What Happens in a Psychiatric Evaluation? What to Expect

Written by
Shebna N. Osanmoh
Reviewed by
Dr. Ellen A. Machikawa- A psychiatric evaluation is not a test you can fail. It is a structured conversation designed to understand your experiences and build a treatment path together.
- The appointment typically lasts 60 to 90 minutes and can take place in person or through secure telehealth.
- Expect direct questions about your current symptoms, personal and family history, physical health, sleep, appetite, energy, and daily functioning.
- By the end of the visit, you will receive a preliminary clinical impression and a treatment plan that may include therapy, medication, lifestyle changes, or lab work.
- You will never be forced into any treatment. Every decision is collaborative.

Taking the first step toward mental wellness is a real milestone. But it is completely normal to feel nervous when you do not know what is coming.
In my 15 years as a psychiatric nurse practitioner, I have met hundreds of people who felt overwhelmed before that first appointment. Many told me afterward that the anticipation was worse than the appointment itself.
A psychiatric evaluation is not something you can pass or fail. I think of it as a mapping exercise. We are sitting down together to figure out where you are, what is getting in the way, and what kind of help makes sense for your situation.
Dr. Lauren Grawert, MD, FASAM, describes it similarly: the goal is to get you clear on what kind of support you actually need so you can move forward.
I want to walk you through what happens during that first appointment. Knowing the rhythm of the visit, the types of questions we ask, and how we figure out next steps can help you walk in feeling more prepared and less anxious about the whole process.
What Is a Psychiatric Evaluation?
A psychiatric evaluation is a thorough diagnostic assessment done by a licensed mental health provider. That could be a psychiatrist (an MD) or a psychiatric nurse practitioner like me.
I gather details about your medical history, current symptoms, physical health, and how you are doing day to day. The goal is to figure out what is going on and build a treatment plan that works for your life.
How Long Does a Psychiatric Evaluation Take?
Your initial visit will take place in a comfortable, private setting or securely online through telehealth. Because we want a complete picture of your health, this first meeting is thorough.
An initial evaluation usually runs 60 to 90 minutes. As Dr. Michael Genovese, MD, Chief Medical Advisor at AscendantNY, explains, it takes that long because providers need to review your history, look at past treatments, and think about family patterns before making a diagnosis.
For complex cases where someone has more than one condition at play, like a mood disorder plus substance use, the visit may take the full 90 minutes. Sometimes a short follow-up is needed to finish the treatment plan.
What to Expect During Your Visit
Every clinician has a slightly different style, but most evaluations follow the same general structure. Here is how I typically run mine.
Phase 1: Paperwork and Screening Forms
Before we sit down to talk, you will complete a few baseline mental health screening forms. These are short questionnaires about your mood, energy, focus, and sleep. They give me a starting snapshot before the conversation begins.
Phase 2: Medical and Family History
We review past mental health treatments (therapy, medications, hospitalizations), your family history of mental health conditions, current physical health, and any medications or supplements you take. Family history matters because conditions like depression and bipolar disorder often run in families.
Phase 3: The Clinical Interview
This is the core of the visit. I will ask you to describe your current challenges in your own words. We will talk about when your symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, and how they affect your work, relationships, sleep, and everyday routines.
I am not looking for perfect answers. I am looking for an honest picture of what your life actually looks like right now.
Phase 4: Mental Status Examination
While we talk, I am also doing what clinicians call a Mental Status Examination (MSE). This is not a separate test. It happens in the background during our conversation.
I notice things like your speech pattern, your mood, how your thoughts flow, and your overall awareness. This gives me clinical data beyond just what you tell me. It helps me see your current state of mind from a medical angle.
Phase 5: Treatment Planning
By the end of the visit, I share my preliminary clinical impression. This is my initial read on what is going on based on everything we discussed.
Then we build a treatment plan together. For some patients, that means starting talk therapy. For others, it means trying medication. For many, it is a mix of both, plus lifestyle changes and, in some cases, somatic yoga therapy.
Dr. Grawert stresses that every visit should end with a clear summary: what I think is going on, what I suggest, and why. You should leave feeling heard and knowing there is a plan.
What Questions Will the Psychiatrist Ask?
