Dr Gergely Mészáros

psychiatrist, child and adolescent psychiatrist, psychotherapist

Place of consultations

Panoráma Polyclinic (Buda)
7 Derkovits u., 1126 Budapest

Booking an appointment

Some of our services require arranging an appointment (it is not possible to register directly). Please click on the button and send us your contact details. We will then contact you by phone or email.

As a child psychiatrist and psychiatrist, his main area of interest is helping young people with psychological difficulties on the verge of adolescence and adulthood, using pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy. In addition, it is also worth contacting him at Panoráma Polyclinic with classic child psychiatric disorders (e.g. attention deficit hyperactivity disorder – ADHD) and with other disorders occurring in adult

His interest in psychiatry dates back to his university years, when he began conducting student research at the Vadaskert Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Hospital and Outpatient Clinic in 2005. He obtained his medical degree in 2007. He passed his specialist exams in child and adolescent psychiatry in 2012 and in adult psychiatry in 2022, and obtained his PhD in psychiatry in 2023. In 2011, he completed a course preparing him for the psychotherapist exam of the Hungarian Association for Behavioural, Cognitive and Schema Therapies (VIKOTE), and passed the psychotherapy exam in 2024.

He is also a member of the children’s ADHD team at Panoráma Polyclinic.

Dr Mészáros works in Hungarian and English.

Main areas of expertise

  • adolescents and young adults with psychological difficulties, situations related to blockages in life, relationship problems, personality disorders
  • diagnosis and therapy of child psychiatric disorders
  • diagnosis and treatment of mood disorders, anxiety disorders and obsessive- compulsive disorders
  • diagnosis and treatment of ADHD in children and adults

‘I started my studies in adult psychiatry in 2020 because I realised that my main area of interest—diagnostic and therapeutic work with adolescents—needed to be complemented: in the challenges of our time, it is certainly important to work with young adults who live in the parental home for a long time and their families, in a comprehensive child psychiatric-psychiatric approach.’

I like it, I’ll share it:

Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
WhatsApp
Email