Skip to content

Adaptive
Health Care

Doctoral Internship – San Jose

Silicon Valley Internship Consortium (Fremont, San Jose, and Santa Clara)

Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center
Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center

The city of San Jose lies in the Santa Clara Valley about 50 miles southeast of San Francisco. With over 1 million residents, San Jose is a sprawling metropolitan area. The population is ethnically diverse, with large Asian and Hispanic communities that constitute three-fifths of the total population.

Nicknamed the capital of Silicon Valley, San Jose’s economy remains focused on high technology. Computer hardware design and manufacturing, software production, and Internet concerns are the major industries. The metro area retains its character with quirky attractions like the 160-room, maze-like Winchester Mystery House; a 120-acre flea market complete with ponies; and a larger-than-life Monopoly board. San Jose supports a variety of music, dance, and theatre organizations, including professional ballet and opera companies. Notable museums include the San Jose Museum of Art, the Tech Museum of Innovation, and the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum. Several sports teams call San Jose home including the Sharks NHL team.

Cradled by the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains and Diablo Range, San Jose offers a prime environment for outdoorsy residents, with its proximity to beaches along the California coast including Santa Cruz, Monterey, and Carmel and state parks such as Henry Coe and Big Basin. The city boasts a number of local municipal parks and flower gardens as well.

The Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center is staffed with 400 physicians and 3,250 support staff and serves health plan members from South San Jose to Los Banos in the central valley. In addition to offering a full complement of inpatient and outpatient care, it features Regional Subspecialty Centers in Genetics, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Sleep Medicine, and Spine Care. Satellite clinics are located in Gilroy, Santa Cruz, Scotts Valley, and Watsonville.

Program Curriculum

Equity, Inclusion, & Diversity

We are committed to nurturing and integrating diversity training into all aspects of our doctoral internship by:

  • Providing interns with opportunities to work with diverse patients who represent various aspects of diversity, including age, religion, gender, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, values, and lifestyle
  • Placing a high value on interns’ willingness to engage in self-reflection and learning and supporting the exploration of attitudes, beliefs, and therapeutic postures that could have a negative impact on clinical interactions
  • Maintaining a consistent focus in clinical supervision on expanding interns’ multicultural awareness and competence in the provision of psychotherapeutic services and by providing guidance, suggestions, and resources on topics related to diversity
  • Providing formal in-person or online training on diversity topics such as discovering and mitigating unconscious bias, respecting every voice, and cultivating a sense of inclusion and belonging in the workplace
  • Encouraging interns to participate in the Regional Mental Health Training Program Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity Committee’s advanced trainings on topics related to cultural sensitivity and competence alongside a forum to reflect on and discuss their varied experiences in a safe environment

Didactic Training

Regularly scheduled weekly didactic seminars are organized and administered at the regional level for all KP Northern California doctoral interns. Interns are required to attend the two-hour weekly seminar, which focuses on aspects of clinical practice that the interns may not regularly encounter. Diversity issues are always integrated into seminar presentations.

Seminar topics include: Frontiers in Trauma Treatment; Advanced Risk Assessment; Updates in Substance Abuse Research & Treatment; Advancements in Psychopharmacology; Cognitive Processing Therapy; Technology and Mental Health; Trans/Nonbinary Mental Health; Building a Better Brain through Exercise, Nutrition, Sleep and Stress Management; and Self-Compassion.

Our Regional Mental Health Training Program also sponsors professional training courses for continuing professional development. These courses and presentations are offered at select times during the year for all KP Northern California mental health trainees and staff at Kaiser Northern California Medical Centers. The Regional Mental Health Training Program brings in national experts and keynote speakers on a variety of cutting-edge topics in mental health treatment and research. Interns are required to attend these monthly regional trainings in addition to the weekly didactic seminars. Course dates and a list of speakers and topics for the regional trainings can be found on the Regional Mental Health Training Programs website. In addition, many of these lectures are recorded and available on the regional website under the continuing education lecture library.

Seminars and Meetings

Doctoral interns are expected to attend weekly team staff meetings and case consultation. During these meetings, interns will practice creating a working hypothesis for a diagnosis and treatment plan, as well as learn how to incorporate Feedback Informed Care (FIC) and symptom management in their treatment plans. Additionally, interns will learn how to align their patient’s cultural background into their treatment plan.

