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Acute: a plain-language definition

In psychiatry, acute means recent in onset or short in lived duration. An acute episode is the problem you have right now, as opposed to a chronic pattern that has run for months or years.

Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy

Definition

What acute means

Acute describes a symptom or episode that started recently or is expected to be short in duration. When a clinician calls something acute, they are pointing to the present moment: a depressive episode that began six weeks ago, a flare of panic this week, a sudden change in sleep. The word says nothing about how serious the problem is. Acute and severe are different ideas. A condition can be acute and mild, or acute and severe, depending on its intensity.

In practice, the acute label shapes the first decisions a psychiatrist makes. The acute phase of treatment is the early stretch where the goal is to bring active symptoms down and get someone back to functioning. For depression, that often means the first weeks to a few months on a medication or in therapy. Once symptoms ease, care shifts toward keeping the gains, which is a different phase with different aims.

Why the distinction matters: acute problems and chronic ones call for different plans. An acute episode in someone with no prior history is approached one way; the same symptoms in someone who has carried them for years are read differently. Knowing where a person sits on that line helps a clinician set realistic timelines and decide how actively to intervene.

A common mix-up is treating acute as a synonym for emergency. It is not. Some acute presentations are urgent, but most acute episodes of anxiety or depression are handled in routine outpatient care. The opposite of acute is chronic, not stable. If you are unsure whether what you are feeling is new or long-standing, that history itself is useful information to bring to an evaluation.

Frequently asked questions

Good questions, clear answers

Does acute mean the same as severe?

No. Acute refers to timing, meaning recent onset or short duration. Severity refers to intensity. A problem can be acute and mild or acute and severe.

Is acute the opposite of chronic?

Yes. Acute describes something recent or short-lived, while chronic describes a pattern that has lasted months or years. Many conditions move between acute episodes and longer chronic courses.

Does an acute episode mean I need emergency care?

Not usually. Most acute episodes of anxiety or depression are treated in routine outpatient care. If you are in danger or thinking of harming yourself, call or text 988.

Medical Disclaimer: This content is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reading this content does not create a doctor-patient relationship with shrinkMD, Dr. Shariq Refai, or any affiliated clinician. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional regarding questions about a medical or mental health condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking care because of something you have read on this website. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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