Vineeth John, MD, MBA Professor and Vice Chair of Education Residency Training Director
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Louis A. Faillace, MD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences McGovern Medical School University of Texas Health Science Center Houston, Texas
Disclosures The authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.
Another concern is patient autonomy.32 For example, it would be ethically problematic if a patient were to assume that there was a human physician “at the other end” of a virtual therapist or other technology who is communicating or reviewing his/her messages. Similarly, an older adult or a patient with intellectual disabilities may not be able to understand advanced technology or what it does when it is installed in their home to monitor the patient’s activities. This would increase the risk of privacy violations, manipulation, or even coercion if the requirements for informed consent are not satisfied.
A flowchart for the future
Although current research and innovations typically target specific areas of psychiatry, these advances can be integrated by devising algorithms and protocols that will change the current practice of psychiatry. The Figure provides a glimpse of how the psychiatry clinic of the future might work. A maxim of management is that “the best way to predict the future is to create it.” However, the mere conception of a vision is not enough—working towards it is essential.
Bottom Line
With advances in technology, psychiatric practice will soon be radically different from what it is today. The expanded use of telepsychiatry, social media, artificial intelligence, and web-based applications/devices holds great promise for psychiatric assessment, diagnosis, and treatment, although certain ethical and privacy concerns need to be adequately addressed.