By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Psychiatry Intake Forms: What Every Psychiatric Practice Needs to Capture at New Patient Intake

A psychiatry intake is not a therapy intake with a prescription pad. It is a medical evaluation that drives diagnostic formulation, risk stratification, and treatment planning — often for patients presenting in crisis, with complex medication histories, and with safety concerns that require immediate assessment. The information a psychiatric practice captures before or during the first appointment determines whether the clinician can prescribe safely, identify risk factors that demand urgent intervention, and build a treatment plan grounded in the patient's full clinical picture rather than a fifteen-minute conversation.

Most general-purpose medical intake forms miss the domains that matter most in psychiatry: prior suicide attempts, medication trials and failures, substance use with withdrawal history, family psychiatric genetics, and the layered consent requirements that govern behavioral health records. A purpose-built psychiatry intake form captures all of this in a structured format that the clinician can review before the patient sits down. Here is what that form should include.

Presenting complaint: the chief concern in the patient's own words

Every psychiatric evaluation begins with why the patient is seeking care right now. Not a diagnostic label — the patient's own language for what is wrong, what prompted them to schedule this appointment, and what they want help with. Your intake form should capture:

Psychiatric history: the foundation of the diagnostic formulation

Psychiatry is one of the few medical specialties where the patient's treatment history is as diagnostically important as the current presentation. A patient presenting with depressed mood who has had three prior manic episodes is not a major depressive disorder patient — regardless of what they were previously diagnosed with. Your intake needs to capture a thorough psychiatric history:

Current medications: what the patient is taking, what they have tried, and what went wrong

Medication management is the core clinical function of psychiatric practice, and the intake medication review is the most consequential section of the form. A prescriber who does not know what the patient has already tried, what failed, and why it failed will repeat mistakes that have already been made — costing the patient months of ineffective treatment and avoidable side effects.

Safety assessment: the section that cannot wait

Every psychiatric intake must include a structured safety assessment. This is not optional, and it is not something that can be deferred to the first appointment. If a patient discloses active suicidal ideation with a plan on the intake form, the practice needs to know before the scheduled appointment — and ideally before the patient leaves the waiting room.

This section overlaps with what mental health counseling practices capture at intake, but psychiatric safety assessments carry additional weight because the prescribing clinician must factor safety findings into medication decisions — a suicidal patient should not receive a 90-day supply of a lethal-in-overdose medication with no follow-up interval.

Medical history: the body affects the brain

Psychiatry sits at the intersection of medicine and mental health, and the medical history section reflects that dual role. Psychiatric symptoms can be caused by medical conditions, and psychiatric medications carry medical risks that must be monitored:

Family psychiatric history: genetics inform prescribing

Psychiatric illness runs in families, and family history is one of the strongest diagnostic tools available in psychiatry — particularly for bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and substance use disorders. Your intake should capture first-degree relatives (parents, siblings, children) with:

Social history: context for clinical decision-making

Psychiatric treatment does not happen in a vacuum. A brilliant medication regimen fails if the patient is homeless and cannot refrigerate their injectable medication, or if they have no transportation to follow-up appointments, or if their domestic partner is sabotaging their treatment. Social history provides the context that makes treatment plans realistic:

Substance use: screening, current use, and medication-assisted treatment history

Substance use is comorbid with psychiatric illness at rates far exceeding the general population. Approximately half of individuals with a serious mental illness also have a substance use disorder. Your intake must go beyond "do you drink alcohol — yes or no":

Functional assessment: where the patient is right now

Diagnosis tells you what is wrong. Functional assessment tells you how impaired the patient is — and that distinction drives treatment intensity. A patient with moderate depression who is still working full-time and maintaining relationships may be appropriate for outpatient medication management. A patient with moderate depression who has stopped going to work, is not eating, and has not showered in a week may need a higher level of care.

Insurance and prior authorization: the administrative reality

Psychiatry has more prior authorization burden than nearly any other medical specialty. Stimulants, antipsychotics, brand-name medications, and even some generic psychiatric medications require prior authorization from insurance. Your intake form should capture the information your billing staff needs to start this process immediately:

Consent, HIPAA, and the unique protections for behavioral health records

Psychiatric records carry additional legal protections that do not apply to general medical records. Your intake consent process must address these explicitly:

For a deeper look at the HIPAA compliance requirements that apply across all healthcare intake documentation, see our guide to HIPAA-compliant intake forms.

Building the clinical relationship from the first document

A comprehensive intake form serves a purpose beyond data collection. For many psychiatric patients, the intake form is the first interaction with a new provider — and for patients who have had negative experiences in the mental health system, that first impression matters. A form that asks thoughtful, clinically relevant questions signals that this practice understands psychiatric care. A form that asks the patient to list their medications and check a box for "depression" signals that this practice treats psychiatric patients the way an urgent care treats a sore throat.

The thoroughness of the intake also protects the clinician. Prescribing psychiatric medications without knowing the patient's suicide attempt history, current substance use, medication trial history, or pregnancy status is a liability exposure that no practice should accept. The intake form is the documentation that you asked the right questions before you wrote the first prescription.

If you are building documentation across a behavioral health practice that includes both prescribers and therapists, the Healthcare Bundle includes psychiatry alongside 20 other healthcare categories, each with specialty-specific intake fields.

Psychiatry intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Presenting complaint, psychiatric history, medication review, safety assessment, family history, substance use screening, functional assessment, insurance authorization, and behavioral health consent. Built for psychiatric practices.

View Psychiatry Forms