Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

198 COHEN


Notes


  1. Today the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).

  2. And subsequently the NIH director from 1955-1968.

  3. Braceland occupied many important positions: Chief of the Navy’s
    Neuropsychiatry Branch, President of the American Psychiatric Association,
    Head of Psychiatry at the Mayo Foundation, and Medical Director of the
    Hartford Retreat.

  4. When I began residency training in September 1937, psychiatry was not a
    widely accepted specialty. My 1935 class at the University of Chicago did
    not have a single lecture in the subject. The American Board of Psychiatry
    and Neurology, however, had just been established in 1936–many years
    after such boards had been established in medicine, surgery, cardiology, obste­
    trics and gynecology, ophthalmology, and other specialties. It required
    three years of residency training and two years of practice for eligibility to
    take the examination. Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia
    University, the University of Michigan and the University of Iowa had
    residency programs in psychiatric institutes, as did some of the large private
    mental hospitals and a number of state hospitals, but there was very little
    research going on. Of the 1,889 members in the American Psychiatric
    Association in 1936, only 157 were psychoanalysts. In 1937, there was only
    one staff member at the Johns Hopkins University who had taken and
    passed the board examination. By World War II, there could not have been
    more than 3,000 psychiatrists (by 1967 there were almost 16,000, largely
    the result of the NIMH’s financial support).

  5. Kolb left the NIMH to join Braceland at the Mayo Clinic and from there
    went to Columbia University to head the Psychiatry Department.

  6. Their work, The Mental Hospital, was published in 1954. It received much
    acclaim and led to Stanton’s subsequent appointments as Medical Director
    of the McLean Hospital and Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard University,
    and Schwartz’s appointment as Professor of Sociology at Brandeis University.

  7. John Eberhart once said that part of his first job in the extramural program
    was to persuade universities to set up training programs in clinical psychology,
    using as an inducement the possibility of training grants and training stipends.
    There were few such programs at the time, and although most were eager for
    PHS subsidies, there was a good deal of reluctance in academic departments
    to begin giving Ph.D.s in such a relatively undeveloped subfield.

  8. We at the NIH were not to engage in private practice. The University of
    Chicago at the time Mabel and I graduated was, I believe, the only full-time
    medical school in the country. After Eberhart and I left, Frederick Goodwin
    was able to obtain official permission for private practice.

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