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Shitty Shrink

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I beg to differ but don't know what country State/Territory you hale from but in my Country, you must be a fully qualified Doctor which takes 6 years including 1 year as a Intern:: then if you wish to specialise a further 6, including a year of being assessed by a Sr Consultant, then if you decide to further specialize into just one field of Psych, you are required to get into that area, do further study specific to that. Then you must pass a Board of peers & then you can hang your Degrees on the wall as a Doctor (thereby being allowed to prescribe medications/treatment only Doctors can do...legally) As a general Psych., & if you have done the specialized area, you get to hang that one up.

A psychologist, does a Degree in psychology but is not a Doctor & cannot dispense medication or treatment that falls within the confines of what Doctors can legally do. After attaining a Degree in psychology, one has to do one year under the supervision of a Senior Psychologist & if you really want to, you can go on from there into specialist fields.

A Councilor doesn't have to do such rigorous training, in fact as I found out to my severe detriment there are no privacy laws, nothing that binds them to anything really. You can hang out a shingle saying your a Counselor in Alphabet Soup & nobody can stop you.

How do I know this, I have a close relative whom I watched go into specialist psych., level & its all life long learning, as studies, medications etc are done. She has tree loads of crap to read, conferences etc to go to, write papers for publishing in peer related journals. It's pretty full on stuff at that level. Little wonder most psych's call it a done deal when they get that far, they still are very valuable but its a long learning curve.
In this country we don't have enough health care professionals, least of all in mental health.
 
I was specifically referring to the US. Medical training varies greatly from country to country. In some countries physicians aren't doctors but attain master's degrees. I probably should have specified the country.

Edit: Just to add, in the US not all specialties have exact residency length though many do. Psychiatry does, the respective board has specified 4 years for elligibility. There are fellowships that extend beyond residency like child and adolescent psychiatry.
 
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Five completely seperate and un related things:

  • being any use at all (the important bit to us)
  • having a license (a means by which people who only have a talent for extortion, get money out of the rest of us)
  • having paper qualifications (you've spent time or money justifying the existence of a school - that might be good bad or indifferent)
  • membership of a professional body (who want to limit who can practice, so they can raise prices)
  • Having served a number of years (which might be experience or might be time spent repeating the same mistakes)
 
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