Psychiatric Intake Template
- kbuch88
- 3 days ago
- 4 min read
What Is an Psychiatric Intake Template?
Psychiatric care involves getting a sense of a large picture in order to diagnose, assess safety, launch treatment, and set the tone for long-term care. An intake template structures this into something legible. It captures the entire clinical picture: from symptoms and meds to trauma, substance use, family context, and DSM-5 criteria
When Should You Use a Psychiatric Intake Template?
Use this template for:
Initial psychiatric evaluations
Transfers into new levels of care (e.g., outpatient, IOP, residential)
Re-establishing care after a long lapse
Diagnostic clarification visits
Building documentation for treatment planning or insurance
This applies across psychiatry, telepsych, collaborative care models, and complex primary care.
How Should You Use the Intake Template?
The intake template is high-density and multi-domain. It organizes:
Presenting concerns (Summary, Chief Complaint)
The story (HPI)
Systems context (Social, Family, Psychiatric histories)
Substance use and sleep
Mental status + safety
Diagnosis, plan, and tasks
Used properly, it reflects the totality of institutional care, including safety protocols, medication access, team communication, and custodial/legal involvement.
Key Sections of the Intake Template
Summary & Chief Complaint
Summary: One-line synopsis of today’s evaluation
Chief Complaint: The patient’s framing of why they’re seeking help
Clinician Tip
Let the patient lead here, even if you suspect there's more to the story. Contrasting the CC with the observed symptoms often reveals diagnostic nuance.
History of Present Illness (HPI)
This is the core narrative:
Symptom onset and progression
Functional impairment
Coping strategies, prior treatments
Current stressors
Insight, motivation, and goals
Clinician Tip
Think chronologically. When did this begin? What changed? Why now?
Medications & Access
Meds currently prescribed (psychiatric and non-psychiatric)
Side effects, adherence, efficacy
Access issues (insurance, pharmacy, cost barriers)
Clinician Tip
Note any med changes since the last provider or facility—especially if the patient doesn't know why something was discontinued.
Psychiatric, Social & Family History
Psychiatric History
Past diagnoses, hospitalizations, suicide attempts
Treatment adherence and outcomes
Social History
Housing, employment/school, relationships, stressors
Cultural or spiritual factors that may shape care
Family History
Psychiatric conditions in immediate or extended family
Suicide, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, substance use
Substance Use & Sleep
Substance Use
Substances used, route, frequency, duration
Last use
Treatment history (e.g. rehab, MAT)
Sleep
Onset latency, maintenance, duration
Hypersomnia or insomnia
Sedation from meds
Tests and Scores
Include any structured scales:
PHQ-9, GAD-7
ASRS, PCL-5, YMRS, etc.
Mental Status Exam (MSE)
Document objective findings:
Appearance and behavior
Mood and affect
Thought process/content
Perceptions
Cognition
Judgment and insight
Safety Assessment
Essential in all intakes. Include:
Current suicidal/homicidal ideation
Past attempts, self-injury, violence
Access to lethal means
Protective factors
Psychiatric advance directives or safety plans
DSM-5-TR Codes & Assessment
List:
Diagnoses using DSM-5 terminology
ICD-10 codes for billing and documentation
Brief justification for each diagnosis (symptom criteria, duration, impairment)
Plan
The next steps in treatment. Include:
Medication changes or initiations
Referrals (therapy, labs, case management)
Safety interventions
Behavioral goals
Psychoeducation
Clinician Tip
Make the plan clear enough that another clinician reading the note could continue care.
Follow-Up & To-Dos
Recommended return time
Lab or imaging orders
Tasks for clinician or staff
Tasks for patient
What Is an AI Scribe?
An AI scribe is an automated tool to simplify the process of note-taking and documenting patient encounters. An AI scribe will automatically convert rough notes into a structured record of the intake, documenting the specifics and filling out a template for you. The goal is that you handle the ideas and encounter, and the AI tackles the procedure.
JotPsych’s Intake Note Template

What It Is
JotPsych’s intake template is tailored for acute psychiatric care. It includes:
Presenting problems
Psychiatric and substance use history
Sleep and functioning
Family/social/legal context
Safety and DSM-5 diagnosis
Plan and billing-ready outputs
How It Works
Before a patient encounter, you open JotPsych, select your psychiatric intake template, and begin recording. The template has every section you should need in your intake, but can be easily customized if you find your encounters taking a different shape. To see how to create your first note, click here, and to see how to customize a template, click here.
When your encounter concludes, simply finish recording in JotPsych. Our AI will autopopulate the template with the relevant parts of your discussion, turning the conversation into notes automatically.
To see what a sample encounter looks like and how JotPsych turns any recording into a comprehensive note, click below.
Benefits of the Intake Template
Covers all relevant systems without forgetting key elements
AI identifies and organizes info across psychiatric and social domains
Captures risk, diagnosis, and plan in an audit-ready format
Saves you time—no more backfilling after the interview
Designed to meet clinical and billing standards
Customizing the Template
If your unit requires different fields—like trauma history, legal status, collateral info—you can modify the template and JotPsych will respect that structure moving forward. To learn how to customize JotPsych Templates, click here.
FAQ
Is submitting recordings to JotPsych secure?
Yes, it is! JotPsych takes extensive measures to remain HIPAA compliant and uses secure encryption to maintain the integrity of patient data.
Why does intake documentation need its own template?
This one is built specifically for psychiatric evaluation—with fields for mood, psychosis, substance use, risk, and DSM-5 diagnoses. It balances comprehensiveness with speed, and it's optimized for use with AI so your documentation doesn’t drag behind your clinical work.