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Have also seen neurological diversification specialist (NDS doctor for short) suggested as a possible alternate name.![]()
Maybe We Should Call Psychiatry Something Else
Research shows that changing the name could help reduce the stigma of mental illnessblogs.scientificamerican.com
Thoughts on this article? Would changing the term help the public to distinguish between psychiatry and psychology better?
Have also seen neurological diversification specialist (NDS doctor for short) suggested as a possible alternate name.
For me, that's an awful name. The last thing we need is more confusing terms that have to be reduced into yet another acronym to be useable.Have also seen neurological diversification specialist (NDS doctor for short) suggested as a possible alternate name.
Most humans are horrible with the exception to the rule. Most medical specialties start with the suffix- ology. Dermatology, cardiology and anesthesiology and more. So if you gave someone a test which one is not a medical specialty Cardiology, Dermatology, Endocrinology and Psychiatry . Most would say psychiatry because it is an exception to the rule and humans are bad at exceptions to the rule. Also most in the general public have no clue what the difference is between a psych nurse practitioner and a psychiatrist .I thought maybe his view was that the stigma associated with psychiatry is related to the fact that it sounds too similar to psychology, not so much that mental health in general has a stigma associated with it, as he seemed to think he got a more positive reception when he referred to himself as a doctor specializing in mental health. Since he mentioned that psychologists are not medical doctors but doctorates, perhaps this is also where the whole "psychiatrists are not real doctors thing" comes from... Most of the general public still cannot distinguish between the two. The average person just sees psychiatrists as psychologists with special prescribing rights, if they can tell them apart at all, no? Both of my parents are psychiatrists so I get asked these things all the time and the simple explanation that "psychiatrists can prescribe medicine and psychologists cannot" just seems to reinforce misconceptions/seems reductive. So I thought that that was what he was getting at but now I'm not sure.
Most humans are horrible with the exception to the rule. Most medical specialties start with the suffix- ology. Dermatology, cardiology and anesthesiology and more. So if you gave someone a test which one is not a medical specialty Cardiology, Dermatology, Endocrinology and Psychiatry . Most would say psychiatry because it is an exception to the rule and humans are bad at exceptions to the rule. Also most in the general public have no clue what the difference is between a psych nurse practitioner and a psychiatrist .
That’s true and I’ve yet to meet any lay person who knows what a Physiatrist is or what they do.I mean most people don’t know what the difference is between a CRNA and a anesthesiologist either. Or a optometrist and ophthalmologist.
This comment sounds like something a 15-16 year old would say.Yeah what is the best way to respond when people ask what the difference is in your opinion?I know some psychologists' kids and I often get "your parents are not real doctors they just ask people how they feel for a living","our parents do the same thing yours are just also allowed to give out medicine" from them and I just feel like the similarity in the terms propels these kinds of comments. didn't mean to come off bitter, sorry.
Yeah what is the best way to respond when people ask what the difference is in your opinion? I know some psychologists' kids and I often get "your parents are not real doctors they just ask people how they feel for a living","our parents do the same thing yours are just also allowed to give out medicine" from them. Of course psychology is equally valuable but I just feel like the similarity in the terms propels these kinds of comments. didn't mean to come off bitter, sorry.
You do realize that the public thinks most anesthesiologists are nurses because of CRNAs? In a poll done only 44% of the public knew anesthesiologists were physicians. About 42% said anesthesiologists were another medical profession. 13% didn’t know. Also don’t forget the CRNAs who are pushing for the nurse anesthesiologist title . Nursing Board Signs Off On ‘Anesthesiologist’ Title Also don't forget psych nps and NPs in general. You ask a pt who their psychiatrist is and they say Dr. X but it's a psych NP instead and the pt thought they were a psychiatrist. This happens all the time people think they saw a psychiatrist but its' a psych NP.Right but with optometrist/ophthalmologist the misconception elevates optometrist to the status of physician but has no baring on the perception of the ophthalmologist. With psychologist/psychiatrist, the misconception seems to paint psychiatry as something non-medical.
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How psychiatrists became lesser physicians
We also need to look beyond our own specialty, and identify with other physicians as a whole.www.kevinmd.com
Yeah I understand that they're both doctors but my friend circle is kids in a BS/MD program so in that context when we use the term doctor we mean people who finished med school. And so the scenario plays out more like I'll contribute something to the conversation about medicine, mentioning that I learned it from my parents, and from them more so than anyone else it's always "Well your parents aren't real doctors so what do you know about this? They don't practice REAL medicine, they just ask people about their feelings." But they don't say it to others in our circle whose parents are non-medical doctors. Like it's not that I exactly mind but it's clear that they mean it in a derogatory sense. But point taken, I understand I sound like a high schooler... I just thought I'd get asked this stuff less in uni/med school but looks like I'm getting asked it more and more...
Are you a premed? Most don't care about these things in the real world...Yeah I understand that they're both doctors but my friend circle is kids in a BS/MD program so in that context when we use the term doctor we mean people who finished med school. And so the scenario plays out more like I'll contribute something to the conversation about medicine, mentioning that I learned it from my parents, and from them more so than anyone else it's always "Well your parents aren't real doctors so what do you know about this? They don't practice REAL medicine, they just ask people about their feelings." But they don't say it to others in our circle whose parents are non-medical doctors. Like it's not that I exactly mind but it's clear that they mean it in a derogatory sense. But point taken, I understand I sound like a high schooler... I just thought I'd get asked this stuff less in uni/med school but looks like I'm getting asked it more and more...
round here, forensic psychiatrists are still called alienists.It'd be pretty cool if we just went back to calling ourselves "alienists" regardless of inpt/outpt.
It'd be pretty cool if we just went back to calling ourselves "alienists" regardless of inpt/outpt.