Supervision an essential tool in medical (and psychiatric) training
R. J. Van Der Gaag

TL;DR
Supervision is crucial in medical and psychiatric training, combining skill development and personal reflection to ensure professional growth and patient safety.
Contribution
The paper emphasizes the need for structured supervision training and intervision to develop effective supervisors in psychiatry.
Findings
Supervision in psychiatry includes coaching and personal reflection to foster professional competence and empathy.
Specialized training is needed to develop supervisors who can manage transference and maintain professional boundaries.
Supervision practices vary across Europe and require standardization to ensure quality professional development.
Abstract
Supervision is an essentail tool in medical training and especially in psychiatry and psychotherapy. It emcopasses two distinct aspects namely: coaching in the workplace aimed at developping competences (pyramid of Miller) and on the other side a safe place to reflect on ones personal development as a professional. This mentoring should be distinguised from the personal training psychotherapy. The mentoring supervisor will take the doctor’s pledge as a starting point of professional development. But will also encourage the resident to become aware of elements of transference and counter transference in his/her clinical work, helping to foster empathy “maximal understanding with respect for professional distance. This, not only for the benefit of the patient and his/her security, but also in order to take care of one’s own health and developing a sound balance between work and private…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCounseling Practices and Supervision