Supervision

All doctoral interns are supervised by licensed psychologists and are assigned to a primary and secondary supervisor. These two clinical supervisors meet with their assigned intern one hour per week for individual face-to-face supervision, for a total of two hours of individual supervision per week. The primary and secondary supervisor in each training track are responsible for supervising the direct delivery of clinical services. The primary supervisor takes the lead role in developing the intern’s learning plan, monitoring their progress, and evaluating their training schedule. The primary supervisor is also responsible for supervising the intern’s clinical work and completing quarterly evaluations after gathering input from the other delegated supervisors and staff who have worked with the intern.

Doctoral interns are also provided with weekly clinical group supervision and group supervision for psychological assessment. During clinical group supervision, interns learn how to conceptualize treatment plans and frame interventions through a cultural framework that considers age, gender identity, race and ethnicity, family systems, socioeconomic status, work and school history, and other cultural factors. Interns also gain experience presenting clinical cases, as well as giving and receiving peer feedback. These feedback interactions help interns to develop both collegial and supervisory aspects of their professional identities as psychologists. Assessment group supervision provides support for interns gaining proficiency conducting psychological evaluations. During assessment group supervision, interns have an opportunity to discuss several aspects of the assessment process, including how to interpret test results, formulate clinical impressions, and plan patient feedback. Time allotted for all group supervision ranges from 2-4 hours per week depending on the time of year and the training schedule dictated by the specific tracks and rotations.

Community Partnership Program

Reflecting Kaiser Permanente’s core commitment to mental health and wellness in our communities, each doctoral intern will spend at least 32 hours during their training year on a Community Partnership Project that focuses on improving mental health in the local community beyond Kaiser Permanente patient membership.

The goal of this project is to provide outreach to underserved populations in the community to promote healthy behaviors. Anchors for this project include: developing alliances with individuals and/or systems to improve the lives of those served; providing education and training based on the empirical literature; collecting, analyzing, and presenting relevant outcome data to partnership stakeholders.

Psychological Assessment

All doctoral interns complete psychological testing as part of the internship training program. During the training year, interns further their knowledge about test battery design, administration of various tests and measures, interpretation and integration of test results, and communication of test results. Opportunities exist for interns to develop proficiency in cognitive, memory, and mood assessments as well as specialty ADHD evaluations. Interns primarily receive assessment training support in a group supervision format with additional modalities of support available as needed.

Program Evaluation

Each intern is required to undertake a program evaluation project during their training year. The project is selected based upon the intern’s interests and skill set and should fall within the regular scope of departmental services.

It may involve collecting and analyzing data to improve administrative operations, or a quality improvement project aimed at improving or assessing a treatment program or process. Examples include developing and evaluating a treatment group, intake procedure or other new programming; evaluating factors associated with treatment outcomes; or a needs assessment of a service that may be enriched by psychological consultation. Interns meet with the program evaluation supervisor as a group regularly over the course of the training year to review progress on their projects.

Tracks and Rotations

Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Track

The Child and Adolescent Psychiatry track offers doctoral interns the opportunity to work on a multidisciplinary treatment team utilizing evidence-based and multimodal treatment with children, teens, and their families. Depending on the intern’s interests, opportunities are available to complete a rotation in the Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for teens and co-facilitate evidence-based psychotherapy groups and classes.

This track is designed to provide a breadth of training experiences with the purpose of developing a generalist practitioner in child and adolescent psychiatry. Doctoral interns are assigned cases from the broad and diverse patient population served at the clinic, with referrals addressing mental health needs related to the treatment of mood disorders, anxiety disorders, autism spectrum disorders, attention and impulse control disorders, behavioral issues, and more. Interns will utilize evidence-based interventions within a feedback informed care model with the use of outcomes monitoring at each session.

Doctoral interns will utilize individual and group supervision for case formulation and treatment planning. Within this track, interns will receive training in individual and family psychotherapy as well as group treatment. Training in evidence-based individual and family treatment will consist of providing individual and family therapy within a focused therapy treatment track. Training in evidence-based group treatment will consist of co-facilitating groups under the supervision of licensed therapists.

