“Not doing it justice”: Perspectives of Recent Family Medicine Graduates on Mental Health and Addictions Training in Residency
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
METHODS
RESULTS
CONCLUSION
Introduction
Methods
Study design and participants
PARTICIPANTS CHARACTERISTICS | N | PERCENT |
---|---|---|
Average age | ||
< 29 | 4 | 57.1% |
> 30 | 3 | 42.9% |
Sex | ||
Male | 4 | 57.1% |
Female | 3 | 42.9% |
Residency sites | ||
THO MH | 1 | 14.3% |
North York General Hospital | 2 | 28.6% |
Mount Sinai Hospital | 3 | 42.8% |
Sunnybrook Hospital | 1 | 14.3% |
Years of independent practice | ||
< 1 year | 1 | 14.3% |
1 year | 5 | 71.4% |
> 3 years | 1 | 14.3% |
Location of practice | ||
Suburban | 1 | 14.3% |
Urban | 6 | 85.7% |
Type of current practice | ||
Group practice | 6 | 85.7% |
Solo practice | 1 | 14.3% |
Psychotherapy offered in practice | ||
Yes | 2 | 28.6% |
No | 4 | 57.1% |
Maybe | 1 | 14.3% |
Addiction management in practice | ||
Yes | 1 | 14.3% |
No | 6 | 85.7% |
Maybe | 0 | N/A |
Data analysis

