The Psychoergonomic Method is an original clinical methodology in psychiatry aimed at individualizing diagnostic, therapeutic, and long-term monitoring processes based on the patient’s unique psychological, neurobiological, and life configuration.Developed between 2006 and 2016 and continuously applied in clinical practice since 2016, the method represents a structured response to the limitations of protocol-based and purely statistical models of psychiatric treatment. It integrates international diagnostic standards (ICD, DSM) with a multidimensional clinical analysis, collegial decision-making, and dynamic patient-centered monitoring. The method prioritizes diagnostic depth, minimally sufficient pharmacological intervention, functional outcomes, and ethical responsibility. Over ten years of systematic application (2016–2026), the Psychoergonomic Method has demonstrated clinical stability, reproducibility, and adaptability in complex psychiatric cases across outpatient and online formats. This publication presents the validated methodological framework and serves as a fixed reference document for clinical, educational, and research purposes.
Valery Kravitz (Tue,) studied this question.
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