Robert Neil Butler

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Robert Neil Butler (born January 21, 1927) is a physician, gerontologist, psychiatrist, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, who was the first director of the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Butler is known for his work on the social needs and the rights of the elderly and for his research on healthy aging and the dementias.

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[edit] Background

Having grown up with his grandparents, Butler was shocked by the dismissive and contemptuous attitude toward the elderly and their diseases by many of his teachers at medical school, an attitude he later characterised as "ageism".

He graduated from Columbia College of Columbia University, where he was editor of the Columbia Daily Spectator and a member of the Philolexian Society.

[edit] Career

Dr. Butler was a principal investigator of one of the first interdisciplinary, comprehensive, longitudinal studies of healthy community-residing older persons, conducted at the National Institute of Mental Health (1955-1966), which resulted in the landmark book Human Aging. His research helped establish the fact that senility was not inevitable with aging, but is a consequence of disease.

In 1975, he became the founding Director of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) of the National Institutes of Health, where he remained until 1982. At the National Institute on Aging he established Alzheimer's Disease as a national research priority.

In 1982, he founded the Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development at The Mount Sinai Medical Center, the first department of geriatrics in a United States medical school. In addition, Dr. Butler helped found the Alzheimer's Disease Association, the American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry, the American Federation for Aging Research and the Alliance for Aging Research.

In 1990, he established the U.S. branch of the International Longevity Center (ILC) at Mount Sinai Medical Center. In 1998 it became a separate 501(c)(3) institution affiliated with Mount Sinai.

[edit] Publications

Dr. Butler is best known for his 1975 book Why Survive? Being Old In America, which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction in 1976.[1] A 2003 paperback edition is currently available (ISBN 0-8018-7425-4). Other recent books by Dr. Butler include Aging and Mental Health: Positive Psychosocial and Biomedical Approaches (with Myrna I. Lewis and Trey Sunderland, 1998), Life in an Older America (2001) (ISBN 0-87078-438-2), and The New Love and Sex After 60 (with Myrna I. Lewis, 2002) (ISBN 0-345-44211-3).

Dr. Butler is the author of 300 scientific and medical articles.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pulitzer Prize Winners: General Non-Fiction (web). pulitzer.org. Retrieved on 2008-02-28.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links