An increasing number of psychiatrists consult to nonmedical psychotherapists and treat their patients with medication. This dual treatment arrangement is known as "split treatment." Split treatment arrangements generate a triangular relationship among the three parties—patient, psychotherapist, and psychiatrist. Both the transferential aspects of the triangular relationship among the two therapists and a patient and the overt interpersonal conflicts that may arise—such as ideological and interdisciplinary conflicts—are discussed. Enhanced awareness of both sets of factors may facilitate the cooperation between psychiatrists and psychotherapists.
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