Starting Up: Volume 1: Starting Up (An Oral History of Neuropsychopharmacology: the First Fifty Years, Peer Interviews) - Tapa blanda

Ban, Thomas A., M.d.

 
9781461009641: Starting Up: Volume 1: Starting Up (An Oral History of Neuropsychopharmacology: the First Fifty Years, Peer Interviews)

Sinopsis

THE SERIESThe 10 volumes in this series record a fifty year history of neuropsychopharmacology related by 213 pioneer clinical, academic, industrial and basic scientists in videotaped interviews, conducted by 66 colleagues between 1994 and 2008. These volumes include a preface by the series editor placing its contents in an historical context and linking each volume to the next. Each volume is dedicated to a former President of the ACNP and edited by a distinguished historian or Fellow of the College who provides an introduction to its themes and a biography of each scientist s career. The series provides insights into a half century of discovery and innovation with its rewards and disappointments, progress and setbacks, including future expectations and hopes for the field as a whole and the ACNP as an organization.IN THIS VOLUMEVolume I, Starting Up is dedicated to Heinz Lehmann, President, 1965 and edited byEdward Shorter, a distinguished historian and professor of the history of medicine andpsychiatry. ¬The 22 pioneers, all men and predominantly Americans, include trialists,pharmacologists and clinical scientists. From 1952 to the mid 1960s the earliest clinicaltrials of the first psychotropic drugs took place in the V.A., private practice and Statehospitals. ¬Thousands of people with untreated mental illness benefited for the firsttime. Psychoanalysis dominated academia, the pharmaceutical industry had barelyawakened to the potential for treatment of mental illness and clinical pharmacologywas an infant discipline. But the NIH and NIMH expanded dramatically, funded byan enthusiastic Congress and the FDA was empowered to insist on drug efficacy as wellas safety. Basic scientists began to make the first linkages between serendipitous clinicalefficacy and putative neurochemical mechanisms of action.

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Reseña del editor

THE SERIESThe 10 volumes in this series record a fifty year history of neuropsychopharmacology related by 213 pioneer clinical, academic, industrial and basic scientists in videotaped interviews, conducted by 66 colleagues between 1994 and 2008. These volumes include a preface by the series editor placing its contents in an historical context and linking each volume to the next. Each volume is dedicated to a former President of the ACNP and edited by a distinguished historian or Fellow of the College who provides an introduction to its themes and a biography of each scientist’s career. The series provides insights into a half century of discovery and innovation with its rewards and disappointments, progress and setbacks, including future expectations and hopes for the field as a whole and the ACNP as an organization.IN THIS VOLUMEVolume I, “Starting Up” is dedicated to Heinz Lehmann, President, 1965 and edited byEdward Shorter, a distinguished historian and professor of the history of medicine andpsychiatry. ¬The 22 pioneers, all men and predominantly Americans, include trialists,pharmacologists and clinical scientists. From 1952 to the mid 1960s the earliest clinicaltrials of the first psychotropic drugs took place in the V.A., private practice and Statehospitals. ¬Thousands of people with untreated mental illness benefited for the firsttime. Psychoanalysis dominated academia, the pharmaceutical industry had barelyawakened to the potential for treatment of mental illness and clinical pharmacologywas an infant discipline. But the NIH and NIMH expanded dramatically, funded byan enthusiastic Congress and the FDA was empowered to insist on drug efficacy as wellas safety. Basic scientists began to make the first linkages between serendipitous clinicalefficacy and putative neurochemical mechanisms of action.

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