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Tuesday, August 5
 

9:25am MDT

From Beepers to AI: Modernizing Emergency Psychiatry Training 2025
Tuesday August 5, 2025 9:25am - 10:10am MDT
This panel presentation aims to spark dialogue among attendees about the future of emergency psychiatry training and provide a roadmap for curriculum enhancement.

Emergency psychiatric care has significantly evolved since the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry (AAEP) published its model curriculum in 2004. This presentation examines the existing curriculum and proposes essential updates to align with current practices and emerging challenges.

The original AAEP curriculum, developed by consensus in the late 1990s, provided a comprehensive framework for training residents in core competencies like rapid assessment, crisis intervention, and risk management. These foundational skills remain crucial. However, the evolving nature of healthcare delivery, technological advancements, and shifting patient demographics necessitate a curriculum revision.

We will begin by reviewing the AAEP consensus process and the key components of the 2004 curriculum that remain relevant. These include prioritization skills, patient assessment and management, crisis intervention techniques, and professional communication. We will then introduce new areas for integration into the curriculum to address contemporary challenges.

Proposed additions include:
  1. Telepsychiatry Competencies: Training residents to conduct remote emergency assessments and interventions effectively.
  2. Substance Use Emergencies: Enhanced training to manage the ongoing opioid and stimulant crisis and evolving drug use patterns.
  3. Cultural Competence and Health Equity: Skills to provide culturally informed care and address disparities in emergency psychiatric services.
  4. Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Emphasizing effective teamwork with diverse healthcare professionals, as per ACGME “teaming”.
  5. Community-Based Crisis Intervention: Working with the site-specific variety of emergency psychiatry service delivery modalities, such as mobile crisis teams and community-based emergency services.
  6. Updated Psychopharmacology: Focus on newer medications and rapid-acting interventions for acute agitation, suicidality, and withdrawal management.
  7. Legal and Ethical Considerations: Addressing challenges in involuntary treatment, capacity assessment, patient rights, boarding issues, and duty to protect.
  8. Suicide/Violence Risk Assessment: Understanding evidence-based tools, improved EHR screening protocols, and technology integration. Personalized, collaborative safety planning and follow-up care.

We will also identify elements of the original curriculum to be de-emphasized or removed due to changes in practice patterns.

Finally, we will discuss strategies for residency programs to incorporate these updates effectively, including integrating new content into existing rotations, technology for education, and developing partnerships with community organizations.
By modernizing the emergency psychiatry curriculum, we can ensure that the next generation of psychiatrists is well-prepared to meet the complex needs of patients in crisis.

Learning Objectives:

Identify core components of the 2004 AAEP emergency psychiatry curriculum that remain essential and those requiring updating or removal.

Describe at least five new content areas to be incorporated into emergency psychiatry residency training to address contemporary challenges.

Discuss strategies for implementing curriculum updates in residency programs, including integrating new content and leveraging technology for education.
Speakers
avatar for Rachel Glick, MD, MBE

Rachel Glick, MD, MBE

Clincal Professor Emerita, University of Michigan Medical School
Rachel Glick is a Clinical Professor Emerita at University of Michigan Medical School where she practiced emergency psychiatry for almost 30 years and was Medical Director of Psychiatric Emergency Services. She is a past president of AAEP and served as chair of AAEP’s education... Read More →
avatar for Michael Allen, MD

Michael Allen, MD

Professor, University of Colorado
Michael H. Allen, MD, DFAPA is a professor at the University of Colorado in Psychiatry and Emergency Medicine and medical director for the Colorado 988 crisis line. A past president of AAEP, he led the Expert Consensus Guideline for Behavioral Emergencies and served as PI for STEP-BD... Read More →
avatar for Annelise Bederman, MD

Annelise Bederman, MD

Instructor, New York University
Annelise Bederman graduated from Emory Medical School in 2020. She then completed her General Psychiatry Residency at Washington University in Saint Louis in 2024. She is currently a Clinical Instructor at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and an Emergency Psychiatrist at Bellevue... Read More →
avatar for Gerald Busch, MD, MPH

Gerald Busch, MD, MPH

Child and Family Behavior Health Service Provider, Tripler Army Medical Center
Following 29 years in private practice, Dr Busch joined the faculty of University of Hawaii after obtaining his MPH. He was Director of Medical Education and Patient Care at the Queens Hospital Psychiatric Emergency Department from 2020-2024, focusing on curriculum development. He... Read More →
Tuesday August 5, 2025 9:25am - 10:10am MDT
Phoenix Ballroom C

3:40pm MDT

Updates on Training Emergency Medicine Physicians for Psychiatric & Behavioral Health Emergencies
Tuesday August 5, 2025 3:40pm - 3:55pm MDT
Despite increasing psychiatric and behavioral health presentations to emergency departments, Emergency Medicine (EM) residents and physicians have limited training in caring for these patients. The training that is received is not standardized across residency programs and is primarily focused on didactic lectures. During this session, we will discuss our own approach to bridging this gap and the development of a fellowship designed for EM-trained physicians. Our fellowship is housed at a large, urban, tertiary-care medical center and includes rotations with the Department of Psychiatry’s inpatient units, inpatient consult-liaison service, emergency consult service, and addiction medicine service as well as an outpatient continuity clinic.  Finally, we will discuss the observed and anticipated effects of escalating training for EM-trained physicians.

Learning Objectives:

Summarize the current state of psychiatric and behavioral health training for Emergency Medicine physicians.

Describe the development of a psychiatry and behavioral health fellowship at an urban, tertiary-care medical center.

Discuss the anticipated effects of increased psychiatric training for Emergency Medicine physicians.
Speakers
avatar for Savannah Benko, MD

Savannah Benko, MD

Emergency Medicine Psychiatry/Behavioral Health Fellow, RUSH University Medical Center
Savannah Benko is the inaugural Emergency Medicine Psychiatry & Behavioral Health Fellow at RUSH University Medical Center. She completed both her Emergency Medicine residency & medical school training at RUSH as well. Clinically, she practices as an EM attending physician in both... Read More →
Tuesday August 5, 2025 3:40pm - 3:55pm MDT
Phoenix Ballroom C
 
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