- Wed Jan 02, 2019 5:31 pm
#61551
Hikaru,
I think maybe a restatement of some of the information in the stimulus may help. Essentially, the stimulus says that clinical psychologists who are not doctors should not be allowed to prescribe meds. The reason is that they don't receive a lot of training in neuroscience, physiology, and pharmacology. They might receive some, but it's at most "a few hundred hours." Doctors receive years of training in these areas. So the argument in the stimulus implicitly considers the amount of time you spend studying those three fields to be important, perhaps even vital, for your qualifications to prescribe meds. A low (at most a few hundred hours) amount of time studying those fields is insufficient to train someone to prescribe meds. Doctors, because they get a high (years) amount of training in those fields, have no such problems.
Answer choice (C) makes explicit this claim. If someone have anything less than years of training in these fields, they shouldn't be allowed to prescribe meds. The "clinical psychology" training in the stimulus isn't in the answer choice because that training was considered by the stimulus to be insufficient to prove that someone is qualified to prescribe meds. So the stimulus thought that, whether or not you have training in clinical psychology, if you don't also have years of training in the three fields mentioned above, you shouldn't be prescribing meds. Answer choice (C) is not about the lack of clinical psychology training, but instead about the lack of sufficient training in neuroscience, physiology, and pharmacology.
Robert Carroll