Frank Ayd

Summary

Frank Joseph Ayd Jr. (October 14, 1920 – March 21, 2008) was an American psychiatrist known for introducing the first antipsychotic medications into US clinical practice, being granted the first permit from the Food and Drug Administration to use Thorazine for schizophrenia.[1] He took part in writing more than 50 books and authored over 400 articles. The “Ayd’s Lexicon of Psychiatry, Neurology and the Neurosciences” became a standard reference.[citation needed]

Portrait of Frank Ayd

According to the New York Times, he was a chief pioneer in the field of psychopharmacology.[2]

Born in Baltimore on October 14, 1920, in the family of a pediatrician, he graduated from Loyola College in Baltimore and the University of Maryland School of Medicine. His work began in pediatrics but soon he was called to active duty by the Navy and assigned to surgery at Bethesda Naval Hospital. Shortly afterwards he moved to the Veterans Hospital in Perry Point, Maryland and became a psychiatrist. Although initially having no interest in psychiatry, he changed his view and practiced it for the rest of his life, introducing many pharmaceutical agents. Frank Ayd studied, in his words, "practically speaking, every neuroleptic that ever got on the market in this country except for Clozaril and Risperdal".[citation needed]

Books edit

  • Recognizing the Depressed Patient, with Essentials; F. Ayd; Published by Grune & Stratton, Inc. 1961

References edit

  1. ^ Martin, Douglas. "Frank Ayd, 87, Who Advanced Thorazine Use, Is Dead". New York Times.
  2. ^ Martin, Douglas. "Frank Ayd, 87, Who Advanced Thorazine Use, Is Dead". New York Times.

External links edit

  • Frank Ayd, 87, Who Advanced Thorazine Use, Is Dead - New York Times, March 21, 2008; by Douglas Martin.
  • Interviewed by Leo Hollister, 1994[permanent dead link] (PDF file)
  • Delivering Ayd to the Mentally Ill - profile at medicalalumni.org
  • Through the Times With Frank J. Ayd Jr., M.D. - Psychiatric Times, 2005