title: Psychiatrist
slug: psychiatrist
aliases:
  - Psychiatric Physician
  - Mental Health Doctor
  - Shrink
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - psychiatry
  - mental-health
  - diagnosis
  - psychopharmacology
  - healthcare
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Relieves mental suffering by distinguishing the biological, psychological, and
  social drivers of distress and choosing the treatment that fits the cause and
  the person, while keeping them safe.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: specialization
    note: >-
      a physician specialized in the brain and behavior, sharing the duty to
      exclude organic disease
  - slug: registered-nurse
    type: collaboration
    note: psychiatric nurses observe the inpatient course and administer treatment
  - slug: social-worker
    type: collaboration
    note: addresses the social drivers of mental illness and community care
  - slug: pediatrician
    type: collaboration
    note: collaborates on developmental and behavioral conditions of childhood
  - slug: pharmacist
    type: collaboration
    note: partners on the interactions and monitoring psychotropic regimens demand
specializations:
  - Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist
  - Forensic Psychiatrist
  - Addiction Psychiatrist
  - Geriatric Psychiatrist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry
    kind: book
  - title: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR)
    kind: standard
  - title: APA Principles of Medical Ethics for Psychiatry
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A psychiatrist exists to treat suffering of the mind with the rigor of
      medicine,

      in a domain where there is no blood test for the diagnosis and the
      patient's own

      account is both the primary instrument and a thing the illness can
      distort. The

      specialty exists at the intersection of biology, psychology, and meaning:
      the

      same symptom can be a brain disease, a reaction to circumstance, or both,
      and the

      treatment differs. The psychiatrist's reason for being is to reduce
      psychic pain

      and restore function — to tell apart the depression that needs medication
      from the

      grief that needs time, the psychosis that needs an antipsychotic from the
      trauma

      that needs therapy — while protecting a patient who may, because of the
      illness,

      not want help or be able to keep themselves safe.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Relieve mental suffering and restore function by correctly distinguishing
      among

      the biological, psychological, and social drivers of a person's distress,
      and

      choosing the treatment — drug, therapy, or both — that fits the cause and
      the

      person, while keeping them safe.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is prescribing and talking; the actual work is diagnosis
      without

      a lab test and risk assessment without certainty. A psychiatrist takes a

      psychiatric history and performs a mental status exam, builds a
      differential

      across mood, anxiety, psychotic, substance, personality, and organic
      causes, and

      rules out the medical illness masquerading as a psychiatric one. They
      assess

      suicide and violence risk and decide on the least-restrictive safe
      setting,

      sometimes invoking involuntary admission. They prescribe psychotropics and
      manage

      their substantial side effects, conduct or refer for psychotherapy, and
      build the

      therapeutic alliance that is itself a treatment. Underneath it is the
      discipline

      of taking a subjective, sometimes distorted narrative and reasoning toward
      an