The clinical interview follows a structured approach, but it is still a conversation. In my practice, I use what clinicians call the SET framework to keep the interaction grounded:
- Support: I establish a safe, nonjudgmental space from the start.
- Empathy: I acknowledge that what you are going through is real and difficult.
- Truth: I bring in the facts and the next steps so we can build a real path forward.
With that framework in mind, here are the kinds of questions I typically ask:
- Current symptoms: What brought you in today? How long have you been feeling this way? Is it getting worse, staying the same, or improving?
- Physical health markers: How are your sleep, appetite, and energy levels? Are you getting any exercise? What medications or supplements do you take?
- Personal history: Have you had therapy or psychiatric treatment before? What worked and what did not?
- Family history: Does anyone in your family have a history of depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, or substance use?
- Safety screening: I will ask directly about self-harm or suicidal thoughts. This is standard and happens in every evaluation. It is not because I think something is wrong. It is because I need to know you are safe.
Dr. Genovese notes that providers pay close attention to daily markers like sleep, appetite, and energy because these are often the first signs that something clinical is going on.
My goal is to map your timeline. When did symptoms start? What triggers them? How do they affect your work and your relationships? This helps me tell the difference between short-term stress and something more lasting.
What Diagnostic Tools Are Used?
Beyond the conversation, I rely on a few clinical tools to make sure nothing is missed:
Standardized questionnaires: Short, proven checklists that measure mood, anxiety, or attention. These are not IQ tests. They give me a number to track your progress over time.
History of Present Illness (HPI) and MSE: The HPI is a detailed record of what brought you in. The MSE, as I described above, is my real-time read on your speech, mood, memory, and thought patterns during our talk.
Health screenings: Sometimes I will order basic blood work. Symptoms that look like depression or anxiety can be caused by a thyroid problem or a vitamin B12 shortage. Ruling those out is part of being thorough.
Psychiatric Evaluation vs. Therapy: How Are They Different?
Patients often ask how this first visit differs from regular therapy. The short answer: an evaluation is medical. It is about diagnosis and a treatment plan, not working through feelings.
| Feature | Psychiatric Evaluation | Therapy Session |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Goal | Formulate a medical diagnosis and treatment plan | Process emotions and develop coping skills |
| Duration | 60 to 90 minutes (initial intake) | 45 to 60 minutes (ongoing sessions) |
| Focus | Medical history, symptoms, biological factors, medication options | Daily challenges, behavioral patterns, emotional support |
| Provider | Psychiatrist or Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) | Psychologist, LCSW, LPC, or Therapist |
| Prescribing Authority | Yes, can prescribe and manage medication | No (in most states) |
What Happens After the Evaluation?
By the end of the appointment, you will have my initial clinical impression and a preliminary treatment framework.
Dr. Grawert puts it well that every appointment should end with you understanding what is going on clinically, what interventions are being recommended, and why. You should leave feeling heard and knowing that a medical plan is in place.
The specific next steps depend on your diagnosis and situation, but they typically fall into a few categories:
Talk therapy: If therapy is appropriate, we will discuss which approach fits best for your needs, whether that is CBT, supportive therapy, or another modality. At Savant Care, we coordinate between your prescriber and therapist so your treatment team stays aligned.
Medication management: If medication is part of the plan, I walk you through the options: what it does, how long it takes, possible side effects, and what to watch for. You are never pushed into medication. The choice is always a shared one.
Lifestyle adjustments: Sleep hygiene, exercise, nutrition, and stress management are part of the conversation. These are not afterthoughts. They directly affect how well other treatments work.
Somatic yoga therapy: At Savant Care, every patient also has access to clinical somatic yoga therapy at no extra cost. This is not a feel-good perk. There is real science behind it.
A Boston University trial found that 12 weeks of yoga raised brain GABA levels and reduced both mood and anxiety symptoms more than a matched walking program (Streeter et al., 2010). GABA is the same brain chemical that anti-anxiety drugs like benzodiazepines target.
A follow-up study in patients with major depression showed similar GABA gains after yoga and slow breathing (Streeter et al., 2020). Pairing psychiatric treatment with yoga therapy supports your nervous system from two angles at once.
