General Information | History of the Department

 

Originally, the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences was a division in the Department of Medicine; Carl Whitaker, M.D., a leading figure in academic psychiatry in the 1950's was division head. In 1958, an independent Department of Psychiatry was established and, Bernard C. Holland, M.D. was recruited as chairman from Columbia University. He remained chairman for 25 years, and succeeded in expanding the department to a considerable extent in all aspects of academic development including: an increase in the number of faculty and residents, an increase in the clinical responsibilities of the department, an increase in research, including the building of the Georgia Mental Health Institute with modern wet laboratory space, and the establishment of an annual research budget from the State of Georgia.
In 1983, Jeffrey L. Houpt, M.D. was recruited from Duke University Medical Center to replace the retiring Dr. Holland. He remained chair until accepting the Acting Dean (1989) and eventually the position of Dean of the School of Medicine (1990). During Dr. Houpt's tenure as chair, the department continued to build upon its excellence in teaching and clinical service, and began the process of expanding the research programs in the department. Thus, a medical psychiatry unit was established at Emory University Hospital, the Emory University Autism Center was established, and research programs in schizophrenia and drug/alcohol abuse flourished. With the recruitment of Miles Crowder, M.D. from Vanderbilt University to head the general psychiatry training program, a marked increase in the quality of residents was realized. During this time, the Emory University Psychoanalytic Institute experienced considerable growth and moved towards independence from the Columbia University Institute. The department also expanded by providing clinical services in geriatric psychiatry at Wesley Woods Geriatric Hospital, operating a variety of new programs at Grady Memorial Hospital, and the departmental presence at Egleston Children's Hospital was expanded.

Donald Manning, M.D. became Acting Chair when Dr. Houpt assumed the position of Dean of the School of Medicine and remained in this role until the summer of 1991 when Charles B. Nemeroff, M.D., Ph.D. relocated from Duke University Medical Center to become the department's third chairman. Armed with a generous development package that included 10,000 square feet of new laboratory and office space in the Woodruff Memorial Research Building (WMRB), development funds for the recruitment of new research faculty, and the availability of $1.2 million in annual unrestricted state support for research, the department was poised for major expansion. The Dean's mandate to the incoming chairman was to recruit basic and clinical research faculty in order to markedly increase extramural grant funding from both federal and non-federal sources, while maintaining and further improving our acknowledged excellence in medical student education, residency training, psychology training and clinical service. Remarkable progress has been made in virtually all of these areas.