      objective formulation.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Rule out the medical mimic first.** Thyroid disease, delirium, a brain
      tumor,
        intoxication, and withdrawal can all present as psychiatric illness. Don't
        psychologize an organic problem.
      - **The therapeutic alliance is the treatment, not the wrapper.** Across
      every
        modality, the quality of the relationship predicts outcome more than the
        specific technique.
      - **Formulate, don't just label.** A DSM diagnosis is a starting point;
      the
        biopsychosocial formulation — what made this person vulnerable, what triggered
        this episode, what perpetuates it — is what you treat.
      - **Safety first, autonomy close behind.** Protect the patient who can't
      protect
        themselves, but use the least restrictive option and restore agency as fast as
        it's safe to.
      - **Time and observation are diagnostic.** Psychiatric diagnoses declare
        themselves over a course; the cross-sectional snapshot misleads.
      - **Treat the person in their context, not the symptom in isolation.**
      Poverty,
        trauma, isolation, and meaning are not soft factors; they're often the cause.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The biopsychosocial model.** Every presentation has biological (genes,
        neurochemistry, illness), psychological (development, defenses, cognition), and
        social (relationships, work, culture) dimensions. The formulation weighs all
        three; the treatment usually addresses more than one.
      - **The mental status examination as the physical exam of psychiatry.**
      Appearance,
        behavior, speech, mood, affect, thought process and content, perception,
        cognition, insight — a structured observation that turns a conversation into
        clinical data.
      - **The stress-diathesis model.** Illness emerges where vulnerability
      (diathesis)
        meets stress; explains why the same loss devastates one person and not another,
        and where to intervene.
      - **Risk as a probability over a window, not a prediction.** Suicide risk
      is
        stratified (static and dynamic factors, warning signs, protective factors) to
        guide the safety decision, not foretold with certainty no one has.
      - **Transference and countertransference.** The patient's feelings toward
      you and
        yours toward them are data about the patient's relational world — and a hazard if
        unexamined.
      - **Diagnosis as a hypothesis revised over time.** The first presentation
      is
        rarely the final diagnosis; depression may declare itself bipolar, an "anxiety"
        may be early psychosis.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - There is no objective test; the instrument is the interview and the
      observed
        course, both fallible.
      - The illness can distort the patient's insight, so their stated wishes
      may
        conflict with their interests — and usually still deserve to be honored.
      - Mind and brain are one system; psychological and biological explanations
      are
        levels of description, not rivals.
      - Most psychiatric conditions are chronic and relapsing; the goal is
      management
        and recovery, rarely cure.
      - The relationship between clinician and patient is itself an active
      ingredient.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Could a medical illness, drug, or withdrawal be causing this
      presentation?

      - Is this patient safe — to themselves and others — and in the least
      restrictive
        setting that keeps them so?
      - What is the biopsychosocial formulation, not just the label?

      - Does this depression have a bipolar history I'm about to destabilize
      with an
        antidepressant?
      - What does this patient want their life to look like, and does my plan
      serve it?

      - What is my countertransference telling me about this patient?

