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History project unearths a significant event in the Academy’s development
One of the Academy’s former presidents (1999-2000), James Levenson, MD, FACLP, describes on video how he faced “an uprising of sorts” from certain members at his first business meeting—within moments of being handed the president’s gavel.
On the spot, he made one of the most important and, as it turned out, one of the most effective decisions of his presidency.
“Some of the members were saying that the Academy had stopped working to achieve official subspecialty status and why weren’t we doing more,” he recalls.
He immediately appointed “the person who was clamoring most loudly” to chair a task force to pursue subspecialty status.
“My vision for the future is that much of Psychiatry will become C-L Psychiatry.”
—Dr. Levenson
Over months that followed, Constantine Lyketsos, MD, FACLP (Academy president 2007-2008), worked hard with Dr. Levenson to write the argument for becoming an official subspecialty, and subsequently the Academy pursued “a lot of political steps to deal with opposition to that proposition.” Ultimately, the Academy succeeded.
It mattered, in particular, because institutions were cutting back on funding training except for programs recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties. Fellowship training programs had declined—22 programs had been cut. But when the Academy was recognized as a subspecialty, Fellowship training programs began to climb again—and, nowadays, there are 58 of them.
Dr. Levenson’s recounting of those times is one of many memories captured on video by the ACLP history project, first reported here in ACLP News.
Memories of the Academy through the decades—providing practical support, especially for new recruits to the C-L Psychiatry subspecialty—are being captured in a‘story bank’ featuring leaders and pioneers from ACLP since its founding in 1954. As the video archive grows it will become a lasting record of the Academy for future generations of members.
The Board commissioned a former president of the Academy to lead a task force to capture a first wave of recordings for the archive—John Shuster, MD, FACLP, a Veterans’ Administration psychiatrist at the Tennessee Valley Healthcare System, who was Academy president in 2010-2011.
John Shuster, MD, FACLP
He says the narrative bank will offer collective wisdom from pioneers and leaders in the Academy and within C-L Psychiatry. Some interviewees relate anecdotes from their experience, showing how the Academy has evolved, but the main content focus aims to benefit members in their practice as C-L Psychiatry develops—offering experiences of pitfalls and opportunities.
Potential pitfalls and opportunities from the Academy’s growth are referred to by Dr. Levenson. The main risk from such growth, he says, is that “small-town friendliness” with people could suffer. But the Academy has introduced new ways to bring members together and, in particular, to engage more junior members with those more senior so that all feel welcomed and connected.
But, as the Academy grows bigger, it also grows stronger, to better influence the delivery of health care, and to disseminate recognition of how C-L Psychiatry can improve medical outcomes.
Dr. Levenson is also asked for his vision of the future. Pointedly, he says: “My vision for the future is that much of Psychiatry will become C-L Psychiatry.”
Some of what C-L psychiatrists traditionally do will be delivered more efficiently by others, such as primary care physicians, leaving C-L Psychiatry-trained psychiatrists to focus on the more psychiatrically ill, and those whose medical conditions significantly complicate their psycho-pathology.
The Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry is a professional organization of physicians who provide psychiatric care to people with coexisting psychiatric and medical illnesses, both in hospitals and in primary care. Our specialty is called consultation-liaison psychiatry because we consult with patients and liaise with their other clinicians about their care.
With nearly 2,000 members, the Academy is the voice of consultation-liaison psychiatry in the US with international reach.
Please browse our website, read our journal, Psychosomatics, and come to our annual meeting which is in November each year. In 2020 it will be a virtual event – see www.CLP2020.org for more details.
If you are a C-L Psychiatrist and not yet a member please join our great organization and welcoming, inclusive community. Please visit this page for details on joining.