psychiatry
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- American Psychiatric Association - What is Psychiatry?
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Philosophy of Psychiatry
- Cell Press - Cell - Understanding the biological basis of psychiatric disease: WhatÂ’s next?
- Verywell Mind - Types and Symptoms of Common Psychiatric Disorders
- Open Library Publishing Platform - Revisiting the History of Psychology - Psychiatry and Mental Health (SC)
- BCCampus Publishing - Psychology - Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - A war over mental health professionalism: Scientology versus psychiatry
- Cell Press - Patterns - Modern views of machine learning for precision psychiatry
- Psychology Today - Psychiatry
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - What Psychiatry Means To Us
- NHS - Psychiatry
- WebMD - Guide to Psychiatry and Counseling
psychiatry, thescience and practice of diagnosing, treating, and preventingmental disorders.
The termpsychiatry isderived from the Greek wordspsyche, meaning “mind” or “soul,” andiatreia, meaning “healing.” Until the 18th century, mental illness was most often seen as demonic possession, but it gradually came to be considered as a sickness requiringtreatment. Many judge that modern psychiatry was born with the efforts of French physicianPhilippe Pinel in the late 1700s. His contemporary in theUnited States, statesman and physicianBenjamin Rush, introduced a comparable approach. Perhaps the most significant contributions to the field occurred in the late 19th century, when German psychiatristEmil Kraepelin emphasized a systematic approach to psychiatricdiagnosis and classification and Austrian psychoanalystSigmund Freud, who was familiar with neuropathology, developedpsychoanalysis as a treatment and research approach.
In countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom, psychiatrists have both abachelor’s degree and a medical degree and at least four years of specialty training in psychiatry. In the United States and Canada, specialty training occurs during a period of residency, which typically begins with work in ahospital setting in which the resident learns to provide supervised care to acutely ill individuals. Following this period of hospital training, which lasts at least one year, residents are required to complete an additional three or more years of training that includes designated clinical anddidactic experiences. These experiences must take place in structured educational programs that expose the resident to the biological, psychological, and sociocultural determinants of the major psychiatric disorders. Graduates of residency programs in the United States and Canada or of equivalent programs in other countries are designated as having achieved the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of the profession. These individuals have the ability to address the complicatedethical questions that often arise in the care of patients whose capacity for participation in their own treatment may be compromised. In many countries, before psychiatrists can begin practicing, they must take and pass both written and oral examinations. In the United States, successful completion of these exams enables psychiatrists to become board certified, meaning they have met the nationalbenchmarkcriteria ofcompetency required for the practice of psychiatry.

Certified psychiatrists should be able to employ treatments, such asdrug therapy,electroconvulsive therapy, andbiofeedback, to address biological dimensions of mental and emotional disorders. In addition, they should be prepared to apply different forms ofpsychotherapy, such ascognitive behavioral or interpersonal psychotherapies, to the psychological elements of mental and emotional dysfunction. Certified psychiatrists must be able to combine different treatments based on their understanding of the complexities ofmind-brain interactions; this often involves an understanding of environmental factors and of how these factors apply to individuals with severe and persistent mental illness. Most mental and emotional disorders require a pluralistic treatment approach because they affect so many facets of thehuman experience. As a result, psychiatrists frequently work as part of a multidisciplinary treatment team with psychologists,social work professionals, occupational therapists, and psychiatric nurses.
In addition to overall competency to deal with psychiatric disorders, some psychiatrists pursue subspecialty training and associated certification. Examples of subspecialties include addiction psychiatry,forensic psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, and psychosomatic psychiatry. Subspecialty education typically involves an additional one to two years of training. Other forms of subspecialty education, which are not recognized by board certification in the United States, include fellowships in emergency psychiatry and inneuropsychiatry, which focuses on the treatment of psychiatric symptoms in individuals with neurological disorders, such astraumatic brain injury and stroke.
- On the Web:
- Cell Press - Patterns - Modern views of machine learning for precision psychiatry (Nov. 04, 2025)
There has been rapid growth in the science of psychiatry because of the development of technology that allows measurement and observation of brain function. Neuroimaging techniques, such asmagnetic resonance imaging (MRI),positron emission tomography (PET), andsingle photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), have begun to answer basic questions about both psychopathologic disorders and normal development and function. These technologies can be used tointegrate the different dimensions of the biopsychosocial model—biology,psychology, andsociology—that have been characterized independently.






