Clinical Mentorship

Your First Year as a PMHNP

The clinical reasoning, pattern recognition, and professional instincts that take years to develop — delivered as guided pathways through real scenarios.

$399·12-month access·4 guided pathways
What this is
  • A senior colleague sharing observed patterns
  • Models for how experienced clinicians think
  • Honest commentary on where people get burned
  • Reflection prompts, not answers
  • Scope boundaries and documentation awareness
What this is not
  • Clinical protocols or treatment guidelines
  • Prescriptive advice on what to do
  • A substitute for supervision
  • Legal or professional recommendations
  • Standard-of-care declarations

Four guided pathways

Each pathway takes you through a curated sequence of clinical scenarios with mentorship commentary layered on top.

💊
Pathway 18 units · ~4h

Your First Medication Decisions

The prescribing decisions most new PMHNPs face in their first months — and how experienced clinicians think through them.

🚨
Pathway 28 units · ~5h

When Things Get Scary

The high-acuity moments that test composure — and how experienced clinicians have learned to think through them.

🌫️
Pathway 38 units · ~5h

The Gray Areas

The clinical ambiguities where reasonable clinicians disagree — and learning to sit with uncertainty.

🧭
Pathway 48 units · ~5h

Navigating the System

The politically dangerous territory, institutional dynamics, and documentation that protects — what they didn't teach in school.

How each unit works

Context

A brief recap of the scenario — what makes it hard and why it feels uncomfortable for new clinicians.

Observed Patterns

Common mistakes, how experienced clinicians tend to think about it, and where people often get into trouble.

Reflection

Questions to sit with — not answers. The kind of thinking that builds clinical judgment over time.

Educational Context
This commentary reflects common clinical perspectives and patterns observed in psychiatric practice. It is intended for educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, or professional advice. Always follow your facility's policies, applicable laws, and the guidance of your supervising or collaborating physician.