      - Is the patient's refusal a symptom of the illness or a competent choice?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Suicide and violence risk assessment.** Weigh static factors (prior
      attempts,
        diagnosis, demographics), dynamic factors (current ideation, plan, means,
        hopelessness), and protective factors to choose the safety plan and the setting,
        documenting the reasoning.
      - **Least-restrictive setting.** Match the level of containment
      (outpatient,
        voluntary admission, involuntary admission) to the actual risk, escalating only
        as far as safety requires and de-escalating as soon as it allows.
      - **Capacity assessment.** Determine whether the patient can understand,
      retain,
        weigh, and communicate a decision; incapacity for one decision is not global
        incompetence.
      - **Stepped care / treatment selection.** Match intensity to severity —
      watchful
        waiting and therapy for mild presentations, medication and combined treatment
        for moderate-to-severe — and escalate by evidence (augmentation, switching) when
        response is inadequate.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Establish safety and rapport.** Assess acute risk first; build enough
         alliance that the patient will tell you the truth.
      2. **History and mental status exam.** Gather the developmental,
      psychiatric,
         substance, medical, and social history; perform the structured MSE.
      3. **Exclude the organic.** Screen for and rule out medical and substance
      causes
         before settling on a primary psychiatric diagnosis.
      4. **Formulate.** Build the biopsychosocial formulation and a
      differential, not
         just a code.
      5. **Plan collaboratively.** Choose medication, therapy, or both, aligned
      with the
         patient's goals; obtain informed consent including side effects.
      6. **Monitor and titrate.** Track response, side effects, and risk over
      weeks;
         psychotropics take time and the diagnosis may evolve.
      7. **Adjust and maintain.** Switch or augment for inadequate response;
      plan for
         relapse prevention and the long arc of a chronic condition.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Autonomy vs. safety.** Respecting a patient's refusal of treatment
      against the
        duty to protect them when the illness impairs their judgment — the involuntary-
        commitment dilemma.
      - **Medication benefit vs. side-effect burden.** Antipsychotics control
      psychosis
        but cause metabolic disease and movement disorders; the relief must outweigh the
        harm the patient will live with for years.
      - **Diagnostic specificity vs. premature labeling.** A clear diagnosis
      guides
        treatment and access to care; a wrong or early label follows the patient and can
        itself cause harm and stigma.
      - **Symptom suppression vs. addressing the cause.** A benzodiazepine calms
      anxiety
        fast and builds dependence; therapy is slower but treats the root.
      - **Confidentiality vs. duty to warn.** The near-absolute privacy of
      psychiatric
        care against the duty to protect an identifiable third party from serious harm.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - New psychiatric symptoms after age 40, or with abnormal vitals or
      neurology, are
        organic until proven otherwise.
      - Always ask directly about suicide; asking does not plant the idea, and
      not
        asking is how you miss it.
      - Before treating "depression," ask about manic episodes; an
      antidepressant alone
        can destabilize bipolar disorder.
      - Start low and go slow on psychotropics, especially in the elderly and
      the
        medically ill.
      - The patient who suddenly seems "better" after deep depression may have
      decided
        to die; reassess, don't relax.
      - Believe the collateral history; the illness often impairs the patient's
      own
        account.
      - Document the risk reasoning, not just the conclusion.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Missing the medical cause.** Treating delirium, thyroid disease, or
        intoxication as primary psychiatric illness.
      - **Diagnostic overshadowing.** Attributing every new symptom in a
      psychiatric
        patient to their known illness and missing a new physical disease.
      - **Anchoring on the first diagnosis.** Treating "unipolar depression" for
      years
        when the history was always bipolar.
      - **Over- or under-estimating risk.** Discharging the patient who then
      attempts
        suicide, or detaining the patient who didn't need it and lost trust.
      - **Polypharmacy drift.** Adding drugs for the side effects of drugs until
      the
        regimen is the illness.
      - **Boundary erosion.** Unexamined countertransference leading to
      over-involvement
        or rejection of a difficult patient.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Treating the label, not the person** — prescribing to a DSM code
      without a
        formulation.
      - **The reflexive benzodiazepine** for chronic anxiety, trading slow
      relief for
        dependence.
      - **Avoiding the suicide question** because it's uncomfortable.

      - **Stigmatizing the "difficult" patient** (borderline, substance use)
      instead of
        understanding the behavior as part of the illness.
      - **Defensive over-detention** to avoid liability rather than to serve the
        patient.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Mental status examination (MSE)** — the structured observation of a
      patient's
        current mental functioning.
      - **Affect vs. mood** — the observed emotional expression vs. the
      patient's
        reported sustained emotional state.
      - **Formulation** — the integrated biopsychosocial explanation of a
      patient's
        presentation.
      - **Psychosis** — a break from reality (delusions, hallucinations,
      disorganized
        thought).
      - **Insight** — the patient's awareness that they are ill.

      - **Capacity** — the decision-specific ability to make an informed choice.

      - **Transference / countertransference** — the patient's and clinician's
        redirected feelings within the relationship.
      - **Akathisia** — drug-induced restlessness, an easily missed and
      dangerous side
        effect.
      - **Diathesis** — an underlying vulnerability to illness.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The clinical interview and the mental status exam** — the primary
      diagnostic
        instruments.
      - **Structured rating scales (PHQ-9, GAD-7, MADRS, C-SSRS)** — to quantify
        severity and track change over time.
      - **Psychotropic medications** — antidepressants, antipsychotics, mood
        stabilizers, anxiolytics, each with a distinct risk profile.
      - **Psychotherapies (CBT, DBT, psychodynamic, motivational interviewing)**
      —
        structured treatments delivered or referred.
      - **Collateral history** — family, records, and other clinicians,
      essential when
        insight is impaired.
      - **Diagnostic systems (DSM-5-TR, ICD-11)** — the shared, imperfect
      classification
        of disorders.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Psychiatry is a team field built around a vulnerable patient. The
      psychiatrist

