The very extensive needs of people with psychiatric disabilities are described in Psychiatric Services, whose authors and readers probably reflect one of the broadest representations of disciplines among medical journals. Psychiatric Services describes the social, educational, economic, legal, vocational, occupational, spiritual, artistic, cultural, and nonpsychiatric medical needs of people with psychiatric disabilities—as well as needed changes within psychiatry itself. Talbott's Psychiatric Services has led the way in stating what is required for people with psychiatric disabilities to live in the community. Moreover, no matter where people with psychiatric disabilities are to be found—in hospitals or nursing homes, on the streets, in jails and prisons, or in morgues—Talbott's Psychiatric Services has found them and has reminded us of how they could have been better served.