Welcome to the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship Program at the Medical College of Georgia (MCG)! We are a fully-accredited two-year ACGME program, and have maintained continued accreditation without citation since our inception in 1983.
As one of the oldest psychiatric fellowships in the Southeast, our continued mission is to educate future leaders in the dynamic and exciting discipline that is pediatric mental health, as fellows achieve competencies via a wide array of activities including research, service, and clinical medicine. Our program also has a strong emphasis on psychotherapy and fellows are exposed to a breadth of therapy modalities. Program leadership is committed to fellow education, and trainees are mentored and supervised regularly to ensure their success and attainment of personal and professional goals.
Fellows rotate through a variety of enriching experiences that highlight the diverse field of child psychiatry and familial mental disease, including a local residential treatment facility, addiction treatment center, consultation-liaison at the Children’s Hospital of Georgia, outpatient clinic, and more. Fellows work collaboratively with faculty and are supported throughout their training. Our fellows have dedicated wellness time and are able to participate in many extracurricular academic activities, such as medical student teaching, scholarly research and QI projects, development of podcasts, advocacy initiatives, moonlighting, and volunteering with the free mental health clinic.
Our fellowship program is also home to the Post Pediatric Portal Program (PPPP), one of only four in the nation! This innovative program began in 2014 at MCG with full support from the State of Georgia and accreditation from the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology (ABPN). It is a three-year program for ACGME trained pediatricians to engage in training in both General Psychiatry and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (CAP). This integrated fellowship leads to credentialing, full recognition, and board eligibility with the ABPN in both General Psychiatry and CAP.