what do psychiatrists do
Psychiatrists are medical doctors who specialize in mental, emotional, and behavioral health. They help people understand their symptoms, get an accurate diagnosis, and build a treatment plan that may include medication, therapy, and lifestyle changes.
Core responsibilities
- Evaluate and diagnose
Psychiatrists carry out in‑depth mental health evaluations, gathering information about symptoms, medical history, family history, and daily life. They use criteria from manuals like the DSM‑5 and may order lab tests or psychological questionnaires to distinguish between physical and mental causes of distress.
- Prescribe and manage medications
Because they are physicians, psychiatrists can prescribe psychiatric medications (for example, antidepressants, mood stabilizers, or antipsychotics) and adjust doses over time. They monitor side effects, check interactions with other medicines, and decide if additional treatments (like psychotherapy or neuromodulation) are needed.
- Provide therapy and coordinate care
Some psychiatrists offer talking therapies such as cognitive‑behavioral therapy (CBT) or supportive counseling, while others refer to psychologists or therapists and focus on medical treatment. They often work as part of a broader team—primary‑care doctors, social workers, or case managers—to manage complex or long‑term conditions.
Where and how they work
- Psychiatrists see patients in outpatient clinics, hospitals, emergency rooms, and sometimes telehealth platforms.
- They treat conditions like depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, PTSD, attention‑deficit disorders, and severe or treatment‑resistant mental illnesses.
- In legal or forensic settings, they may perform risk assessments or give expert opinions for courts or hospital detentions.
Psychiatrist vs other mental‑health roles
Role| Training background| Main focus| Can prescribe meds?
---|---|---|---
Psychiatrist| Medical doctor (MD/DO) + psych residency 35| Medical diagnosis
and medication plus sometimes therapy 17| Yes 35
Psychologist| Doctoral degree (PhD/PsyD) in psychology 36| Psychological
testing and therapy 36| No (except in a few states with extra training) 3
Therapist/counselor| Master’s‑level training (LMFT, LCSW, LCPC) 6| Talk
therapy and coping skills 6| No 6
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.