Directions in psychiatric science address issues of the origin and development of mental illnesses, as well as their therapy. One of these areas is **dynamic psychiatry**.
**Dynamic psychiatry** develops within the framework of Anglo-American psychoanalysis and examines a number of psychological problems from the point of view of mental and social development of the individual. This direction is based on Freudian psychoanalysis, family and environmental theory.
According to **dynamic psychiatry**, mental illness arises as a result of childhood experiences and family relationships that shape pathological personality traits. The theoretical views of dynamics are based on the idea of early acquired pathological connections that influence the formation of mental disorders in the future. Freudianism provides mechanisms for analyzing and interpreting these features.
Dynamic psychiatry, also known as the method of dynamic psychiatry, is a branch of psychotherapy that studies mental disorders and their correction through the prism of psychology rather than medicine. This approach originated in the early 20th century and was developed by the American psychoanalyst Harold Shkulemman. Dynamic psychiatry considers mental disorders as a result of disturbances in the process of personality development,