Getting Started

Therapy vs. Psychiatry: What's the Difference?

Therapy and psychiatry are two different kinds of mental health care: therapy is talk-based treatment that helps you understand and work through what you’re experiencing, while psychiatry is medical care that includes evaluation, diagnosis, and, when appropriate, medication. Many people benefit from one; many benefit from both, working together.

Understanding the difference makes it easier to know where to begin. Anxiety disorders affect an estimated 19% of U.S. adults in a given year and major depression about 8% (National Institute of Mental Health), and many people are helped by therapy, by psychiatric care, or by both together.

TherapistPsychiatric provider
Primary roleTalk therapy and emotional supportMedical evaluation, diagnosis, medication
Can prescribe medication?NoYes
Often helps withAnxiety, depression, relationships, trauma, life transitionsSymptom-heavy or persistent conditions; medication management
CredentialsLMFT, LCSW, psychologistPsychiatrist (MD) or psychiatric nurse practitioner

What a therapist does

A therapist provides talk therapy, a confidential relationship in which you explore what’s bringing you in, make sense of it, and build practical ways forward. Therapists draw on evidence-based approaches such as CBT, DBT, ACT, and trauma-informed methods, tailored to your goals.

Therapy is often the right starting point for anxiety, depression, relationship struggles, trauma, life transitions, and the broad work of feeling more like yourself.

What a psychiatric provider does

A psychiatric provider offers medical care for mental health: a thorough evaluation, a diagnosis where appropriate, and ongoing medication management. Medication isn’t right for everyone, and a good provider treats it as one considered part of a larger plan, never a substitute for understanding the whole person.

Psychiatric care can help when symptoms are significant or persistent, when therapy alone hasn’t been enough, or when a condition such as bipolar disorder or ADHD calls for medical evaluation.

When you might need each

There’s no single rule, but a few patterns hold:

Why coordination matters

The hardest part of mental health care is often that it’s fragmented: a therapist who never speaks to the prescriber, a treatment plan split across people who don’t communicate. Care works better when it’s held by one team.

At Bodhi Clinical, therapy and psychiatry are coordinated under one roof, so your providers stay in step and your care stays unified. If you’re not sure which you need, a free consultation is a good place to sort it out.

If you are in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

References

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