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List of presidents of the American Psychiatric Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of presidents of the American Psychiatric Association.

Image Name Year Notes
Samuel B. Woodward 1844–1848 First president, founded as the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane.
William Awl 1848–1851
Luther Bell 1851–1855
Isaac Ray 1855–1859
Andrew McFarland 1859–1862
Thomas Story Kirkbride 1862–1870
John S. Butler 1870–1873
Charles Nichols 1873–1879
Clement Walker 1879–1882
J.H. Callender 1882–1883
John P. Gray 1883–1884
Pliny Earle 1884–1885
Orpheus Everts 1885–1886
H.A. Buttolph 1886–1887
Eugene Grissom 1887–1888
John B. Chapin 1888–1889
W. W. Godding 1889–1890
H. P. Stearns 1890–1891 Organization name changed to American Medico-Psychological Association
Daniel Clark 1891–1892
J. B. Andrews 1892–1893
John Curwen 1893–1894
Edward Cowles 1894–1895
Richard Dewey 1895–1896
Theophilus O. Powell 1896–1897
Richard M. Bucke 1897–1898
Henry M. Hurd 1898–1899
Joseph G. Rogers 1899–1900
Peter M. Wise 1900–1901
Robert J. Preston 1901–1902
A. B. Richardson 1902–1903 Died before taking office.
G. Adler Bloomer 1902–1903
A. E. Macdonald 1903–1904
T. J. W. Burgess 1904–1905
C. B. Burr 1905–1906
Charles G. Hill 1906–1907 [1]
Charles P. Bancroft 1907–1908 [1]
Arthur F. Kilbourne 1908–1909 [2]
William F. Drewry 1909–1910 [2]
Charles W. Pilgrim 1910–1911 [3]
Hubert Work 1911–1912 [3]
James T. Searcy 1912–1913 [4]
Carlos Frederick MacDonald 1913–1914 [4][5]
Samuel E. Smith 1914–1915 [6]
Edward N. Brush 1915–1916 [6]
Charles G. Wagner 1916–1917 [7]
James V. Anglin 1917–1918 [7]
Elmer E. Southard 1918–1919 [8]
Henry C. Eyman 1919–1920 [9]
Owen Copp 1920–1921 [9]
Albert Moore Barrett 1921–1922
Henry W. Mitchell 1922–1923
Thomas W. Salmon 1923–1924 Mental hygiene advocate and chief consultant psychiatrist to the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I.[10]
William Alanson White 1924–1925
C. Floyd Haviland 1925–1926
George M. Kline 1926–1927
Adolf Meyer 1927–1928
Samuel T. Orton 1928–1929
Earl D. Bond 1929–1930
Walter M. English 1930–1931
William L. Russell 1931–1932
James Vance May 1932–1933 [11]
George H. Kirby 1933–1934 [12]
C. Fred Williams 1934–1935 [13]
Clarence O. Cheney 1935–1936 [14]
C. Macfie Campbell 1936–1937 [15]
Ross McClure Chapman 1937–1938 [16]
Richard H. Hutchings 1938–1939 [17]
William C. Sandy 1939–1940 [18]
George H. Stevenson 1940–1941 [19]
H. Douglas Singer 1941–1942 Died before taking office.
James King Hall 1941–1942 [20]
Arthur H. Ruggles 1942–1943 [21]
Edward Strecker 1943–1944 Graduated from Jefferson University in 1911. Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases (1925-1931).[22][23]
Karl M. Bowman 1944–1946 [24]
Samuel W. Hamilton 1946–1947 [25]
Winfred Overholser Sr. 1947–1948 [26]
William C. Menninger 1948–1949 [27][28]
George S. Stevenson 1949–1950 [29]
John C. Whitehorn 1950–1951 Psychiatrist in Chief from 1941-1960 at Johns Hopkins University and the Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry.[30]
Leo H. Bartemeier 1951–1952 [31]
Donald Ewen Cameron 1952–1953 [32]
Kenneth E. Appel 1953–1954
Arthur Percy Noyes 1954–1955 [33]
R. Finley Gayle Jr. 1955–1956 [34]
Francis J. Braceland 1956–1957 [35][23]
Harry C. Solomon 1957–1958 [36]
Francis J. Gerty 1958–1959 [37]
William Malamud 1959–1960 [38]
Robert H. Felix 1960–1961 [39]
Walter E. Barton 1961–1962 [40]
C. H. Hardin Branch 1962–1963 [41]
Jack R. Ewalt 1963–1964 [42]
Daniel Blain 1964–1965 First medical director of the American Psychiatric Association and founder of the newsletter that became the journal Mental Hospitals (1951–1965), later Hospital & Community Psychiatry (1966–1994) and Psychiatric Services (1995–present).[43][44]
Howard P. Rome 1965–1966 [45]
Harvey J. Tompkins 1966–1967 [46]
Henry W. Brosin 1967–1968
Lawrence C. Kolb 1968–1969 [47]
Raymond W. Waggoner 1969–1970 [48]
Robert S. Garber 1970–1971 [49][23]
Ewald W. Busse 1971–1972 [50]
Perry Clement Talkingten 1972–1973 [51]
Alfred M. Freedman 1973–1974 Led the effort to de-classify homosexuality as a mental illness.[52][53]
John Patrick Spiegel 1974–1975 103rd president[54]
Judd Marmor 1975–1976 [55]
Robert W. Gibson 1976–1977 [56]
Jack Weinberg 1977–1978 [57]
Jules H. Masserman 1978–1979 [58]
Alan A. Stone 1979–1980 [59]
Donald G. Langsley 1980–1981 [60]
Daniel X. Freedman 1981–1982 [61]
H. Keith H. Brodie 1982–1983
George Tarjan 1983–1984 [62]
John A. Talbott 1984–1985 113th president[63]
Carol Nadelson 1985–1986 First female president of the American Psychiatric Association.[64]
First female editor-in-chief of the American Psychiatric Association Press (1986).[65]
First director of Partners Office for Women's Careers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (1998).[65]
