Abstract
Over the past three decades, the world of both amateur and professional sports has expanded greatly and become more complex. In part related to these changes— and relatively unknown to sports medicine practitioners — the field of sport psychiatry has steadily evolved and grown. This paper focuses on what these changes have been.
A sport psychiatrist is a physician-psychiatrist who diagnoses and treats problems, symptoms and/or disorders associated with an athlete, with their family/significant others, with their team, or with their sport, including spectators/fans. The primary aims of the specialty are to (i) optimize health, (ii) improve athletic performance, and (iii) manage psychiatric symptoms or disorders. The training includes medical training to provide knowledge and skills unique to physicians; psychiatric training to provide knowledge and skills inherent in that field, and training and/or experience in sport psychiatry to provide knowledge and skills about psychiatric aspects of sports.
The sport psychiatrist first makes an individual, family-systems and phenomenological diagnosis of the clinical situation. Based on this evaluation, he sets goals for not only the athlete, but also for significant others involved. He delivers treatment based on the psychiatric disorder or problem using a combination of medication, psychotherapy or self-help group interventions plus strategies targeted to specific sport performance issues. Evolution of the International Society of Sport Psychiatry as well as the field, including incorporation into school and professional team sports, is described along with a ‘typical day’ for a sport psychiatrist. Case examples, a training curriculum and core literature are included.
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Acknowledgements
We are indebted to Dan Begel, MD for helpful comments on an earlier draft. No funding was received for this article, and the authors have no conflicts of interest that are directly related to the content of this article.
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Glick, I.D., Kamm, R. & Morse, E. The Evolution of Sport Psychiatry, Circa 2009. Sports Med 39, 607–613 (2009). https://doi.org/10.2165/00007256-200939080-00001
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.2165/00007256-200939080-00001