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You could consider asking both folks to write you letters, and either (as mentioned above) submit both if 4 would be allowed, or send the lab coordinator's letter to more research-heavy sites, and the Psy.D.'s letter to more balanced or clinically-leaning sites.
That being said, I'd be a little surprised if many programs would hold your letter writer's degree (Psy.D. vs. Ph.D.) against you. I'm sure it's possible, but I would hope the vast majority of programs wouldn't do so. As neuronic said, what's going to be more important is how strong the letter is overall, and how personal/individualized the writer is able to be.
Personally I think this is a little SDN neuroticism. I believe the Psy.D. would be just fine for Ph.D. programs.
Agreed. i think this is a non-issue if the letter is strong. PsyD graduates from strong programs (like rutgers, baylor) are directing programs at reputable medical centers, hospitals, VA's all over the country and some have high-level research careers at medical schools. You will likely have a PsyD supervisor in the future and will need a letter from him/her for internship possibly.
Agreed.
How well a LOR speaks to your abilities will matter more. This issue comes up again during internship/post-doc in regard to boarded LOR writers, and the same advice applies.