Treatment Orientation and Associated Characteristics of North American Academic Psychiatrists

We present data showing the degree to which a “biological-psychotherapeutic” division persists in American psychiatry, and how psychiatristsʼ treatment orientation is associated with personal and professional characteristics. Almost two thirds of academic psychiatrists who responded to our survey (N...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of nervous and mental disease 1995-12, Vol.183 (12), p.729-735
Hauptverfasser: BODKIN, J ALEXANDER, KLITZMAN, ROBERT L, POPE, HARRISON G
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container_end_page 735
container_issue 12
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container_title The journal of nervous and mental disease
container_volume 183
creator BODKIN, J ALEXANDER
KLITZMAN, ROBERT L
POPE, HARRISON G
description We present data showing the degree to which a “biological-psychotherapeutic” division persists in American psychiatry, and how psychiatristsʼ treatment orientation is associated with personal and professional characteristics. Almost two thirds of academic psychiatrists who responded to our survey (N = 435) could be classified as either biological (27%) or psychotherapeutic (37%) in orientation, according to the proportion of their caseload to which they provided psychotherapy (25% vs. ≥75%). There appears to have been an increase over the last 35 years in the proportion of psychiatrists who can be classified as biologically oriented and a decrease in the proportion who can be classified as psychotherapeutically oriented, as well as the emergence of a large class of intermediate or “eclectic” practitioners (36%). Several personal and professional attributes were distributed differentially according to treatment orientation. Psychotherapeutically oriented respondents more frequently reported personal histories of psychiatric disorders than did biologically oriented respondents (64% vs. 39%) as well as greater satisfaction with clinical work (81% vs. 53% “very satisfied”). Differences were also found in age, gender, history of personal psychotherapy, family history of psychiatric disorder, history of marijuana use, degrees of involvement in research, teaching and clinical care of patients, and overall work satisfaction, as well as other characteristics.
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Almost two thirds of academic psychiatrists who responded to our survey (N = 435) could be classified as either biological (27%) or psychotherapeutic (37%) in orientation, according to the proportion of their caseload to which they provided psychotherapy (25% vs. ≥75%). There appears to have been an increase over the last 35 years in the proportion of psychiatrists who can be classified as biologically oriented and a decrease in the proportion who can be classified as psychotherapeutically oriented, as well as the emergence of a large class of intermediate or “eclectic” practitioners (36%). Several personal and professional attributes were distributed differentially according to treatment orientation. Psychotherapeutically oriented respondents more frequently reported personal histories of psychiatric disorders than did biologically oriented respondents (64% vs. 39%) as well as greater satisfaction with clinical work (81% vs. 53% “very satisfied”). 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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Adult
Age Factors
Attitude of Health Personnel
Biological and medical sciences
Biological Psychiatry
Female
Health staff related problems. Vocational training
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Mental Disorders - drug therapy
Mental Disorders - epidemiology
Mental Disorders - therapy
Middle Aged
Personal Satisfaction
Practice Patterns, Physicians
Psychiatry - classification
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Psychotherapy
Sex Factors
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
title Treatment Orientation and Associated Characteristics of North American Academic Psychiatrists
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