- Frederick Redlich
Frederick Carl Redlich ("Fritz") (
June 2 1910 -January 1 ,2004 ) was apsychiatrist and academic administrator. He was dean of the Yale School of Medicine from 1967 to 1972.Redlich was born in
Vienna , the son of Ludwig and Emma Redlich, and received his M.D. in 1935 from theUniversity of Vienna . He moved to theUnited States in 1938 with his wife Elsa (they divorced in 1953) and became a U.S. citizen in 1943.He joined the faculty of Yale in 1942. In addition to his time as dean of the School of Medicine, Redlich was head of the department of
psychiatry from 1950 to 1967.He was a member of the
Institute of Medicine and theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences . He was honored with Distinguished Service Awards from theAmerican College of Psychiatrists and theAmerican Psychiatric Association .Redlich is best known within the field of Community Mental Health for his groundbreaking study done in the late 1950s with psychologist August Hollingshead. In the study, Social Class and Mental Illness Hollingshead, A. and Redlich, F., Social Class and Mental Illness: A Community Study. New York: John Wiley] the two researched the mentally ill population of New Haven, Connecticut and the treatment they received within a calendar year.
Two aspects of the study have contributed to its historical significance. First, was the large, almost complete sample of all people from New Haven who sought psychiatric treatment in that year. This was achieved by identifying and communicating with psychiatric practitioners throughout the eastern United States as well as within New Haven. The second aspect of the study was its definition of social class by income level with the designation of five social classes using the roman numerals I though IV. This system of class designation is still utilized in current social science research.The outcome of the study demonstrated that the majority of people in the upper two social classes received insight or talking therapy which was non-bodily intrusive and took place in private settings. The majority of the lowest social class received their treatment in public institutions. Their treatment consisted primarily of constraint and intrusive methods ( such as cold packs, electroshock, and lobotomies). The conclusions of their study were that social class plays a significant role in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment, with the upper social classes receiving less intrusive therapy.
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External links
* [http://www.yale.edu/opa/v32.n15/story21.html Yale obituary]
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