Reflexivity service
Results

THEME | SUB-THEME | ILLUSTRATIVE QUOTATIONS FROM RESIDENT GRADUATES |
---|---|---|
1. Barriers in providing Mental Health and Addictions Care | Financial Barriers | There are additional training resources for us to take training session on psychotherapy and such, but unfortunately that's not part of residency, and once you finish residency, those kind of training cost money, and you have to think about it and say practitioner do you want to invest the time and money in doing the psychotherapy.—Ling |
Knowledge of Patient-Facing Resources | … it's very easy to tell patients why don’t you just look up this website or whatever, it's very different when you’re actually counseling them how to do that, or what else that they are going to be doing at the same time. And that's, I think that's where the burden of primary care is coming.—Sarah | |
Time Constraints | I think what family doctors do lack in terms of mental health patient is time. We obviously don’t have an hour to spend with mental health patients. And every single time like psychiatrist may. And so it sometimes challenging to effectively treat mental health patients “cause the amount of time that's involved.”—Scott | |
Boundaries in Scope of Practice | …You enter practice [and get] a lot of questions like…I think I have OCD, I think I have ADHD … I wish I could give people a bit of a clear answer I feel like comfortable getting things started. Cause there can often be a really long wait for these assessments … I wish that not necessarily that I would be the sole person managing it, “cause I don’t think that's sort of my scope.”—Jeff | |
2. Curriculum Renewal | Addictions Training: Lack of exposure and seeking additional training | I didn’t see as much addiction medicine in these areas during my residency … so I would say my comfort level for certain addictions [is] not as great, and it (my comfort) is simply based on the exposure I’ve had in residency.—Kimberly |
Addictions Training: Site Dependent | I felt like I got very little exposure through the standard curriculum. Maybe part of it was the site that I was at, like it was less common. In hospital for example there weren’t really a lot of people that were admitted for a substance issue that saw Psychiatry.—Jeff | |
Addictions Training: Oversaturation of learners | […] These clinics were only a few times a month and so residents would have to be split you know share the time. And it ended up being out of the five family medicine blocks that we do in residency in a year, for example in the first year, maybe each resident would get to work in the clinic twice a year, so it was limited time unfortunately, but it's a great resource for learning.—Kimberly | |
Addictions Training: Comfort in prescribing and managing | […] I think it depends on the substance we are talking about. I think of in terms of nicotine, and alcohol I’m very well trained and is a very common place but if we’re talking about something a bit more hardcore, like cocaine addiction, meth addiction, then unfortunately I don’t feel like I had enough exposure. I tend to just refer those patients to addiction services.—Ling | |
Counselling-Psychotherapy Training: Defining counselling or therapy | I guess that depends on what you label as counselling services or psychotherapy. I’m happy to follow-up with my patients every two weeks or whatever just to talk and make goals and things. So, in that case I guess you would consider it counseling. I do a lot of that, mind you I’m very interested in this type of thing. Many of my colleagues in the same clinic don’t do that. They would just you know refer to bounce-back or you know psychotherapy or one link or something like that.—Sarah | |
Counselling-Psychotherapy Training: Additional training-inadequate skills | I think the prevalence as well, 1 in 4 people will have a mental health problem, it's kind of like saying you don’t know how to treat diabetes as a family doctor, that the same you know as saying I don’t know what to do with mental health. Uhm, yah I think that's not acceptable. And I think they need to do more to help residency acquire the skills.—Jaylin | |
Counselling-Psychotherapy Training: Training by experts and non-MDs | […] We had several amazing social workers in our family health teams who were a wealth of knowledge and a wealth of resources and taught us so much about where to refer to and what resources are available in the GTA. And I think that helped quite a bit with my comfort level for my addictions patients.—Scott | |
Counselling-Psychotherapy Training: Confidence in providing services | I personally don’t do a lot of counselling myself. I mean part of the reason is truthful, is I don’t feel like I have the skills to be doing it.—Roy | |
Training Should be Specific to Family Medicine | I think also emphasising to if you are doing a like a Psychiatry rotation or having non-family physicians’ preceptors as part of the curriculum, it's just emphasising that these are family physicians’ residents. So whatever training whatever knowledge they want to impart should be from a family physicians’ lens. So, what family docs see most, what would be most useful for their practice.—Scott | |
Limited duration of residency training | With a two-year residency I felt like it just wasn’t enough to give me the expertise that I wanted in the area that I want to practice.—Dwight | |
Implementation Methods and recommendations | See Table 3 | |
Positive Experiences | I think our family residency trained us pretty well for at least the common presentations. We had some quite a few patients who presented with depression and anxiety. We had quite about of time for counseling. We had supervisions for those sessions. We had dedicated teaching for those sessions. So at the end of the day I think it comes down to using that experience using those skills and practising them, which we had an advantage for because our longitudinal curriculum.—Scott | |
3. Professional Identity formation and Role of the Family Physician | Formation of Professional Identity | Some people might actually think that it's not a physician's role to have those types of skills. But I really think that you know, at least having some bedside skills, at least an understanding of those therapies can be useful.—Roy |
Family Physician's Role: Attributes of Family Physician's: First point of care | …And I think in family medicine that we’re seen as the first point of care, so you have to be able to have that kind of patience as well as make a plan and make goals and meet back and really talk to patients. So, patience is one of them. Being empathetic is another one, and I think being that leader, you know being the person who can, not necessarily cheer-lead the patient on, but engage the patient in motivational conversation, at the same time in recognizing and being prepared to give feedback when you need and to support patients.—Sarah | |
Family Physician's Role: Gatekeeper | Because our mental health system let's say in the province or even in the GTA, can kind of be convoluted for some patients to navigate, we can kind of be a bit like a gatekeeper, but kind of like more of a steward of the resources, pointing patients in the right direction…—Roy | |
Family Physician's Role: Reducing Stigma | The connections you have with your patients, these are the people you are going to have long-term relationships. You’re going to be their doctor for years and even decades right. So, I think because we are the ones looking after them first, it's kind of already builds on the trust and the relationship we already have, and I think people are more likely to open up about their mental health conditions. And I also feel like it's less shameful because I know some patients are like “oh I don’t want to see a psychiatrist” because of the stigma associated with that.—Jaylin |
Theme 1: Barriers in providing mental health and addictions care
Financial barriers
Knowledge of patient-facing resources
Time constraints
Boundaries in the scope of practice
Theme 2: Curriculum renewal
Addictions training
Counselling-psychotherapy training
Training should be specific to FM
Limited duration of residency training
Implementation methods
SUB-THEME | CATEGORIES | ILLUSTRATIVE QUOTATIONS FROM RESIDENT GRADUATES |
---|---|---|
Implementation Methods | Transitioning to residency | […] you know just like when you start your general rotations, or rotations that have a large breadth of knowledge, they do a little bit of a bootcamp at the beginning, I think that can really help with psychiatry, mental health, and addictions. Like before people kind of start their rotation, in the transition to residency period, just like a little bit of a bootcamp where everyone gets on the same page of base knowledge that we need.—Roy |
Curriculum Development: Longitudinal approach | […] A lot of times for interventions take time to actually come into effect. And so, seeing a patient once or twice in a month, is I don’t think is as effective as following that patient for months or years to actually see the benefits of your counseling or the benefits of the medications you’ve prescribed uhm so with whatever curricula methods ends up being developed I think a longitudinal method makes more sense.—Scott | |
Curriculum Development: Serving diverse population needs | I actually feel like I had very little exposure to doing mental health for ethnic minority. I didn’t really have a whole lot of encounters with those types of patients. And I think they have specific mental health needs that are not quite the same as the mainstream. So, I didn’t really have a lot of immigrant or refugee patients or people of colour in general.—Ling | |
Curriculum Implementation: Mixture of didactic and hands-on experience | … I definitely think some sort of practical training, some sort of one-on-one or like in small groups for example … I think a variety will always be better. And maybe hearing from interprofessional providers as well … like resources available including sessions with like a social worker from the family health team for example, to get a different perspective as well.—Jeff …some residents they thrive in a didactic setting … recently residents have been looking for more in the moment teaching, [which] would be like in rotations or sometimes in role play… I would try and be mindful of the different types of learners and try … develop a curriculum that that can be used and benefit from, from a variety of different learning styles. [Having] a devoted core rotation in psychiatry, in mental health and addiction is ultimately beneficial.—Dwight | |
Curriculum Implementation: Exposure | …despite getting didactic teaching and even an OSCE simulation I feel it wasn’t enough for me to comfortably manage it on my own and I would be looking to refer to a specialist or opioid use clinic for example.—Kimberly | |
Learning Improvements: Resources | I would definitely have some teachings on community resources. Teaching the residents about the tools and referral services that are there at their disposal, so not just limiting themselves to skills, but arming them with the skills to ask for additional help.—Ling Maybe in residency learning more about the resources available OHIP vs non-OHIP might be helpful in transitioning into staff.—Kimberly |
Transition to residency
Longitudinal approach
Serving diverse population needs
Resources
Positive experiences
Theme 3: Professional identity formation and role of the FP
Formation of professional identity
FP's role
Attributes of FPs/first point of care
Gatekeeper
Reducing stigma
Discussion

Implications for FM Residency Education
Study Limitations
Future Directions
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
DECLARATION OF CONFLICTING INTERESTS
FUNDING
REFERENCES
Appendix 1
Semi-structured Interview Guide
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This article was published in Journal of Medical Education and Curricular Development.
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