News (Media Awareness Project) - US MD: Dr Albert Kurland |
Title: | US MD: Dr Albert Kurland |
Published On: | 2008-12-09 |
Source: | Baltimore Sun (MD) |
Fetched On: | 2008-12-10 04:09:39 |
DR. ALBERT KURLAND
Distinguished research psychiatrist studied LSD therapy.
Dr. Albert A. Kurland, a distinguished research psychiatrist, a former
director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center at Spring Grove
State Hospital and an advocate of LSD therapy, died Sunday of cardiac
failure at North Oaks retirement community. He was 94.
Dr. Kurland, the son of Eastern European immigrants, was born in
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. He later was sent to live with relatives in
Baltimore, where he graduated from City College in 1932.
He was a 1940 graduate of the University of Maryland Medical School
and completed an internship at the old Sinai Hospital in East Baltimore.
Dr. Kurland was drafted into the Army in 1941 and served as an
assistant battalion surgeon with Gen. George S. Patton Jr.'s 3rd Army
in the Tunisian and Italian campaigns.
In an article that was published in The Evening Sun in 1943, Dr.
Kurland wrote that captured records showed that, while the Nazis were
"beset with typhus, there were no cases among the American troops who
lived under the same conditions."
He wrote that he attributed this to "rigorous training and physical
conditioning, along with the use of the most advanced medical practices."
He wrote that the Germans prevented removal of American wounded from
the battlefield by maintaining constant fire, and it was only after
"nightfall that we could go out and gather them in."
"Many wounded had to stay in foxholes a whole day before we could get
to them. However, there were very few cases of shock, and the use of
sulfanilamide, which all soldiers carried, was of immeasurable help in
cutting down our casualties," Dr. Kurland wrote.
A recipient of the Legion of Merit and discharged with the rank of
captain in 1946, Dr. Kurland returned to Baltimore and completed his
psychiatric training at Spring Grove State Hospital in
Catonsville.
In the late 1940s, Dr. Kurland was appointed director of medical
research at Spring Grove.
He was named the first director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research
Center, which was built on the grounds of Spring Grove by the state
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in 1970.
In 1954, Dr. Kurland told The Sun that Thorazine, then a new drug,
"must be considered an important and effective agent in the treatment
of chronic, agitated, severe mental cases."
A decade later, Dr. Kurland reported that lysergic acid diethylamide,
better known as LSD, was effective in treating alcoholism with
"careful and controlled use of LSD in combination with intensive
psychotherapy."
From 1963 to 1976, Dr. Kurland led exploratory studies using LSD at
Spring Grove, concluding them later at the Maryland Psychiatric
Research Center.
"He was the world's expert on LSD. He had the idea that it could be
used in helping those addicted to alcohol and drugs," said Dr. Irving
J. Taylor, a longtime friend and colleague, who in 1939 founded Taylor
Manor Hospital, which since 2002 has been Sheppard Pratt at Ellicott
City.
"He had used LSD in these cases and found that it gave patients a
better quality of life and that it really made a difference in some
patients," said Dr. Taylor, who is now retired.
"LSD has two images. The predominant public one is of an evil arising
from the tragic consequences of casual use. The little-known one comes
from its experimental uses as a therapeutic agent in medicine and
specifically psychiatry," Dr. Kurland wrote in a 1979 op-ed article in
The Sun. "As yet, however, despite the promise that LSD's unique and
dramatic effects have held out, experiments seeking to use the
powerful psychological forces of the LSD experience for man's benefit
have been engulfed in uncertainty."
Dr. Kurland hoped that future use of LSD and research would lead to
"effective therapies that will heal - more quickly and comfortably -
the psychic wounds that leave so many people handicapped and
alienated," he wrote.
After retiring from the state in the early 1980s, Dr. Kurland joined
the staff at Taylor Manor, where worked as a researcher until retiring
again in 2002.
"He was a mild-mannered person who had a wonderful, dry sense of
humor," Dr. Taylor recalled. "Because he was always excellent when it
came to dealing with patients with whom he was very empathetic, they
felt comfortable with him."
Substance abuse issues still fascinated Dr. Kurland, who was working
on a book at his death, LSD: An Investigational Odyssey.
Dr. Kurland, a longtime resident of the Elmont Condominium on Park
Heights Avenue before moving to North Oaks in 2004, was an avid
theatergoer and enjoyed attending concerts of the Baltimore Symphony
Orchestra.
He was a member of Temple Oheb Shalom.
Services were yesterday.
