Dr. A. Lawrence Rubin is a board-certified psychiatrist specializing in psychopharmacology for almost thirty years. He has been on the faculty of Columbia University School of Medicine where he trained residents in diagnosis and treatment for more than twenty years. He attended University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and earned the Appel Award in Psychiatry.
He completed his residency at Yale University where he was Chief Resident of the Research Unit. He helped to found Holliswood Hospital in Queens and served as Medical Director before starting his outpatient practice. Treatment services for depression, anxiety, panic, ADD, bipolar disorder are performed in our 3 locations in New York City, Brooklyn, and Garden City.
He completed his residency at Yale University where he was Chief Resident of the Research Unit. He helped to found Holliswood Hospital in Queens and served as Medical Director before starting his outpatient practice. Treatment services for depression, anxiety, panic, ADD, bipolar disorder are performed in our 3 locations in New York City, Brooklyn, and Garden City.
Services
Treatment begins with an evaluation that lasts one hour. Treatment is based upon the evaluation, because the response to each available treatment can be predicted based upon the patient's symptom profile and response to prior treatments. The evaluation consists of hundreds of questions which reveal the individual symptoms and pattern of symptoms which are the hallmarks of illness and predict treatment response.
Dr. Rubin specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of treatment-resistant depression and bipolar disorder. He utilizes the techniques learned as the Chief Resident of the Yale Research Center, and refined through twenty years experience supervising Columbia University psychiatry residents in diagnosis and treatment, and thirty years of clinical experience.
If you have the symptoms of persistent sadness and inability to enjoy yourself, loss of ability to socialize and loss of interest in your usual activities, an antidepressant is likely to help. People begin to see improvement by three weeks provided that they are on the right medication at the right dose.
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