Lab work: If I suspect a physical cause could be contributing to your symptoms, I will order blood work to rule out conditions like thyroid dysfunction or nutritional deficiencies.
4 Ways to Prepare for Your First Psychiatric Evaluation
A little preparation goes a long way. Here is what I tell my patients before their first visit:
- Write down your symptoms and questions. It is easy to forget things in the moment, especially when you are anxious. A simple list on your phone works fine.
- Bring your medication list. Include everything: prescription medications, over-the-counter supplements, dosages. If you take something daily, I need to know about it.
- Note your timeline. When did your symptoms start? Have they gotten worse recently? What makes them better? Have you tried any treatments before, and did they help?
- Be honest. I am not here to judge you. I have heard every kind of struggle there is, and none of it shocks me. The more honest you are, the more accurate the diagnosis and the more effective the treatment plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I be forced to take medication?
No. A psychiatric evaluation is about gathering information, not pushing pills. If I think medication could help, I explain what it does, why I think it fits, and what the side effects might be. Then you decide.
Can I bring a family member or friend?
Absolutely. If having someone with you in the room, or on the video call, makes you more comfortable, they are welcome. Family members and partners can also provide useful context about symptoms or behavior changes that you might not notice in yourself.
What if I start crying or get too overwhelmed to talk?
Tears happen in my office all the time. They are normal and welcome. If you get overwhelmed, we pause. I give you time to breathe. We go at whatever pace works for you.
How Savant Care Can Help
In my experience, the best care treats the whole person, not just a symptom. That is the approach we take at Savant Care.
Our team across California and Texas offers both in-person and secure telehealth visits, often with same-week openings. We pair medication management and talk therapy with somatic yoga therapy that calms your nervous system from the inside out.
The result is a care plan built around your life. Your prescriber, your therapist, and your yoga therapist all work toward the same goal.
Book a same-week appointment | Call or text (866) 499-2588 | View insurance coverage
The Hardest Part Is Scheduling It
I tell every new patient the same thing: the hardest part of the entire process is picking up the phone and making the appointment. Once you are in the room, it is just a conversation.
You do not need to have your thoughts perfectly organized. You do not need to know what is wrong. That is my job. Your only job is to show up and be honest about what you have been going through.
A good psychiatric evaluation gives you something you might not have had before: a clear starting point. Not a label, but a map. And from there, we figure out the rest together.
Sources
- American Psychiatric Association. What Is Psychiatry? Psychiatry.org
- MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine). Mental Health Screening. MedlinePlus
- National Library of Medicine (StatPearls). Mental Status Examination. NCBI
- National Institute of Mental Health. Suicide Risk Screening (ASQ Toolkit). NIMH
- National Institute of Mental Health. Mental Health Medications. NIMH
- Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Shared Decision Making. AHRQ
- National Library of Medicine. Hypothyroidism and Psychiatric Symptoms. NCBI
- Harvard Health Publishing. Vitamin B12 Deficiency and Mood. Harvard Health
- U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. Telehealth for Mental Health. Telehealth.HHS.gov
- Streeter, C. C., et al. (2010). Effects of Yoga Versus Walking on Mood, Anxiety, and Brain GABA Levels: A Randomized Controlled MRS Study. Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 16(11), 1145-1152. PubMed
- Streeter, C. C., et al. (2020). Thalamic Gamma Aminobutyric Acid Level Changes in Major Depressive Disorder After a 12-Week Iyengar Yoga and Coherent Breathing Intervention. Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 26(3), 190-197. PubMed
- Cleveland Clinic. Psychiatric Evaluation Overview. Cleveland Clinic
- University of Michigan Medicine. What to Expect at a Psychiatric Evaluation. Michigan Medicine
- CDC. Suicide Prevention. CDC
- National Institute of Mental Health. Depression Basics. NIMH
- National Institute on Drug Abuse. Comorbidity: Substance Use and Other Mental Disorders. NIDA
About the Author
Shebna N. Osanmoh I, PMHNP-BC, is a board-certified psychiatric nurse practitioner with over 15 years of experience. He treats anxiety, depression, ADHD, and related conditions at Savant Care in California and Texas. NPI: 1376183442
