Present on
the line were Drs. Madonick, Rukstalis, Villier, Pieri,
Williams, Guschwan, Levy, Akerele, Londino, Welsh, Schuckit, and
Tapert.
The meeting
began with a reminder that our next face-to-face meeting is
in Del Mar, California (a suburb of San Diego) with arrival by
no later than 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April 24th.
The meeting will be at the L’Auberge Del Mar (a fabulous
hotel), and will end at noon on Saturday, April 27th.
At this meeting all Junior Scholars will be expected to
present their lectures, and all Junior and Senior Scholars will
give an update of their progress at their university.
We next
turned to a tentative date for the October 2002 meeting.
The specific date is not at all certain, and
will depend on a variety of other factors, but the first choice
appears to be Wednesday, October 16th through
Saturday, October 19th, and the second choice,
Wednesday, October 23rd through Saturday, October 26th.
The venue of the meeting has not yet been established,
but it should be decided upon soon.
The majority
of the discussion was to help Junior Scholars finish their
lectures. Woody Levy has pretty much
completed his, and everyone else is working hard and making
progress. Marc reminded everyone of several
points which have been covered in individual letters to each of
the Junior Scholars. These include:
1.
The need to work closely with their Senior Scholar
mentor.
2.
The importance of carefully studying the lectures posted
on the website.
3.
The necessity of carefully following the outline format
exemplified on the website.
4.
The importance of giving enough information so that a
teacher in any medical school anywhere in the world could
actually deliver the lecture after studying the notes and slides
for a few hours. At the same time,
avoiding using too much detail, as well as avoiding using
complete sentences in a way that might look like a paper for
publication or the chapter for a book.
5.
The importance of including key references within the
text (the average lecture will have somewhere around 20
references, and not every comment is to be referenced—only the
important ones).
6.
The need to carefully develop the slides following the
slide format already presented on the website.
7.
The need to follow the specific reference format of the
American Psychiatric Association (as listed in the Journal of
the American Psychiatric Association) when making the
reference list.
The group
then turned to a report by Junior and Senior Scholars
regarding some of their major accomplishments and potential road
blocks as they try to expand alcohol and drug education at their
medical schools. All of the scholars
agreed they were making progress. None felt
there were any major roadblocks getting in their way, and all
agreed that the major problem is finding enough time to do what
they want to do. Marc reminded the scholars
to carefully study their “wish list” as stated at the Hawaii
meeting, so they can gauge whether they are making progress on
the things they had highlighted for themselves.
He reminded everyone of the relevance of evaluating the
level of alcohol and drug education to medical students and
residents currently available at their school, the possibility
of incorporating a new elective on alcohol and drugs, and the
fact that the website offers scholars lectures they might wish
to use as part of their efforts. Each
scholar reviewed their own areas of accomplishments, and each
will present a much more detailed overview of what has gone on
during our meeting in Del Mar in April.
Minutes of those accomplishments and challenges will be given in
detail at that time.
Several
specific events are worthy of mention.
Marianne Guschwan, Susan Tapert and four additional
scholars will be giving a workshop on “How to Give a Lecture” at
the American Psychiatric Association meeting; Donna Londino has
been appointed to the Family Council for the American Academy of
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry — focusing on substance use
disorders among youth; Chris Welsh has been named the Chair of
the Medical Student Committee for the American Academy of
Addiction Psychiatry; and Evaristo Akerele has recently been
appointed Associate Residency Training Director for Psychiatry
at Columbia University Medical School.
The
Conference Call ended with a reminder to scholars to make
suggestions regarding new scholars to begin in August of 2002,
an announcement that a poster regarding AMSP is being proposed
for the Research Society on Alcoholism meeting in July, 2002 in
San Francisco, and a reminder that all presentations at the
April meeting should be made in PowerPoint if at all possible.
Marc A.
Schuckit, M.D.