      works with psychologists and therapists who deliver structured
      psychotherapy,

      psychiatric nurses who observe the inpatient course and administer
      medication,

      social workers who address the housing, benefits, and family realities
      that drive

      relapse, and primary-care physicians who manage the medical comorbidities

      psychiatric patients disproportionately carry. With families, the
      psychiatrist

      balances the patient's confidentiality against the family's role in care
      and

      collateral history. In crisis they coordinate with emergency physicians
      and, at

      times, police. The recurring skill is integrating multiple perspectives
      into one

      coherent plan without losing the patient's own voice.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Psychiatry holds a unique power: the ability to detain and treat people
      against

      their will, justified only when illness impairs judgment and risk is real.
      That

      power demands restraint — the least-restrictive setting, the constant
      question of

      capacity, and the swift restoration of autonomy. Confidentiality is
      especially

      sacred given stigma, breaking only under a clear duty to protect an
      identifiable

      person (the Tarasoff principle). The hard ground includes coercion in
      treatment,

      the long-term harms of medications a patient may not fully appreciate,
      boundary

      maintenance in an intimate relationship, the stigma the diagnosis itself
      confers,

      and honesty about uncertainty in a field without confirmatory tests. The

      psychiatrist must also resist using diagnosis as social control and guard
      against

      their own biases shaping who they label.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The "depression" that's a thyroid problem.** A 50-year-old presents with
      low

      mood, fatigue, and weight gain, and asks for an antidepressant. Rather
      than

      prescribe to the symptom, the psychiatrist rules out the medical mimic and
      orders

      thyroid function tests, which show profound hypothyroidism. Treating the
      thyroid

      resolves the "depression." Reaching for sertraline first would have masked
      a

      physical disease and left the cause untreated. The discipline was
      excluding the

      organic before labeling the psychiatric.


      **The risk call after the relapse.** A patient with recurrent depression
      discloses

      passive suicidal thoughts but no plan, has strong family support, and
      engages with

      a safety plan. The defensive reflex is involuntary admission. The
      psychiatrist

      instead stratifies the risk — chronic ideation, protective factors
      present, no

      intent or means, good alliance — and chooses intensive outpatient
      follow-up with a

      safety plan and removal of means, the least-restrictive safe option.
      Documenting

      the reasoning, they preserve the patient's autonomy and trust without
      abandoning

      safety. Over-detaining would have damaged the alliance that keeps the
      patient

      coming back.


      **The antidepressant that would have caused a manic switch.** A young
      adult

      presents with depression and requests medication. Before prescribing, the

      psychiatrist takes a careful history and uncovers a past period of three
      days

      without sleep, racing thoughts, and impulsive spending the patient had
      dismissed as

      "just being productive." This is a bipolar history; an antidepressant
      alone could

      trigger mania. The plan shifts to a mood stabilizer first. The catch came
      from

      asking about mania before treating the depression in front of them.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The psychiatrist applies medical diagnosis to the mind. Physicians share
      the

      clinical reasoning and the duty to exclude organic disease; the
      psychiatrist is a

      physician who specialized in the brain and behavior. Registered nurses,

      especially psychiatric nurses, observe the inpatient course and administer

      treatment. Social workers address the social drivers of mental illness and

      coordinate community care. Pediatricians collaborate on the developmental
      and

      behavioral conditions of childhood. Pharmacists partner on the complex

      interactions and monitoring that psychotropic regimens demand.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry*

      - *The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR)*

      - *The Noonday Demon* — Andrew Solomon (for the lived experience)

      - *Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me)* — Tavris & Aronson (on clinical
      bias)

      - The American Psychiatric Association *Principles of Medical Ethics with
      Annotations Especially Applicable to Psychiatry*
