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Ok I know the difference between them, the major one being that a psychiatrist issues medicine and drugs to patients and a psychologist ismore clinical and does not issue such things. but I was wondering, whic should I be? Should I be one at all? At first I wanted to be a respiratory therapist to help people with asthma, but now it dawned on me that the issue of Psychology may be a better field to pursue.

1. Tell me waht you know about each field? The differences? The similarities?

2. How much do they get paid, salary wise, hourly wise?

3. Which is the better one?

4.How long I'd have to go to school for either one?

5. A school that offers a good program of it (I live in Illinois, Im thinking Loyola or Northwestern)

6.Any other additional information.

Thanks I would appreciate this alot, this is like a career descision, Im lost and I need help, I have a good GPA and am on honor roll and stuff so maybe this is a good idea. 10 points for best answer! Thanks!

2007-11-12 03:05:41 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

5 answers

To be a psychologist you must go to school 2-5 years after college graduation depending on your specialty. Psychiatrists have to go school longer. Psychiatrists must go to med school before they study psychiatry. Pay is very variable for both. I think psychiatrists work more hours and often very odd hours. Many have to work on alternating weekends. Atleast that is my experience. Most psychiatists work in hospitals. Most psychologists don't work in hospitals. Psychologists have more free time. I rather be a psychologist. I have considered Northwestern and decided it is too expensive. My specialty will be biopsychology or neuropsychology. I plan on going to Omaha for my Ph.D. Forest Institute, Wisconsin @ Madison, and Emporia State are the other schools I'm considering.

2007-11-12 04:16:04 · answer #1 · answered by Susas 6 · 0 1

ok ill break it down best i can for you: Psychologist is a Ph.D. It's not that he doesn't issue them, he can't. a psychiatrist is an M.D., he goes to medical school (4years of med school, then 2 years internship with a MD in psychiatry).. the Ph.D usually takes 5-7 years right out of graduating with a Bachelors in psychology. In the process you get a Master's. A Ph.D can do anything he wants really. He is licensed by the state and can even have his own office. He can work with regular people, psychotic/neurotic people, or he can work with children or at a school (this is a specialization, you have to take education courses to be a school psych.)...the clinical Ph.d can work in the FBI and CIA and give therapy to their staff, or analyze criminals... and MD will get you anywhere.. you own practice, with a hospital.. anything... a Ph.D clinician would start maybe about 60k and (not in own practice) max out at about 120k.... a MD would (naturally make more) start at about 115K and can make up to 250K or more... so.. realyl do you want to do a pre-med program in underrgrad studies consisting of all the natural sciences and more, and psych classes.. if u go Ph.d u dont go the premed route, you just pump an extreme amount of psych classes... an MD would see a lot of "crazy" people.. schizo's and many depressed that need anti-depre. as an MD you can also do therapy, or just do drug rehab and let the PhD do the psychotherapy.. so really it's up to you... and i duno about the school.. if ur any smart at all you can find the college that makes the best sense and has the best reputation...look for a good psych rep or premed depending on what you decide.. look on the APA.org site... find which colleges and universities rank best..

2007-11-12 03:36:55 · answer #2 · answered by delco714 4 · 0 0

A psychiatrist has greater credentials than a therapist. A psychiatrist is a well being care expert besides as Psychiatry and could consequently presribe drugs. A psychologist frequently has a masters or doctorate yet can not prescribe drugs. it is likewise acceptable that a psychologist is a specialist in human behaviour while a Psychiatrist is greater for psychological ailment. frequently a therapist has a Masters degree in Psychology, and a Psychologist has a Doctorate in Psychology. i might say decide for it. start up with a therapist or psychologist and if want be, they could refer you to a psychiatrist. decide for it! determine you end it to the tip nonetheless with the aid of fact you should to offer up after feeling slightly greater acceptable or not seeing countless progression on the beginning up, yet do not!

2016-09-29 02:09:45 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A psychiatrist has a degree in medicine as well as psychology classes. That means a LOT more schooling, unless you're going for a Ph.D in psychology. Which is better is up to you - you'll have to decide for yourself. How long you go to school depends on what level of education you want or need to practice. You won't practice on your own with a BA in psychology, but you might work for another psychologist under their supervision. With a MA, maybe you can practice on your own. You could end up as an industrial psychologist, or a school counselor, or in a hospital. There are tons of different jobs in the field.

Your your best course might be to start doing a lot of research in the field, rather than just asking here. If you're still in high school, go talk to the school counselor. You can get a lot of information there.

2007-11-12 03:18:00 · answer #4 · answered by Ralfcoder 7 · 1 1

Psychologist = Ph.D. (often marginal or no training in neurology, psychiatry, drugs).

Psychiatry = M.D. (lots of training often sponsored by drug companies to treat almost everything with expensive prescription pills only; not as scientifically well-trained as neurologists/the field of neurology).

Neurologist = M.D. (lots of training often sponsored by drug companies to treat almost everything with expensive prescription pills only; scientifically better trained than psychiatrists/the field of psychiatry).

Psychologists, psychiatrists, and neurologists have little training in nutrition and often routinely badmouth anything which has ever been discovered in the field of good nutrition
about health in general.

Psychologists, psychiatrists, and neurologists belong to different business clubs (guilds) which do not interact that much with one another. They all live in their own little fields (aka business turf trade wars) vs actively collaborate for better outcomes for their customers.

Good luck.

2007-11-12 03:22:32 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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