TBK11
Member
title says it all what degree do you have to do to become a psychiatrist i think u need a MBBS first then specialize in psychiatry i think can some1 give an insight as to what the process is and what uni offers it ty
First you need to get a medical degree from any accredited medical school. Then you work for 1 - 2 (or more) years as a junior hospital doctor (rotating through various areas of medicine).title says it all what degree do you have to do to become a psychiatrist i think u need a MBBS first then specialize in psychiatry i think can some1 give an insight as to what the process is and what uni offers it ty
With the risk of sounding like a pedant:Note, during these 5 years you are working as a psychiatrist (but under supervision).
I think that's a semantic distinction which is only really meaningful for those that better understand the system (i.e. I was using 'working as a psychiatrist' in the lay sense, not the more technical, heirarchichal sense which requires a bit more background understanding). The reason I said that is that some people view specialist training as 'yet another long wait' before they get to do what interests them. Certainly, one is not practicing consultant psychiatry at that point, but as a registrar they are practicing within the context of psychiatry nonetheless (interviewing psych patients, monitoring charts with psychotropics, even engaging in supervised psychotherapy) - which in lay terms amounts to practicing as a psychiatrist. I agree that the professional distinction is important though, especially in terms of one's legal responsibilities, ability to practice independently, etc.With the risk of sounding like a pedant:
During your training, you are not "working as a psychiatrist" (even under supervision) - you're working as a psychiatry registrar. Until you hold your fellowship, you are not professionally regarded (or paid) as a fully fledged specialist. Of this you're probably aware, KFunk - just wanted to draw some distinctions for those readers who mightn't have realised there is a difference.
Eh, it headed off the inevitable, "omg so can I be a psychiatrist the year after I do internship?? Sweeeeet!" question.Thus I would label your comment as pedantry, but also 'fair enough'