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Kay Redfield Jamison
Kay Redfield Jamison is the daughter of an Air Force officer and was
brought up in the Washington, D.C. area and in Los Angeles. She attended UCLA as
an undergraduate and as a graduate student in psychology, and she joined the
faculty there in 1974. She later founded the UCLA Affective Disorders Clinic,
which became a large teaching and research facility.
Dr. Jamison is now Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine. The textbook on manic-depressive illness that she wrote in
association with Frederick Goodwin was chosen in 1990 as the Most Outstanding
Book in Biomedical Sciences by the Association of American Publishers. She is
also the author of a trade book, Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and
the Artistic Temperament (1993), and has produced three public television
specials on the subject: one on manic-depressive composers, one on van Gogh, and
one on Lord Byron. The recipient of numerous national and international
scientific awards, Dr. Jamison was a member of the first National Advisory
Council for Human Genome Research, as well as the clinical director for the Dana
Consortium on the Genetic Basis of Manic-Depressive Illness. She lives in
Washington, D.C., with her husband, Dr. Richard Wyatt, a physician and scientist
at the National Institutes of Health.
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