Robert O. Pasnau 1986–1987 [66]
George H. Pollock 1987–1988 [67]
Paul J. Fink 1988–1989 [68]
Herbert Pardes 1989–1990 [69]
Elissa P. Benedek 1990–1991 [70]
Lawrence Hartmann 1991–1992 [71]
Joseph T. English 1992–1993 [72]
John S. McIntyre 1993–1994 [73]
Jerry M. Wiener 1994–1995 [74]
Mary Jane England 1995–1996 [75]
Harold Eist 1996–1997
Herbert S. Sacks 1997–1998 [76]
Rodrigo A. Muñoz 1998–1999 [77]
Allan Tasman 1999–2000 [78]
Daniel B. Borenstein 2000–2001 [79]
Richard K. Harding 2001–2002 [80]
Paul S. Appelbaum 2002–2003 [81]
Marcia Kraft Goin 2003–2004 [82]
Michelle Riba 2004–2005 [83]
Steven Sharfstein 2005–2006 [84]
Pedro Ruiz 2006–2007 [85]
Carolyn Robinowitz 2007–2008 [86]
Nada Logan Stotland 2008–2009 [87]
Alan F. Schatzberg 2009–2010 [88]
Carol A. Bernstein 2010–2011 [89]
John M. Oldham 2011–2012 [90]
Dilip V. Jeste 2012–2013 First Asian-American President of the APA.[91]
Jeffrey Lieberman 2013–2014 Chair of Columbia University Department of Psychiatry, principal investigator for the NIMH CATIE study.[92][93]
Paul Summergrad 2014–2015 Dr. Frances S. Arkin Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at the Tufts University School of Medicine, Psychiatrist-in-Chief of the Tufts Medical Center.[94][95]
Renée Binder 2015–2016 Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship Director, UCSF Department of Psychiatry.[96][97]
Maria A. Oquendo 2016–2017 She was the first Latina president of the APA. Professor and Chairman of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine.[98]
Anita Everett 2017–2018 Chief Medical Officer, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and Director of the Office of Chief Medical Officers (OCMO).[99]
Altha Stewart 2018–2019 First African-American elected to lead the APA. Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Director, Center for Health in Justice Involved Youth, University of Tennessee Health Science Center.[100]
Bruce J. Schwartz 2019–2020 Deputy Chair and Clinical Director of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Montefiore and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. President of the Montefiore Behavioral Care IPA. Medical Director and founding member of University Behavioral Associates.
Jeffery Geller 2020–2021 Prior Director of Public Sector Psychiatry and current Professor of Psychiatry at University of Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS). Previous medical director (served 7 years) and current staff psychiatrist, Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital.
Vivian Pender 2021–2022 Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College. Training psychoanalyst, Columbia University. Founder of Healthcare Against Trafficking, Inc. Consultant psychiatrist and psychoanalyst to the United Nations.
Rebecca W. Brendel 2022–2023 Director of the Master of Bioethics Program, Associate Director of the Center for Bioethics, and an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. She is also a Director of Law and Ethics at the Center for Law, Brain, and Behavior at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Petros Levounis 2023–2024 Serves as professor and chair of the Department of Psychiatry and associate dean for professional development at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School. He is also the chief of service at University Hospital in Newark, New Jersey. Dr. Levounis came to Rutgers from Columbia University where he served as director of the Addiction Institute of New York from 2002 to 2013.
Ramaswamy Viswanathan 2024–2025 Current President
Theresa Miskimen 2025–2026 President-elect

References

[edit]
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  63. ^ Sabshin, Melvin (September 1985). "John A. Talbott, M.D. One hundred thirteenth President, 1984-1985". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 142 (9): 1014–6. doi:10.1176/ajp.142.9.1014. PMID 3895986.
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  68. ^ Robinowitz, C.B. (September 1989). "Paul J. Fink, M.D., One Hundred Seventeenth President, 1988-1989". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 146 (9): 1112–4. doi:10.1176/ajp.146.9.1112. PMID 2669533.
  69. ^ Brodie, H. Keith H. (September 1990). "Herbert Pardes, M.D., One Hundred Eighteenth President, 1989-4990". American Journal of Psychiatry. 147 (9): 1126–1127. doi:10.1176/ajp.147.9.1126.
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  71. ^ Sabshin, M. (September 1992). "Lawrence Hartmann, M.D., One Hundred Twentieth President, 1991-1992". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 149 (9): 1145–7. doi:10.1176/ajp.149.9.1145. PMID 1503126.
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