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EducationWorld September 05 | EducationWorld
Respectable socially valued professionWith the number of people suffering from mental and emotional health problems having multiplied exponentially, career opportunities for trained psychiatrists are excellentIn contemporary high-pressure society where stress is ubiquitous, a growing number of people ‚ from teenagers to geriatrics ‚ are experiencing difficulty in managing and coping with competition, rejection, loneliness, changing gender equations, altered lifestyles etc. Continuous stress plays havoc with the brain and body systems and has resulted in a huge increase in people suffering from mental and emotional health problems. Not surprisingly career opportunities in mental healthcare ‚ especially in psychiatry ‚ are multiplying rapidly. According to a World Health Organisation (WHO) report, one of four people in the world will suffer from mental health problems at some point of time in their lives and mental health disorders are expected to rank second in the list of killer diseases by 2020. Therefore a whole new world of opportunities comes-a-knocking for psychiatrists at a time when the social stigma attached to this career has evaporated.To practise psychiatry, one has to first qualify as a medical practitioner (MBBS) and specialise in mental health with either a DPM (diploma in psychological medicine) or a Masters in medicine (MD). Most medical colleges in the country offer psychiatry as a specialisation. Within psychiatry too, there are several sub-specialisation options such as child, community, forensic, geriatric, rehabilitation, military and biological psychiatry. The latest addition to the list is sports medicine psychology for which there‚s rising demand.For those with an interest in human behaviour and psychology who are not medical professionals but choose careers in the field of mental health, the best option is to train as psychologists or counsellors. Societal demand for their services is also growing.With the number of patients rising rapidly, psychiatry is a financially rewarding career. In Mumbai, fees for each visit ranging between Rs.500-800 are de rigueur.Chhabria: multi-skilled approach”Despite lingering vestiges of the stigma associated with this profession, career prospects for psychiatrists are bright. The knowledge, facilities and medication are highly sophisticated and easily available in India today,” explains much-sought-after psychiatrist Dr. Anjali Chhabria, who runs her clinical practice in Vile Parle in suburban Mumbai, where a stream of patients visit her every morning. Chhabria was intrigued by human behaviour and psychology while still in school. In 1985, she was awarded an MBBS by Grant Medical College, Bombay. Following a year‚s internship, she secured admission in the two-year diploma course in psychological medicine of Mumbai‚s K.E.M. Hospital from where she graduated in 1989. This was followed by an MD in psychiatry from Nair Hospital in 1990. “I specialised in psychiatry against my parents wishes as it was not considered a socially acceptable career for women in those days, with most teaching hospitals preferring to admit only male psychi-atrists. Many people tried to dissuade me but I was adamant,” she recalls.The first job Chhabria landed after being awarded an MD in 1990 was in the special clinic of the School of Mental Health at Nair Hospital where
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