creators_name: Lakhan, Shaheen E creators_id: slakhan@gnif.org editors_name: Kakkilaya, Srinivas editors_id: Kakkilaya BS type: journale datestamp: 2007-09-18 02:42:23 lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:56:57 metadata_visibility: show title: Prescribing Privileges for Psychologists: A Public Service or Hazard? ispublished: pub subjects: OJHAS full_text_status: public keywords: Prescriptions, Psychologist, Psychiatrist, Pharmacology, Privileges, Collaboration abstract: The privilege to prescribe pharmacotherapeutics has been granted in limited areas to psychologists. The psychologist's role in society may be approaching a great evolution that can dramatically impact the state of mental healthcare and the discipline of psychiatry. Opponents argue drug company funding and cheaper non-PhD psychological professionals fuel the movement for prescription rights for PhD level psychologists. However, proponents claim that this right would equip psychologists with greater psychotherapeutic modalities and the capability of having richer doctor-patient relationships to diagnose and treat underserved populations. Nonetheless, the paucity of prescribing psychologist studies cannot allow the biopsychosocial community to make firm opinions, let alone a decision on this debate. This article reviews the history of clinical psychology and highlights the potential divergence into collaborative clinical and health psychologists and autonomous prescribing psychologists. date: 2007-07-17 date_type: published publication: Online Journal Of Health Allied Sciences volume: 6 number: 1 publisher: Dr. B.S. Kakkilaya refereed: TRUE referencetext: 1. Taylor E. Psychotherapeutics and the problematic origins of clinical psychology in America. American Psychologist 2000;55(9):1029-1033. 2. Cranston A. Psychology in the Veterans Administration: a storied history, a vital future. 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