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The First and Last Word in Psychiatry
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received at least 6 months in advance of the meeting and should be addressed to:
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Because of space limitations, only listings of meetings of the greatest interest to
Journal readers will be included.
e
mb e rJ a nua
MAY
May 15–17, 5th International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related
Disorders in the Middle East, Limassol,
Cyprus. Contact: Conference Secretariat;
1-773-784-8134 (tel), 1-773-782-6747
(tel), 1-208-575-5453 (fax), [email protected] (e-mail),
www.worldeventsforum.com/alz.htm
(web site).
May 16–21, 162nd Annual Meeting of
the American Psychiatric Association, San
Francisco, CA. Contact: Cathy Nash, APA
Annual Meetings Dept., 1000 Wilson
Blvd., Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA 22209;
(703) 907-7822.
JUNE
June 16–20, 2nd Thematic Conference
on Legal and Forensic Psychiatry, Madrid,
Spain. Contact: World Psychiatric Association, Alfredo Calcedo Barba,
[email protected].
sociation, New York, NY. Contact: Jill Gruber, APA Annual Meetings Dept., 1000
Wilson Blvd., Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA
22209; (703) 907-7815.
Association, Boston, MA. Contact: Jill Gruber, APA Annual Meetings Dept., 1000
Wilson Blvd., Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA
22209; (703) 907-7815.
October 27–November 1, 56th Annual Meeting of the American Academy
of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
Honolulu, HI. Contact: AACAP, 3615 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC
20016-3007; (202) 966-7300 (tel), (202)
966-2891 (fax), [email protected] (email), www.aacap.org (web site).
October 26–31, 57th Annual Meeting
of the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry, New York, NY.
Contact: AACAP, 3615 Wisconsin Avenue,
N.W., Washington, DC 20016-3007; (202)
966-7300 (tel), (202) 966-2891 (fax),
[email protected] (e-mail), www.
aacap.org (web site).
NOVEMBER
MAY 2011
November 11–14, 56th Annual Meeting, Academy of Psychosomatic
Medicine, Las Ve g as, Nev. Contact:
www.apm.org (web site).
May 14–19, 164th Annual Meeting of
MARCH 2010
March 17–20, 21st Annual Meeting,
American Neuropsychiatric Association,
Tampa, Fla. Contact: www.anpaonline.org
(web site).
AUGUST
August 27–30, Canadian Psychiatric
Association 59th Annual Meeting, St.
Johns, Newfoundland, Canada. Contact:
260-441 MacLaren Street, Ottawa, ON
K2P 2H3, Canada; (800) 267-1555 (tel),
(613) 234-9857 (fax), [email protected] (e-mail). www.cpa-apc.org (web
site).
MAY
May 22–27, 163rd Annual Meeting of
the American Psychiatric Association,
New Orleans, LA. Contact: Cathy Nash,
APA Annual Meetings Dept., 1000 Wilson
Blvd., Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA 22209;
(703) 907-7822.
OCTOBER
OCTOBER
October 8–11, 61st Institute on Psychiatric Services, American Psychiatric As-
October 14–17, 62nd Institute on Psy-
A14
the American Psychiatric Association, Honolulu, HI. Contact: Cathy Nash, APA Annual Meetings Dept., 1000 Wilson Blvd.,
Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA 22209; (703)
907-7822.
chiatric Services, American Psychiatric
OCTOBER
October 18–23, 58th Annual Meeting
of the American Academy of Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry, Toronto, Ontario.
Contact: AACAP, 3615 Wisconsin Avenue,
N.W., Washington, DC 20016-3007; (202)
966-7300 (tel), (202) 966-2891 (fax),
[email protected] (e-mail), www.
aacap.org (web site).
October 27–30, 63rd Institute on Psychiatric Services, American Psychiatric Association, San Francison, CA. Contact: Jill
Gruber, APA Annual Meetings Dept., 1000
Wilson Blvd., Ste. 1825, Arlington, VA
22209; (703) 907-7815.
New Feature for Residents!
The American Journal of Psychiatry
Residents’ Journal
A FREE electronic publication produced specifically for psychiatry residents
The Residents' Journal contains special
links to full text of the articles from the
current American Journal of Psychiatry
and to AJP Audio, a downloadable MP3
file featuring highlights from the issue. In
addition, this e-mail bulletin contains two
exclusive features:
Journal Club Kit
A featured article presented with an
overview discussing the reasons for its
selection, discussion questions, and an
editorial by a senior member of the field
placing the article into clinical context.
Educational Article
Case presentation that illustrates a major
point in clinical practice or highlights
unique treatment approaches.
Plus lively contributions from your fellow
residents:
• Instructive cases
• Unique clinical or educational
programs
• Perspectives on training and career
development
• Discussions arising from journal club
discussions
a publication of
The American Journal of Psychiatry and the
APA Committee of Residents and Fellows
April 2009
Volume 4
Issue 4
This Issue
Introduction
Todd Benjamin Young, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico
2
A Conversation With
Frances Koenig
Todd B. Young, M.D.
5
Countertransference: A
Primer for Residents
Todd B. Young, M.D.
7
Mindfulness: A Framework
for Integrating Tradition
With Evidence-Based
Psychiatric Practice
Brant Hager, M.D.
