Anonymous wrote:Psychologist have drastically lower salaries compared to psychiatrists but they have less work load, easier cases and no or limited access to meds. They also spend less time in college and training and admission or fold isn’t a competitive one so less stress and less student debt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a psychiatrist. I don’t see this in my day to day life.
It looks like this study was done on psychiatrists who graduated from Hopkins in the 1950’s. This is before there were antidepressants, antipsychotics, or mood stabilizers. Thorazine came out in 1955, but wasn’t widely used. This is also when all of the studies came out on psilocybin (hallucinogenic mushrooms) and LSD in mental illness.
I’m going to guess that most physicians who became psychiatrists around that time were less conservative and less likely to follow social convention than their counterparts in more traditional specialties.
Another psychiatrist here. I agree with the above. I believe this may have been true for the baby boomer cohort, but for Generation X I do not believe it applies. Gen X psychiatrist have a very low divorce rate, are mostly all married, many females went into the profession due to the family friendly hours (although not me) and mostly are very socially conventional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isnt 50% pretty average for a divorce rate?
No, especially not amongst people with a lot of education.
Anonymous wrote:50 percent or more of everyone is divorced. Not sure why they’d be any different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see it as a negative. They probably recognize abuse and unhealthy behavior more than the average person, and they don't settle for it. When I think about the marriages around me, there are verrrrry few I'd ever want to be part of.
That's what I was thinking, or at least that this accounts for a good chunk of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Psychologist have drastically lower salaries compared to psychiatrists but they have less work load, easier cases and no or limited access to meds. They also spend less time in college and training and admission or fold isn’t a competitive one so less stress and less student debt.
Not true AT ALL that psychologists have less work load, easier cases, spend less time in college, and that admission is less competitive. Admissions into Clinical Psychology PhD programs is among the most competitive of any doctoral programs possible. By the time you have your PhD, you likely will have spent about 9-10 years or more in higher education (4 years undergrad, plus 5-6+ years of graduate school getting the MA and PhD).
Clinical psychology can be an incredibly demanding, draining field, and psychologists work with all ranges of patients, including the very same types of patients that psychiatrists work with.
The only thing the PP stated that CAN be true is that psychologists often have less student debt, as many PhD programs are funded via grants.
I have noticed many therapists in the DMV who go by doctor of psychology have a psy.d from an online college....now a real phd from a good psychology program is something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Psychologist have drastically lower salaries compared to psychiatrists but they have less work load, easier cases and no or limited access to meds. They also spend less time in college and training and admission or fold isn’t a competitive one so less stress and less student debt.
Not true AT ALL that psychologists have less work load, easier cases, spend less time in college, and that admission is less competitive. Admissions into Clinical Psychology PhD programs is among the most competitive of any doctoral programs possible. By the time you have your PhD, you likely will have spent about 9-10 years or more in higher education (4 years undergrad, plus 5-6+ years of graduate school getting the MA and PhD).
Clinical psychology can be an incredibly demanding, draining field, and psychologists work with all ranges of patients, including the very same types of patients that psychiatrists work with.
The only thing the PP stated that CAN be true is that psychologists often have less student debt, as many PhD programs are funded via grants.
Anonymous wrote:Psychologist have drastically lower salaries compared to psychiatrists but they have less work load, easier cases and no or limited access to meds. They also spend less time in college and training and admission or fold isn’t a competitive one so less stress and less student debt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see it as a negative. They probably recognize abuse and unhealthy behavior more than the average person, and they don't settle for it. When I think about the marriages around me, there are verrrrry few I'd ever want to be part of.
That's what I was thinking, or at least that this accounts for a good chunk of it.
If they are so enlightened then why do the pick wrong partners, why can’t they help those partners, why they are depressed and suicidal themselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see it as a negative. They probably recognize abuse and unhealthy behavior more than the average person, and they don't settle for it. When I think about the marriages around me, there are verrrrry few I'd ever want to be part of.
That's what I was thinking, or at least that this accounts for a good chunk of it.
Anonymous wrote:The one psychiatrist I know is weird. She doesn't like people and is socially awkward. I remember being surprised when I first met her because I assumed you wouldn't go into that field if you were anti-social.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a psychiatrist. I don’t see this in my day to day life.
It looks like this study was done on psychiatrists who graduated from Hopkins in the 1950’s. This is before there were antidepressants, antipsychotics, or mood stabilizers. Thorazine came out in 1955, but wasn’t widely used. This is also when all of the studies came out on psilocybin (hallucinogenic mushrooms) and LSD in mental illness.
I’m going to guess that most physicians who became psychiatrists around that time were less conservative and less likely to follow social convention than their counterparts in more traditional specialties.