Emergency room medical clearance: an educational problem

Am J Psychiatry. 1979 Jun;136(6):787-90. doi: 10.1176/ajp.136.6.787.

Abstract

The term "medically clear" has a greater capacity to mislead than to inform correctly. The overuse of this term, especially in emergency room settings, may indicate difficulties in medical education and in the consultation/referral process between psychiatry and other specialties; further, it results in poor patient care. Nonpsychiatric physicians may prematurely refer patients as medically clear because of their unfamiliarity or discomfort with clinical psychiatry. Psychiatrists often ask for medical clearance of patients to hide their discomfort with or antipathy toward clinical medicine. The use of emergency room settings for interspecialty collaboration and training helps minimize the underlying difficulties that lead to the use of this term by fostering psychiatric skills in nonpsychiatrists and a sense of medical identity in psychiatrists.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Diagnostic Errors
  • Education, Medical*
  • Emergency Service, Hospital*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Mental Disorders / diagnosis
  • Middle Aged
  • Neurocognitive Disorders / diagnosis*
  • Psychiatry / education*
  • Psychoses, Alcoholic / diagnosis
  • Psychoses, Substance-Induced / diagnosis
  • Referral and Consultation
  • Suicide, Attempted