Adult Outpatient Mental Health Track

The Adult Outpatient Mental Health track offers education and training in an integrated healthcare system. Doctoral interns will work with a multidisciplinary team, providing empirically supported treatments to a wide variety of patients. Depending on the intern’s interests, opportunities are available to complete a rotation in the Adult Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP), bariatric evaluations, and co-facilitate evidence-based group treatment programs.

This track is designed to provide a breadth of training experiences with the purpose of developing a generalist practitioner in health service psychology. Doctoral interns are assigned cases from the broad and diverse patient population served at the clinic, with referrals addressing mental health needs related to the treatment of mood disorders, personality disorders, trauma, aging, adjustment, crisis, work or life stress, neurodevelopmental disorders, schizophrenia and other psychotic disorder, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, bipolar disorders, sexual and gender identity disorders, and dissociative disorders. Interns will evaluate and diagnose mental health disorders based on DSM-5-TR and ICD-11 criteria. Interns will also learn how to collaborate with patients for treatment planning purposes and gain proficiency utilizing evidence-based interventions within a feedback informed care framework.

Doctoral interns will utilize individual and group supervision for case formulation and treatment planning. Within this track, interns will receive training in individual psychotherapy and group treatment. Training in evidence-based individual treatment will consist of providing individual therapy within specialty treatment programs (mood, trauma, and trans-diagnostic). Training in evidence-based group treatment will consist of co-facilitating groups under the supervision of licensed therapists.

Behavioral Medicine Services (Adult) Track

The Behavioral Medicine Services track offers excellent training in Health Psychology while working within a tight-knit team. Doctoral interns will spend approximately half of their time in Behavioral Medicine Services (BMS), which is embedded within primary care and/or OBGYN. Interns are integrated into these respective clinics and cultivate support and collaboration throughout the training year. Interns also attend weekly BMS staff meetings and case consultation.

In this track, doctoral interns will have the opportunity to diagnose, develop treatment plans, and care for patients within the partnering departments of medicine. BMS interns assist medical care providers and their patients by addressing behavioral and psychological factors that contribute to overall improved health outcomes. Interns will be exposed to a wide range of presenting problems that are intertwined with mental health, including chronic conditions such as diabetes mellitus, chronic pain, headaches, insomnia, and irritable bowel syndrome. In addition, BMS interns will be integral in treating adjustment disorders that are often related to challenges coping with medical diagnoses. This track broadens and deepens brief assessment and intervention skills across many diagnoses with a very diverse group of patients.

The BMS model allows for warm handoffs from physicians for patients who may be ambivalent about treatment engagement or likely to benefit from brief interventions. Doctoral interns will collaborate with physicians on the evaluation of psychotropic medications within their scope of practice. Interns serve as a liaison between the patient and physician, especially in monitoring patients’ response to medications. Interns will also aid in general medication compliance with the goal of optimizing overall health. An additional responsibility in the BMS track is performing brief cognitive screenings as requested by the primary care physicians. Opportunities to conduct Bariatric surgery evaluations are also available depending on interest and experience.

This track requires autonomy and flexibility in fast-paced medical settings. Candidates with education and previous experience working in behavioral medicine or health psychology settings strongly preferred.

Schedule

Weekly 40-hour Schedule

  • Direct Patient Care: 20 hours
  • Individual Supervision: 2 hours
  • Clinical Group Supervision: 2 hours
  • Assessment Group Supervision: 1 hour
  • Didactic Training: 2 hours
  • Program Evaluation: 1 hour
  • Supervision of Practicum Students: 1 hour
  • Community Benefit Project: 1 hour
  • Team Meeting: 1 hour
  • Case Consultation: 1 hour
  • Non-Patient Care: 8 hours

Current hybrid work option with 3 days in clinic and 2 days remote

Location

San Jose Psychiatry Child & Adolescent Division
6620 Via Del Oro
San Jose, CA 95119

San Jose Psychiatry Adult Division
5755 Cottle Road, Buildings 23 & 24
San Jose, CA 95123

San Jose Medical Center
276 International Circle, Building 1, Floor 1 & 2
San Jose, CA 95119

Training Director

Dina Alkhoury, PsyD
Training Director
dina.s.alkhoury@kp.org
831-440-4520


Meet the Training Team

Membership

Member of the Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC)

Back To Top
Search