Andrew E. Skodol
Andrew E. Skodol is a
professor of
psychiatry at the
University of Arizona and
Columbia University. Skodol is a member of the
American Psychiatric Association,
American College of Psychiatrists, and the
World Psychiatric Association. He was also the
President of the
Association for Research on Personality Disorders and, in 2017, the
American Psychopathological Association. He graduated from
Yale University and the
University of Pennsylvania. Skodol received his psychiatric training at the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine, where he worked as an assistant professor until 1979, when he transferred to Columbia. Becoming a professor of
Clinical Psychiatry from 1995 to 2007. From 2007 to 2008 he was the president of the
Institute for Mental Health Research, and from 2008 to 2011 he helmed the
Sunbelt Collaborative. Skodol helped write the
DSM-5 and served as the
chair for its
work group on
personality and
Personality Disorders. While writing the DSM-5 he argued for the removal of
Narcissistic personality disorder. From 2000 to 2003 he was the deputy director of the
New York State Psychiatric Institute. He also is the chair of the
Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorders Study. With his research primarily focused on
diagnosis,
stress and
psychosocial functioning,
Borderline personality disorder,
Avoidant personality disorder,
Major depressive disorder,
Schizotypal personality disorder,
Schizophrenia, and
personality disorders. Skodol also worked to identify differing levels of severity amongst personality disorders, new personality disorder traits, new types of personality disorders, and new general personality disorder criteria.
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