Abstract
Consultation psychiatry has long offered the potential for psychiatrists to impact on the mental health of large numbers of individuals. However, workers in consultation psychiatry have often described it as a stressful, ungratifying experience. Over the last fifty years, since the initiation of consultation psychiatry, a series of models of consult work has been presented in the literature. These models have increasingly become more complex in the system of organization in which they operate. Moreover, there has been a constant movement toward viewing the function of the psychiatrist as intervening in behavior outside of the patient. After reviewing the history of consultation psychiatry, the authors conclude that a logical development would be a systemic model in which the entire hospital system is seen as the focus of consultation and in which the goal of the consultant's work is seen as creating a more open and flexible hospital system. The authors, therefore, describe a systemic model in which the potential crisis offered by any request for consultation work is seen as a tool for intervening with the hospital system. The difficulties of attaining the objectivity necessary for implementing a systemic intervention are discussed. A method of systemic diagnosis of the hospital is presented as well as a number of strategies of intervention with the hospital system. The authors conclude that using a systemic model (with the hospital as the focus of consultation) can lead to the development of a more comprehensive science of consultation which will lead to an increase of gratification for the psychiatrist and a more healthy functioning hospital system.
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