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Letters to the EditorFull Access

What’s in a Name? A Lot!

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.pn.2020.l24

I am a psychiatrist living with bipolar disorder and am responding to the column in the November 15 issue by APA President Bruce Schwartz, M.D., focusing our attention on physician health.

I emphatically agree with the letter to the editor published in the January 17 issue, “What’s in a Name?” We should be called “psychiatrists,” based on the breadth and depth of our role, rather than “behavioral health specialists,” as if we were concerned only with the behavior of the people we serve.

Letters to the Editor

Readers are invited to submit letters of not more than 350 words for possible publication. Psychiatric News reserves the right to edit letters and publish them in any of its formats—print, electronic, or other media. Receipt of letters is not acknowledged. Letters should be emailed to [email protected]. Clinical opinions are not peer reviewed and thus should be independently verified.

The way the people with whom we work are referred to also has been undergoing an unfortunate change, from “patients” to “clients.” The word “patient” is derived from a word that means suffering, while the word “client” essentially means a customer. Medicine, including psychiatry, is a profession, not a business. The motto of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society is “Be Worthy to Serve the Suffering.” This strikes me as a worthwhile goal for all of us. Its essence is service to our suffering patients, an intrinsically deep responsibility, not merely superficial service to customers.

CAVIN P. LEEMAN, M.D.

New York, N.Y.