8
Residents and the
Pharmaceutical Industry
Joseph Vlaskovits, M.D
9
When the Money Runs
Out: Forced Termination
for Financial Reasons
Adrienne M. Yourek, M.D.
10
Who Is Right?
Deepak Kumar, M.D.
Editor-in-Chief: Molly McVoy, M.D.
Issue Editor: Todd B. Young, M.D.
Staff Editor: Angela Moore
The
This month’s issue of the Residents’ Journal emphasizes relationships in residency. In
this issue, five articles, as well as one interview, provide different perspectives on the
relationships we experience as residents: relationships with our patients, the countertransference they elicit in us, and the inherent dichotomy of perspectives between
healthcare provider and the patient with psychosis; relationships with industry and
the financial pressures our patients encounter obtaining healthcare; and, last, relationships with ourselves through mindful awareness in the practice of psychiatry. The
objective of this issue is to promote reflection on the ways in which we engage and
interact as psychiatrists so that we may be deliberate in our dealings with others. I
have found the following quote by the philosopher Philo of Alexandria, shared with
me by a senior member of my faculty, very useful during my training: “Be kind, for
everyone you meet is fighting a great battle.”
Residents’
free-of-charge
Journal
to
all
is
sent
psychiatry
residents. Anyone interested in being
included on the distribution list
should contact Angela Moore, the
Residents’ Journal staff editor at
[email protected] with “Subscribe to
Residents’ Journal” in the subject
line.
Reprinted for the information of the readers of The American Journal of Psychiatry
T H E TBH
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O F POS F
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Volume
186
H I AT R Y AprilMay2009,2005,
VOL.
194
A13
A15
Editorial Board
Highlights of this issue
Editorials
293
Why psychiatry can't afford to be
neurophobic
296
Prednisolone suppression test in depression:
prospective study of the role of HPA axis
dysfunction in treatment resistance
M.F. Juruena, C.M. Pariante, A.S. Papadopoulos,
L. Poon, S. Lightman, and A.J. Cleare
E. Bullmore, P. Fletcher and P.B. Jones
Migraine in recurrent depression: casecontrol study
Prevention of first-episode depression:
progressand potential
Z. Samaan, A. Farmer, N. Craddock, L. Jones,
A. Korszun, M. Owen, and P. McGuffin
R.G. Robinson and R.E. Jorge
Special article
298
Frontotemporal dementia presenting as
schizophrenia-like psychosis in young
people: clinicopathological series and review
of cases
D. Velakoulis, M. Walterfang, R. Mocellin, C. Pantelis,
and C. McLean
Review article
306
Mental health implications of detaining
asylum seekers: systematic review
312
342
350
355
Brain serotonin transporter binding in
former users of MDMA (‘ecstasy’)
S. Selvaraj, R. Hoshi, Z. Bhagwagar, N.V. Murthy,
R. Hinz, P. Cowen, H.V. Curran, and P. Grasby
360
Mortality and tardive dyskinesia: long-term
study using the US National Death Index
364
Watching zee detectives – psychiatry in the
movies
C.E. Dean and P.D. Thuras
Peter Byrne
K. Robjant, R. Hassan, and C. Katona
365
Impact of a mental health teaching
programme on adolescents
The Rose and the Key (1871), J. Sheridan
LeFanu – psychiatrists in 19th-century fiction
P.B. Naylor, H.A. Cowie, S.J. Walters, L. Talamelli,
and J. Dawkins
Fiona Subotsky
Papers
313
Molecular differentiation of schizoaffective
disorder from schizophrenia using BDNF
haplotypes
T. Lencz, R.H. Lipsky, P. DeRosse, K.E. Burdick,
J.M. Kane, and A.K. Malhotra
319
Catatonia – in 100 words
Max Fink and Michael A. Taylor
326
International and indigenous diagnoses of
mental disorder among Vietnamese living in
Vietnam and Australia
Z. Steel, D. Silove, N.M. Giao, T.T.B. Phan, T. Chey,
A. Whelan, A. Bauman, and R.A. Bryant
334
Treated depression in adolescents: predictors
of outcome at 28 weeks
P. Wilkinson, B. Dubicka, R. Kelvin, C. Roberts, and I.
Goodyer
A18
D. Koethe, A. Giuffrida, D. Schreiber, M. Hellmich,
F. Schultze-Lutter, S. Ruhrmann, J. Klosterkötter,
D. Piomelli, and F.M. Leweke
373
Gender differences in the association
between childhood abuse and psychosis
H. Fisher, C. Morgan, P. Dazzan, T.K. Craig,
K. Morgan, G. Hutchinson, P.B. Jones, G.A. Doody,
C. Pariante, P. McGuffin, R.M. Murray, J. Leff,
and P. Fearon
325
Short reports
371
Anandamide elevation in cerebrospinal fluid
in initial prodromal states of psychosis
Using the Stroop task to investigate the
neural correlates of symptom change in
schizophrenia
L. Krabbendam, O. O'Daly, L.A. Morley, J. van Os,
R.M. Murray, and S.S. Shergill
375
Intrauterine testosterone exposure and risk
for disordered eating
J.H. Baker, P. Lichtenstein, and K.S. Kendler
Columns
377
Correspondence
378
Correction
379
Book reviews
384
Contents of Advances in Psychiatric Treatment
385
Contents of the American Journal of Psychiatry
386
From the Editor's desk