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FAQ:
What is a Psychiatrist?
A
psychiatrist is a physician (M.D. or D.O.) who specializes
in the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of mental illnesses
and substance use disorders. It takes many years of education
and training to become a psychiatrist: He or she must graduate
from college and then medical school, and go on to complete
four years of residency training in the field of psychiatry.
(Many psychiatrists undergo additional training so that they
can further specialize in such areas as child and adolescent
psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, forensic psychiatry, psychopharmacology,
and/or psychoanalysis.) This extensive medical training enables
the psychiatrist to understand the body's functions and the
complex relationship between emotional illness and other medical
illnesses. The psychiatrist is thus the mental health professional
and physician best qualified to distinguish between physical
and psychological causes of both mental and physical distress.
Psychiatrists are the only mental health professionals who
can prescribe medications and admit to hospitals.
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