1.New requirements for Psychiatry Residency Training Programs (PRTPs) in the Philippines
Ruth T. Villanueva ; Myra Dee Dee Lopez-Roces ; Constantine D. Della ; Jannel Gatlabayan-Cleto ; Georgina M. Gozo-Oliver
The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry 2023;4(2):1-15
It has been more than a decade since the Committee
on Standardization and Accreditation of
Residency Training was renamed Board of
Accreditation of the Specialty Board of
Philippine Psychiatry (SBPP). The SBPP is
composed of two bodies namely the Boards of
Accreditation and Certification. These bodies are
mandated to uphold the highest standards of
accrediting psychiatry residency training
programs (Board of Accreditation) and granting
diplomate status to graduates of these programs
(Board of Certification). Guided by the
biopsychosocial and spiritual model of health,
the Board of Accreditation remains steadfast in
ensuring that psychiatry residency training
programs continue to be relevant to current
demands of mental health and psychiatric care
in the country. In addition, it sees to it that these
programs are in harmony with global standards.
As psychiatry faces new challenges in the third
millennium, certain innovations and iterations in
the manner by which mental illnesses are
diagnosed, treated, and prevented must be set
in place. Through its Millennium Developmental
Goals, the United Nations has declared that the
achievement of gender equality is an effective
way of combating disease. Mental health
problems and psychiatric disorders are closely
linked with gender-related issues. Yet, many
residency training programs in the Philippines
have not formally and systematically integrated
gender sensitivity into their curricula. The same
can be said of the concepts of religion and
spirituality. Numerous researches have established
the positive link between religion and
spirituality and mental health.
Psychiatry
;
Internship and Residency