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British psychiatry is almost entirely publicly funded; in the United States, a tradition of well-remunerated private practice has prevailed. Despite similar therapeutics and nosology, psychiatry in Britain and the United States has developed in strikingly different ways. Psychoanalysis once dominated US psychiatry; in a big swing of the pendulum, it has been almost entirely replaced by psychopharmacology. In Britain, the research tradition in the past was weak; in the United States, it has been fuelled by large amounts of government funding. A British hesitancy about embracing large abstract theories has no US counterpart. In terms of training, a progressive agenda has been emphasised in Britain, more defensive postures in the United States.
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