The Forensic Psychiatrist of the Future

  • Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online
  • September 1987,
  • 15
  • (3)
  • 217-227;

Abstract

The rate of change in scientific knowledge and the growing psychiatric sophistication of attorneys and courts have made it increasingly difficult for forensic psychiatrists to retain proficiency in the full spectrum of potential professional activities. As the consumers of forensic services become more sophisticated, forensic psychiatrists have an increasing need to become scientifically informed and a decreasing need to become legally informed. Traditional training in forensic psychiatry, which emphasizes clinical, legal, and institutional knowledge and experience, gives short shrift to behavioral science and other technical knowledge that can enhance the validity of forensic assessments and their value to the legal system and society. Forensic psychiatrists can best respond to these changes and maximize the value of their assessments by narrowing their focus to some subset of the four branches of the discipline: criminal behavior, mental disability, forensic child psychiatry, and legal aspects of psychiatric practice. Maximal proficiency in each of these four branches requires a greater depth of knowledge and experience than was once sufficient among those who practiced in all four areas. Fellowship training programs and professional organizations should lead forensic psychiatry into the twenty-first century by organizing their efforts along these four parallel tracks.

Footnotes

  • Dr. Dietz is Professor of Law, Professor of Behavioral Medicine and Psychiatry, and Medical Director of the Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy at the University of Virginia Schools of Law and Medicine, Charlottesville, VA 22901.

    The author expresses his appreciation to Prof. Richard Bonnie, Dr. Daryl Matthews, Prof. John Monahan, and Dr. Michael Solomon for helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article.

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