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- <text id=90TT3390>
- <title>
- Dec. 17, 1990: Unlocking The Pill Bottles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 17, 1990 The Sleep Gap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 95
- Unlocking the Pill Bottles
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Psychologists vie for the right to prescribe drugs
- </p>
- <p>By Andrew Purvis
- </p>
- <p> Psychiatrists were once the power brokers of mental health
- care. With full medical-school training and M.D.s after their
- names, they controlled the prestigious institutes of Freudian
- psychoanalysis. They determined whether patients would be
- committed to mental hospitals. And they had the exclusive right
- to prescribe mind-altering medications. But in the past several
- years psychologists, who have Ph.D.s but no medical school on
- their resumes, have been chipping away at the psychiatrists'
- domain.
- </p>
- <p> Now psychologists are poised to grab a share of perhaps the
- biggest professional prize: prescribing drugs. This fall a pair
- of psychologists at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
- Washington began selecting and dispensing medications to a
- handful of patients in an experiment to see if novice prescribers
- can do the job safely and effectively. The test marks the first
- time in the field of mental health that non-M.D.s have been
- permitted to prescribe medication. Last week the American
- Psychological Association showed its confidence that the
- experiment will be a success by appointing a study group to
- explore university curriculum changes that would teach psychology
- students the art of prescribing.
- </p>
- <p> The push to give prescription privileges to psychologists
- has intensified tensions between the two groups of mental health
- professionals. Psychologists insist that the initiative is the
- only way to get valuable medications to all those who could
- benefit from them. Psychiatrists and many other doctors contend
- that granting such powers to people without adequate training is
- irresponsible and possibly dangerous. Says Dr. Carolyn
- Robinowitz, deputy medical director of the American Psychiatric
- Association: "We're talking about patients and their lives. I
- just hope people don't suffer serious complications for the sake
- of proving a point."
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the dispute is the groundbreaking experiment
- at Walter Reed. Two clinical psychologists who recently earned
- their Ph.D.s are beginning an on-the-job training course that
- could last up to two years. They will prescribe pills for a broad
- range of conditions, from hyperactivity to manic depression. At
- the end of the trial period, independent experts will evaluate
- the students' performance and make recommendations to Congress on
- whether the program should be expanded for general use. The
- initiative was proposed by Senator Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, whose
- administrative assistant, Patrick DeLeon, is an American
- Psychological Association board member. Ostensibly, the study
- aims to explore ways to deal with physician shortages in the
- armed services. But several state legislatures are watching the
- experiment to determine whether psychologists in their regions
- should have the right to prescribe.
- </p>
- <p> Such an expansion of privileges would not be without
- precedent. Dentists and podiatrists have always prescribed some
- medications. And other non-M.D.s, including pharmacists,
- physician's assistants and nurse practitioners (registered nurses
- with some advanced training) have been granted at least limited
- privileges--either for a restricted number of drugs or under
- close supervision by physicians--in many states. Nurse
- practitioners can now prescribe in 34 states, up from 28 last
- year.
- </p>
- <p> But psychologists are in a different league, many doctors
- maintain. In particular, says the A.P.A.'s Robinowitz, psycho-
- active medications are often more powerful than the drugs
- prescribed by other non-M.D.s. The tranquilizer Haldol, for
- example, acts not only on the brain but also on the
- cardiovascular system and the liver. Occasionally the medication
- can cause jaundice, severe skin problems and abrupt drops in
- blood pressure. Prescribers need to be able to spot problems
- wherever they may occur, not just those that show up in
- psychological disorders, says Robinowitz. There is also the
- danger of drug interactions. It is important to know not only
- which combinations of medications should be avoided but also how
- a particular drug might affect some pre-existing medical
- condition. Predicting and detecting such problems, argues Dr.
- John Tupper, president of the American Medical Association, "is
- not something one learns in a quickie course." Tupper and others
- believe that only full medical-school training could prepare
- psychologists to prescribe drugs safely. "There is no shortcut,"
- he says.
- </p>
- <p> The American Psychological Association contends that the
- medical establishment is overestimating the difficulty of
- selecting drugs. Bryant Welch, executive director of professional
- practice at the A.P.A., claims that doctors rely on such readily
- available manuals as the Physicians' Desk Reference and
- background materials provided by the drug companies when deciding
- what to prescribe. "Psychiatrists would have you believe that
- they go in and learn chemistry and biology and anatomy and from
- that they independently figure out what all the adverse reactions
- are going to be," says Welch. "I don't believe you'd find 5% of
- the medical community who use that scientific training." Welch
- argues that permitting psychologists to prescribe drugs would
- help make up for the serious shortages of qualified psychiatrists
- in the rural U.S. and many state hospitals.
- </p>
- <p> Psychologists maintain that they are eager to prescribe
- because medication is an increasingly powerful tool for relieving
- mental illness. But some critics see an ulterior motive. They
- contend that what the two professions are really concerned about
- is profits. In fact, psychiatrists have reason to worry. From
- 1982 to 1987, according to one poll, the proportion of counseling
- visits handled by psychiatrists fell from 36% to 22%, while those
- by psychologists rose from 29% to 34%. This summer Washington
- loosened psychiatrists' grip on treatment of the elderly by
- permitting psychologists to receive reimbursements from Medicare.
- In addition, the California supreme court undercut psychiatrists'
- authority by allowing psychologists to admit patients to the
- state's hospitals.
- </p>
- <p> Both psychiatrists and psychologists insist that their main
- concern lies not with their pocketbooks but with their patients'
- welfare. If that is true, then experiments like the one at Walter
- Reed will settle the debate over who should prescribe psycho-
- active drugs. But if power and profits are the real issues, the
- battle between the two sides could go on for a long time.</p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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