The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
INFORMATION ON THE CANDIDATESFull Access

Candidate for Secretary

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1176/pn.37.23.0028a

About the Candidate

Nada L. Stotland, M.D., M.P.H.

Fellow, 1978

•. 

Speaker, APA Assembly, 2001-02

•. 

Chair, APA Joint Commission on Public Affairs, 1995-99

•. 

Chair, Assembly Committee of Representatives of Minority/Underrepresented Groups, 1993-94

•. 

Professor of Psychiatry and Obstetrics/Gynecology, Rush Medical College, 1996-

•. 

Chief Medical Officer, Illinois Department of Mental Health, 1993-96

•. 

Director of C/L Service and Residency Training, University of Chicago, 1987-93

Candidate’s Views

Times are tough: for our country, our patients, and our profession. We need results from APA. Here are some of mine.

Advocacy: The public needs to know what a psychiatrist is and does. During my four years as chair of the Joint Commission on Public Affairs, we put issue kits in the hands of APA members: on parity, scope of practice, and state mental health funding. The quantity and quality of coverage of psychiatric issues in the media improved significantly. I edited our “Let’s Talk Facts About Mental Illnesses” brochures. I taught our members how to use the media and provided daily bulletins for handling the news. I appeared on the “Oprah Winfrey Show,” “Larry King Live,” CNN, and NPR and in the New York Times, Time, and the Wall Street Journal, explaining and defending our profession. An informed public will demand that our leaders institute and protect equitable insurance coverage, confidentiality, prescriptions written by medical doctors, and care managed on the basis of need and science, not profit. An informed public will turn to APA for information and to APA members for treatment.

Fiscal Responsibility: I have just finished my term as speaker of the APA Assembly. During my three years as an Assembly officer, the Assembly insisted on the formation of a Financial Oversight Committee—and reduced its own expenses. As a direct result, the APA Board is now making real-time course corrections and living within our means.

Lifelong Education: I founded the first Residents’ Committee in APA and served as director of psychiatric education at the University of Chicago. In APA, I have successfully advocated for the development of Board review and recertification resources and a handbook for residents.

Broad-Based Practice: I have headed a consultation/liaison service, a psychiatry residency, the medical office of a state mental health system, and the department of psychiatry in a general hospital, all while maintaining a clinical practice. I have degrees in both public health and psychoanalysis.

Collaboration With Fellow Physicians and Advocacy Groups: I am a C/L psychiatrist working daily with primary care physicians. I founded Illinois’ first mental health coalition, and I am a member of the Board of the National Mental Health Association.

Cutting-Edge Information: I have served on the editorial boards of the American Journal of Psychiatry and Psychiatric News. I originated the journal Medical Update for Psychiatrists. I’ve published seven books and 70-plus articles. I am the treasurer of the Board of the largest psychiatric press in the world: APA’s American Psychiatric Publishing Inc.

Appreciation of Our Diversity: We are diverse in gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, and site of medical education. I have chaired APA’s Committee on Women, been elected chair of the Women’s Caucus, and chair of all the minority group representatives. As speaker, I increased the representation of minority psychiatrists on APA components and founded the APA Roundtable with leaders of psychiatric minority organizations. I have mentored many, and represented all, of our members.

Balance Between Our Professional and Personal Lives: My husband and I have four daughters. I have stayed home with them, worked part time, and worked full time. Now that they are adults, my daughters insist I devote my energy to APA.

Only we psychiatrists have both the medical and psychosocial training essential to treating millions of individuals suffering from agonizing and disabling psychiatric illnesses. With an informed public, up-to-date information, support from fellow physicians and advocacy groups, and a unified, forceful, fiscally responsible APA, we can be as tough as the times. I’ve done the homework, acquired the skills, and demonstrated the ability to protect our profession and make our Association accountable and effective.

As APA secretary, I will provide results.

Primary Loci of Work and Sources of Income

Work:

    100%—My office

Income:

    60%—Clinical care

    20%—Writing and editing

    10%—Lecture fees

    10%—Legal consultations