Harvey D. Strassman
Encyclopedia
Dr. Harvey D. Strassman (1922–2011) was a psychiatrist
Psychiatrist
A psychiatrist is a physician who specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders. All psychiatrists are trained in diagnostic evaluation and in psychotherapy...

, psychoanalyst, medical educator and clinical researcher.

Dr. Strassman, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War
Korean War
The Korean War was a conventional war between South Korea, supported by the United Nations, and North Korea, supported by the People's Republic of China , with military material aid from the Soviet Union...

, is best known for his documentation of a syndrome that eventually became known as post traumatic stress disorder, a result of insights gained from interviews with prisoners of war who had been held in North Korea. He described the condition in the paper, A Prisoner of War Syndrome: Apathy as a Reaction to Severe Stress, published with two colleagues in 1956 in the American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
The American Journal of Psychiatry is a monthly peer-reviewed medical journal covering all aspects of psychiatry and the official journal of the American Psychiatric Association. The first volume was issued in 1844, at which time it was known as the American Journal of Insanity...

.

Dr. Strassman conducted the interviews over several months aboard a hospital ship. He concluded that the prisoners had not been “brainwashed,” as some people had alleged. Rather, they withdrew as a defensive adjustment to the stress of being a prisoner of war
Prisoner of war
A prisoner of war or enemy prisoner of war is a person, whether civilian or combatant, who is held in custody by an enemy power during or immediately after an armed conflict...

. The withdrawal and suppressed emotional responses, he noted, could become so severe and complete that it could lead to a “maladaptive state of dependency in which he (the prisoner) ceases to take care of himself even to the point of death.” He labeled the syndrome “apathy” and distinguished it from a catatonic stupor, or depression.

He was a staff physician at the Veterans Administration Center in Los Angeles and an instructor in clinical psychiatry at the medical school of the University of California at Los Angeles when he published the paper.

Early life

Harvey Daniel Strassman was born in Chicago, on September 19, 1922, to Rose Goldman and Moe Strassman, a teacher, both of whom had come to the United States as young children of Russian Jewish immigrants. During the Great Depression he sold shoes to help his family. Dr. Strassman graduated from Crane Technical High School in 1939 and from the University of Illinois in 1943.

He was admitted to medical school through an Army placement exam and graduated from the University of Illinois in 1948. He did his internship at Los Angeles County Hospital during the polio epidemic and his residency in psychiatry at the Veterans Administration hospital just west of the UCLA campus where he first taught. He lived in Los Angeles, became a psychoanalyst, and practiced in Beverly Hills, doing research on treatment for alcohol and substance abuse and on other topics such as humor and medical education.

Psychiatry

Medical education became his passion. He quit private practice to move to Chicago in 1969 and began to teach psychiatry full time. He was a professor of psychiatry at Chicago Medical School
Chicago Medical School
The Chicago Medical School is one of the graduate schools of Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science. Founded in 1912, The Chicago Medical School has nearly a 100 year history of a broadly-based socially constructive admission process relatively unlike that of other medical colleges....

from 1972 until 1978, served as Acting Dean of the school in 1974 and then as Assistant Dean for Curriculum for three years. He also served as acting chief of psychiatry at the North Chicago VA Hospital from 1975 to 1978.

“Harvey was a mentor and a great giver of advice,” said Dr. Fred Sierles, a professor of psychiatry at the Chicago Medical School.
In 1983, Dr. Strassman became a professor of psychiatry at the Robert Wood Johnson School of Medicine and Chief of Psychiatry at the Cooper Medical Center, now the Cooper University Hospital, in Camden, N.J., where he worked until he retired and moved to Sacramento, Calif., in 1993. There, he resumed private practice. He was a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. In 2004, Dr. Strassman and his wife, Judith, moved to Austin, Texas.

At times, when he would lecture on humor, Harvey Strassman would plan to have someone throw a pie in his face during the talk to elicit a wide range of reactions: from laughter, to embarrassment, to anger, he said. “He took great delight in that,” said his son, Neil. “He enjoyed forcing the immediate realization upon the audience that what some people might find funny, others might find disagreeable.”
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