My Three Shrinks 43: How Doctors Think




My Three Shrinks show

Summary: March 18, 2008: #43 How Doctors Think Topics include: • My Three Shrinks: The Book. We've been talking about writing a book which explains how psychiatrists go about thinking about approaching problems, such as selecting medications or diagnosing illness. We are debating about how to format the chapters in the book. One option is for each of us to write individual chapters about various topics. Another is to maintain the conversational tone so that we each would have some back-and-forth commentary within each chapter. What do you think? Let us know in the comments below, or email us. • NYT: Time Off From Electronics. Mark Bittman had an article in last week's New York Times called "I Need a Virtual Break. No, Really." The article talks about forgoing today's electronic trappings for one day each week, similar to some business' "email-free Fridays." No cell phone. No voicemail. No Blackberry. No internet. This provoked anxiety for Dinah (and "what's the point" from Clink and me), who speculates further about "internet addiction" and the risk of death by videogame. Addiction vs compulsion. • PT: Why Psychiatrists Should Read the Humanities. Clinkshrink discusses a Psychiatric Times article from the Feb 2008 issue by Cynthia M.A. Geppert, suggesting that more humanities should be taught to medical students and residents. Dinah remembers my first blog post about Tom Cruise. • Female Sociopaths in Literature.  Clink lists a number of female sociopaths portrayed in operas, books, and other literary works. • Brain Maturation Delayed in ADHD.  Also in the Feb 2008 issue of Psychiatric Times is this article by Arline Kaplan, describing research suggesting that the brains of kids with ADHD mature a little later than others, bringing into question the medication treatment of this disorder, rather than more behavioral and "tincture of time" methods. • How Doctors Think, book by Jerome Groopman MD.  Dinah is reading this now and notes that Dr Groopman chose not to discuss how psychiatrists think, because this is "beyond [his] abilities."  (We really need to get our book written.) • How Psychiatrists Think.  Once again, we are starting a book and would like some feedback from our listeners and readers.  The question is about the style of writing.  Option 1 would be for each of us to take on topics and write a short (1-5 pages) chapter on a given topic.  Option 2 would be for each of us to chime in within each topic/chapter, thus more resembling a discussion.  Option 1 is more traditional.  Option 2 would sound more like our podcast, at the risk of confusing the reader about who is "talking" at any given point. Email us with your thoughts about these options at mythreeshrinksATgmailDOTcom. Send us your general questions at mythreeshrinksATgmailDOTcom.Go to http://mythreeshrinks.com for show notes with links.