Recently, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. expressed concern about psychiatric overprescribing, especially among children and adolescents. Critics quickly accused him of oversimplification and of stigmatizing mental illness or undermining psychiatric treatment.
But whatever one thinks of Kennedy’s broader views, his comments raise a legitimate question: why has modern psychiatry become so heavily centered on pharmacotherapy?
Part of the answer may lie in the profession’s evolution—from one historically associated with psychotherapy to one now focused largely on medication management.
From the Couch to Medication Management
For much of the twentieth century, psychiatrists were associated with psychotherapy. The popular image of psychiatry was the physician sitting patiently beside the couch while patients explored trauma, relationships, fears, anxieties, and emotions.
Today, that model has largely disappeared.
Most psychiatrists no longer provide talk therapy. Instead, they primarily conduct brief medication-management visits focused on prescribing and adjusting psychiatric drugs. Meanwhile, psychotherapy has increasingly migrated to clinical psychologists, licensed counselors, marriage and family therapists, and clinical social workers.
This transformation did not happen simply because psychiatrists suddenly concluded that medications were always superior to therapy. Economics played a major role.
A study published in JAMA Psychiatry found that the proportion of psychiatrists providing psychotherapy declined dramatically over recent decades while pharmacotherapy became the dominant mode of psychiatric practice. Today, fewer than 11 percent of psychiatrists regularly engage in psychotherapy.
It is generally far more lucrative for psychiatrists to bill third-party payers for brief medication-management visits than for hour-long psychotherapy sessions. A psychiatrist can often see three or four patients for medication checks in the time required for one therapy appointment. Insurance reimbursement has increasingly rewarded throughput, coding, and standardized treatment models. Psychotherapy, by contrast, is time-intensive, difficult to standardize, and often reimbursed relatively poorly.
At the same time, psychologists, licensed counselors, and clinical social workers increasingly filled the psychotherapy role, often at lower reimbursement rates than psychiatrists commanded. From an economic standpoint, the labor market naturally evolved toward specialization: nonphysician therapists provided most talk therapy, while psychiatrists became medication managers.
Managed Care and the Economics of Prescribing
Managed care accelerated the shift. As insurers sought to contain costs in the 1980s and 1990s, long-term psychotherapy became harder to sustain financially within insurance networks. Brief medication visits proved far easier to scale, reimburse, and integrate into managed-care systems than hour-long psychotherapy sessions.
Mental health parity laws probably did not cause the transformation of psychiatry into a pharmacotherapy-heavy specialty, but they may have amplified preexisting reimbursement incentives that accelerated it. By expanding insurance coverage for behavioral health services within a system already oriented toward brief, standardized, billable encounters, parity laws likely increased demand for psychiatric services most compatible with managed-care reimbursement structures. Psychiatrists operating within those incentives had strong economic reasons to focus on short medication-management visits, while psychologists, counselors, and clinical social workers increasingly absorbed psychotherapy. In effect, parity expanded the behavioral health marketplace, but the reimbursement system helped determine which forms of care expanded most efficiently.
The pharmaceutical revolution reinforced this trend. As antidepressants, stimulants, anxiolytics, mood stabilizers, and antipsychotics proliferated, psychiatry increasingly shifted toward pharmacologic management of symptoms. Medications offered what insurers, health systems, and administrators value highly: the ability to treat large numbers of patients quickly and efficiently.
How Incentives Reshaped Psychiatry
Psychiatric medications can be immensely beneficial, and for some conditions, they are life-changing. Psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy remain important tools, and reasonable clinicians can disagree about when each approach is most appropriate.
Professions evolve within the systems that finance them. Over time, modern health care increasingly rewarded brief medication-management visits more than time-intensive psychotherapy. A profession reimbursed primarily for prescribing medications will tend to organize itself around prescribing.
Psychotherapy often explores grief, loneliness, trauma, habits, relationships, social circumstances, and existential distress—parts of the human experience that do not easily fit into brief, highly structured medical encounters. Fifteen-minute medication visits inevitably leave less room for those conversations.
Insurance reimbursement increasingly favored brief medication-management visits over time-intensive psychotherapy. Mental health parity laws expanded access to behavioral health services within those same reimbursement structures. Meanwhile, psychologists, counselors, and clinical social workers increasingly assumed the role of psychotherapists, while psychiatrists specialized in prescribing medications.
None of this means psychotherapy has disappeared or that psychiatric medications lack value. Both remain important tools. But over time, the economic architecture of modern health care reshaped the mental health professions.
When a system pays physicians more for prescribing than for talking, psychiatry will naturally become more focused on pharmacotherapy. The evolution of psychiatry reflects a broader truth about medicine: financial incentives shape how providers deliver care and gradually reshape the practice of medicine.
Patients seeking psychotherapy increasingly navigate a system financially skewed toward medication management. Greater reliance on independent counseling practices, direct-pay therapy, peer-support networks, and other alternatives less dependent on insurance could help restore balance and flexibility in mental health care.






