2017-2018 Practicum Brochure - Doctoral Program
&DQ VWXGHQWV WDSH VHVVLRQV ZLWK FOLHQWV ZLWK DQ LQIRUPHG FRQVHQW" Yes ____ No ____. The referring agency must also provide written consent to permit the student to tape sessions 1XPEHU RI KRXUV SHU ZHHN UHTXLUHG '(6&5,%( 63(&,),& 6,7( 5(48,5(0(176 6+257 352*5$0 '(6&5,37, 21 ZRUGV RU OHVV &/,1,&$/ '(6&5,37,21 2) 352*5$0 &OLHQW 3RSXODWLRQ V 7UHDWPHQW 0RGDOLW\ $VVHVVPHQW 7\SHV 7KHRUHWLFDO 2ULHQWDWLRQ ✔ 20 Drug Screening costs between $35-50. Additional on-boarding requirements: - School clearance letter -Up-to-date BLS Healthcare provider card -Up-to-date immunizations -TB/PPD skin test (within last year) -Level 2 screening (within last 5 years). Will cost between $70-90 if a new one is needed. Children 2 y.o. to young adults (early 20s) Short term, crisis intervention, CBT Consultations to pediatric medical units CBT The Pediatric Behavioral Medicine practicum position involves conducting inpatient consultation-liaison services to Holtz Children’s Hospital and Ryder Trauma Center as well as the potential for academic research. Pediatric behavioral medicine consults are requested by medical staff across a number of pediatric services including solid organ transplant (liver/intestine/multivisceral, kidney, and heart/lung), GI, cardiology, special immunology/HIV, nephrology, intensive care, burn, orthopedics/trauma, and neurology. Advanced practicum students are exposed to patients ranging in age from infancy to young adulthood as well as their families. We are consulted regarding a wide variety of issues, including adjustment to chronic illness/recurrent hospitalization, pre-transplant evaluation and post-transplant management, pain management, non-adherence, psychological distress being converted as physical symptoms, anticipatory anxiety, regimen adherence/pill swallowing, illness-related challenges to quality of life (peers, academics, loss of independence), end-of-life/palliative care, patient-staff communication issues, parental support/bereavement, and acute stress/reaction to trauma and body disfigurement as a result of injury/treatment. Our approach is multidisciplinary and we work closely with teams comprised of medical interns/residents/fellows/ attendings, surgeons, social workers, child life specialists, nurses, and child psychiatry fellows. In addition, the pediatric behavioral medicine service is now an official part of the Pediatric Palliative Care Team (PediPals). We work with a culturally, lingually, and socioeconomically diverse clientele and staff. While the emphasis of consultation is on assessment and providing recommendations to the family and medical team, there are also many opportunities for brief, solution-focused interventions as well as longer-term, intensive interventions as a large portion of our patients remain in the hospital for several days to many months and/or have chronic conditions requiring frequent inpatient stays. Academic research opportunities may include research with the pediatric transplant population, including assessment on use of mental health services, quality of life, non-adherence, psychological integration of grafts, psychological factors impacting transplant outcomes, and transition to adult health care. 084
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