Dr. Kurland is survived by his wife of 67 years, the former Hannah
Fischer; a son, Michael Kurland of Boston; a daughter, Marilyn
Rosenstein of Baltimore; seven grandchildren; and two
great-grandchildren.
Distinguished research psychiatrist studied LSD therapy.
Dr. Albert A. Kurland, a distinguished research psychiatrist, a former
director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center at Spring Grove
State Hospital and an advocate of LSD therapy, died Sunday of cardiac
failure at North Oaks retirement community. He was 94.
Dr. Kurland, the son of Eastern European immigrants, was born in
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. He later was sent to live with relatives in
Baltimore, where he graduated from City College in 1932.
He was a 1940 graduate of the University of Maryland Medical School
and completed an internship at the old Sinai Hospital in East Baltimore.
Dr. Kurland was drafted into the Army in 1941 and served as an
assistant battalion surgeon with Gen. George S. Patton Jr.'s 3rd Army
in the Tunisian and Italian campaigns.
In an article that was published in The Evening Sun in 1943, Dr.
Kurland wrote that captured records showed that, while the Nazis were
"beset with typhus, there were no cases among the American troops who
lived under the same conditions."
He wrote that he attributed this to "rigorous training and physical
conditioning, along with the use of the most advanced medical practices."
He wrote that the Germans prevented removal of American wounded from
the battlefield by maintaining constant fire, and it was only after
"nightfall that we could go out and gather them in."
"Many wounded had to stay in foxholes a whole day before we could get
to them. However, there were very few cases of shock, and the use of
sulfanilamide, which all soldiers carried, was of immeasurable help in
cutting down our casualties," Dr. Kurland wrote.
A recipient of the Legion of Merit and discharged with the rank of
captain in 1946, Dr. Kurland returned to Baltimore and completed his
psychiatric training at Spring Grove State Hospital in
Catonsville.
In the late 1940s, Dr. Kurland was appointed director of medical
research at Spring Grove.
He was named the first director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research
Center, which was built on the grounds of Spring Grove by the state
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in 1970.
In 1954, Dr. Kurland told The Sun that Thorazine, then a new drug,
"must be considered an important and effective agent in the treatment
of chronic, agitated, severe mental cases."
A decade later, Dr. Kurland reported that lysergic acid diethylamide,
better known as LSD, was effective in treating alcoholism with
"careful and controlled use of LSD in combination with intensive
psychotherapy."
From 1963 to 1976, Dr. Kurland led exploratory studies using LSD at
Spring Grove, concluding them later at the Maryland Psychiatric
Research Center.
"He was the world's expert on LSD. He had the idea that it could be
used in helping those addicted to alcohol and drugs," said Dr. Irving
J. Taylor, a longtime friend and colleague, who in 1939 founded Taylor
Manor Hospital, which since 2002 has been Sheppard Pratt at Ellicott
City.
"He had used LSD in these cases and found that it gave patients a
better quality of life and that it really made a difference in some
patients," said Dr. Taylor, who is now retired.
"LSD has two images. The predominant public one is of an evil arising
from the tragic consequences of casual use. The little-known one comes
from its experimental uses as a therapeutic agent in medicine and
specifically psychiatry," Dr. Kurland wrote in a 1979 op-ed article in
The Sun. "As yet, however, despite the promise that LSD's unique and
dramatic effects have held out, experiments seeking to use the
powerful psychological forces of the LSD experience for man's benefit
have been engulfed in uncertainty."
Dr. Kurland hoped that future use of LSD and research would lead to
"effective therapies that will heal - more quickly and comfortably -
the psychic wounds that leave so many people handicapped and
alienated," he wrote.
After retiring from the state in the early 1980s, Dr. Kurland joined
the staff at Taylor Manor, where worked as a researcher until retiring
again in 2002.
"He was a mild-mannered person who had a wonderful, dry sense of
humor," Dr. Taylor recalled. "Because he was always excellent when it
came to dealing with patients with whom he was very empathetic, they
felt comfortable with him."
Substance abuse issues still fascinated Dr. Kurland, who was working
on a book at his death, LSD: An Investigational Odyssey.
Dr. Kurland, a longtime resident of the Elmont Condominium on Park
Heights Avenue before moving to North Oaks in 2004, was an avid
theatergoer and enjoyed attending concerts of the Baltimore Symphony
Orchestra.
He was a member of Temple Oheb Shalom.
Services were yesterday.
Dr. Kurland is survived by his wife of 67 years, the former Hannah
Fischer; a son, Michael Kurland of Boston; a daughter, Marilyn
Rosenstein of Baltimore; seven grandchildren; and two
great-grandchildren.
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