Chaim F. Shatan

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Chaim F. Shatan was born in Wclowek, Poland on September 1, 1924. His parents moved to Canada when he was two. He received both M.D. and C.M. (master of surgery) degrees from McGill University. In 1949, he moved to New York and founded a private practice in psychiatry in the early 1950's.

He had a long time interest in war and trauma and became deeply involved with Vietnam veterans in the late 1960's, responding to Jan Barry's invitation to form "rap groups" for veterans to speak about their emerging reactions. His article "Post-Vietnam Syndrome" was printed on the Op-Ed page of the New York Times ([1]). He continued to advocate for Vietnam veterans and other victims war, trauma and natural and manmade disasters. In 1974, Shatan found out that "traumatic war neurosis" had been eliminated from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), which is used to delineate psychological disorders. He founded the Vietnam Veterans Working Group with several colleagues,Robert Jay Lifton,Sarah Haley, Jack Smith and Arthur Egendorf. They relentlessly pursued the issue, and reached out to Mardi J. Horowitz M.D., the pioneer of experimental research in traumatic stress response, Harley Shands, M.D., Chief of Psychiatry at Roosevelt Hospital, who was working on worker's compensation cases, and William G. Niederland, M.D., who had initiated the study of reactions in concentration camp survivors with Henry Krystal. The group was successful in returning the diagnosis to the next edition of the book, DSM-III, under the new name "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder," a term which evolved from discussions between Shatan and the Working Group with Nancy Andreasen.

Shatan was also a founding member of the Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, now called the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies ([2]).

Shatan died in August 2001.