Skip to content

Top Doctors

Top Docs: Richard Ries, M.D.

UW Medicine, and Harborview Medical Center

By Seattle Mag August 9, 2024

A man wearing glasses, a suit, and a patterned tie, identified as Richard Ries, M.D., poses for a professional headshot against a gray background for the Top Docs 2024 edition.
Photo courtesy of UW Medicine

Dr. Richard Ries, Professor of Psychiatry and Director, Addictions Division, Department of Psychiatry, has been named one of Seattle magazine’s Top Doctors for 2024. 

 

 

Questions and Answers:

 

Why did you pick your specialty?

I didn’t plan to go into psychiatry or addictions when first in medical school but had great clinical clerkships with great teachers, which drew me into these areas.

 

What do you wish people knew about your specialty?

Both psychiatry and addictions practices can be really diverse. On Mondays I cover our department’s psychiatric consult line, PCL, which was set up with backing from our state to help community primary care and other clinicians deal with either psychiatric or addictions problems they encounter in their patients, and we do this with immediate phone access. Most Washingtonians don’t know that half the counties in our state don’t even have a psychiatrist practicing there, and this line helps hundreds of callers each year. On other days I may see my own long-term recovery outpatients, cover our Harborview inpatients, and other times work on research on suicide prevention or on developing our addictions track, which is part of our residency.

 

How do you support patients with their mental health concerns?

I try to do so in many ways but being steady, and being an advocate, is a little challenging if someone is stuck.

 

How is technology changing health care?

In our specialties this is mostly through the electronic medical record (EMR). The EMR allows better access to current and historical records. However, it seems to displace more time with actual face-to-face patient care, which is not good.

 

What’s the most important healthy habit for a patient?

I don’t think there is one “habit” but really a set of activities ranging from physical to spiritual, and is different between patients.

 

What questions do you wish patients would ask?

Maybe, “What are the best things for me to do for my condition outside of sessions?”

 

What do you do for your own personal wellness?

I love my work, and am fortunate to have a three-generation family in Seattle which is very interactive. We have a German shepherd and two Maine coon cats, and I walk hills on Capitol Hill with the dog almost every day. I am an active fisherman with many fishing-partner friends.

Follow Us

Moxie on Monday: The Antidote to Exhaustion Isn’t What You Think

Moxie on Monday: The Antidote to Exhaustion Isn’t What You Think

Maybe you don’t need more rest. Maybe you need more heart.

Burnout is real. It can also be a tricky devil, misleading us into believing that what we need is more rest.  I believe it’s something else altogether. The antidote to exhaustion is living life with more gusto and gumption. You know, jumping in with both feet rather than tippy-toeing in from the sidelines? Life’s a…

Moxie on Monday: Let It Take Root Before You Reveal It

Moxie on Monday: Let It Take Root Before You Reveal It

Some things grow best in the dark

We live in a world that celebrates the loud, the visible, the shared. Social media turns our lives into highlight reels, with ideas and dreams posted before they’ve even taken root. But the most powerful growth happens in the quiet. Life-changing ideas often rise from solitude — like mushrooms, meant to grow in the dark,…

Nature Rx

Nature Rx

Rediscover your health through these increasingly popular outdoor wellness hacks

It could have been the fact that I was lounging in a comfy recliner, staring out of the open-air room at the Four Seasons Resort Maui, in Hawaii, listening to birds chirping, surrounded by exotic plants and palm trees. Perhaps it was the calming outrigger canoe ride I had taken from the shores of Wailea…

Why Text Therapy Works for Teens

Why Text Therapy Works for Teens

Seattle’s free therapy program meets teens where they are — on their phones

When teens in Seattle need someone to talk to, many are starting with their phones. The city launched a free virtual therapy program for teens and young adults in December. It’s open to residents ages 13 to 24 and includes unlimited messaging with a licensed therapist, one live video session per month, and access to…