to go see her GP when she leaves hospital
  5. Explain to her that you think she is depressed, and explain the factors that cause depression, using this as a model for treatments that can include antidepressants, talking therapies and involving family members and close friends
 
 
Answers
 
1.You could consider this, but do you not think option 5. looks better? Also, all antidepressants take at least 2 weeks to work, and have side effects: they should not be started without careful thought and without involving the patient in their own treatment
 
2. Given the description above, you would be on shaky ground here: depending on where you live in the UK there are different rules governing detention. However, if the patient does not pose a serious risk to themselves or others and you think they could be looked after in the community detention would not be warranted (or appreciated by the patient)
 
3. This may be useful for her though given her symptoms and story, it would be better for her to receive a more focused treatment for depression, which might include other forms of talking therapy and/or medication
 
4. Again, this may be all that is required:  should speak to her GP about her case, or send a prompt letter telling them about her case, and then make a joint decision about how best to arrange follow-up care. The GP may well have seen her with these symptoms before, or equally may not have a lot of experience with mental illness and value a further specialist opinion
 
5. This seems like a sensible approach doesn’t it? Depression has a number of different causes, that usually interact with one another to produce a depressive episode: biological (eg certain genes types, certain illnesses affecting hormones in the body), psychological (people’s ways of looking at situations are shaped by their life experience and certain ways of thinking can predispose one o depression) and social (bereavements and different types of abuse make depression more likely to occur). Targeting treatment at these factors can not only treat depression but also prevent it recurring.
 

How much do you know about Psychiatry?

1. Do you believe that people who are depressed?
 
a.        Should pull themselves together
b.        Are weak
c.        Need help and support
d.        Have only themselves to blame
 
 
2. To become a psychiatrist, which of the following must you study after A levels?
 
a.        Psychology
b.        Anthropology
c.        Medicine
d.        Psychotherapy
e.        Sociology
 
 
3. How many people on average will experience a problem with their mental health at some point in their life?
 
a.        1 in 2
b.        1 in 4
c.        1 in 100
d.        1 in 1000
 
 
4. Which of these would a psychiatrist not deal with?
 
a.        Depression
b.        A heart bypass
c.        Learning disabilities
d.        Anorexia
e.        Autism
 
 
5. Where can psychiatrists work?
 
a.        Hospitals
b.        Residential Homes
c.        Prisons
d.        Schools
e.        Courts of Law
f.         All of the above
 
 
6. How long does it take to train to become a psychiatrist after medical school?
 
a.        About 3 years
b.        About 5 years
c.        About 8 years
d.        About 10 years
 
7. What qualities does a good psychiatrist need?
 
a.        Good communication skills
b.        Scientific background
c.        Genuine interest in how people think and feel
d.        Good investigative skills
e.        All of the above
 
 
8. Which of these would a psychiatrist not treat?
 
a.        Adolescents
b.        Adults
c.        Children
d.        Animals
e.        Older people
 
 
9. In terms of public health, which psychiatric disorder is most common?
 
a.        Schizophrenia
b.        Depression
c.        Eating disorders
d.        Drug addiction
 
 
10.  Which of the following categories of person are vulnerable to developing mental illness?
 
a.       People of low intelligence
b.       People with weak personalities
c.       Older people
d.       Everyone
 
 
Answers
 
1.c        2.c        3.b        4.b        5.f         6.c        7.e        8.d        9.b        10d

How much will I earn?

Salaries change slightly each year and the following information is only an estimate. When you begin speciality training as a psychiatrist your basic salary will be approximately £24,000. This is supplemented by a payment for the out of hours work which you are involved in. The more out of hours (or on call) work you do the higher this payment will be.
 
At present an average trainee may get a 50% multiplier for on calls and so their salary would be approximately £36,000. Your basic salary will generally increase each year you are employed, so your overall salary including multiplier may be £45,000 after a few years. A consultant psychiatrist earns between £70,000 and £90,000 a year.

Are there opportunities for psychiatrists wishing to work in the Armed Forces?

Yes. Psychiatrists are recruited into all three of the UK Armed Forces, The Royal Navy, The Army and the Royal Air Force. They provide help with mental health problems to about 500,000 men, women and children in the UK and overseas. In addition to Service personnel, those entitled to benefit from the Defence Medical Services include civilians employed by the Ministry of Defence overseas (such as schoolteachers, welfare professionals, shopkeepers and administrative staff) and the families of Service personnel and other entitled civilians.
 
Military psychiatrists are trained as general adult psychiatrists, but there are opportunities to dual train, in a subspecialty useful to the military e.g. liaison, forensic. They may have a special interest in the maintenance of fitness and morale, and in the study of combat stress, both physical and psychological. Service psychiatrists are based primarily in the community, and are supported by community psychiatric nurses or social workers as part of a multi-disciplinary team. Currently, Service personnel requiring in-patient treatment are admitted into the private sector or an NHS facility.
 
All doctors working within the Armed Forces enlist as military personnel, and undergo some general military training. Before starting specialist psychiatric training, it is usual for Service doctors to spend one or two years undertaking general medical duties to enable them to acquire an understanding of the conditions of life and the culture within the Armed Forces.
 
There are also career opportunities for civilian psychiatrists within the Defence Medical Services, to work alongside uniformed consultants, who take care of military personnel, but do not have an Operational Role.
 

Information on work experience

Work experience is a great way to improve your knowledge and understanding of psychiatry and also:

 

  • Gives you the opportunity to develop skills and qualities which are needed to become a psychiatrist.
  • Provides solid experience to offer on application forms and interviews and helps improve prospects for entry to higher education.
  • Increases self-understanding, maturity, independence and self-confidence, especially in the workplace.
  • Provides the opportunity to develop networks.
  • Improves the understanding of the work environment and employees’ expectations.
  • Gives you the opportunity to develop and practice key skills that employers are looking for e.g. communication, teamwork and problem solving.
  • Increases awareness of how the NHS works.

 

There are many hospitals throughout the UK which offer work experience to Year 10/11 students, sixth formers and medical students. The Royal College of Psychiatrists is not responsible for organising work placements so please contact your local hospital directly for further information.

 

 

 

What if I already have a degree?

 
You will still need to apply for medical school even if you already have a degree in another subject. A number of medical schools however offer graduate-entry programmes to candidates who already have degrees – usually, but certainly not exclusively, in scientific subjects. These courses are shorter (usually 4 years) than the traditional 5 years. Students work in a variety of areas, including psychiatry.
 
To apply for these graduate entry courses you will need to pass the
 
Further information is available from UCAS: UCAS GAMSAT Office, PO
Box 28, Cheltenham GL52 3ZA. Email: gamsat@ucas.ac.uk; tel. 01242
544730;
 
 

What is the difference between psychology and psychiatry?

Psychiatrists, psychologists and psychotherapists are professionally trained people who see and help those suffering from psychological problems. The main difference is that psychiatrists are all medically qualified doctors, and as doctors can prescribe medication. Psychologists are non-medically trained professionals who are primarily concerned with how people think, act, react and interact.
 
FURTHER INFORMATION
 

 

Please note that we are unable to offer advice on individual cases. Please see our FAQ for advice on getting help.

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