000003248 001__ 3248 000003248 005__ 20230919120758.0 000003248 02470 $$2Collection name$$aOHSU Oral History Program 000003248 0247_ $$2DOI$$a10.6083/M4VQ31GN 000003248 02470 $$2Collection number$$a2018-007 000003248 037__ $$aDA 000003248 041__ $$aeng 000003248 245__ $$aInterview with George Saslow, M.D., Ph.D. 000003248 260__ $$bOregon Health & Science University$$c2003 December 12$$010958 000003248 269__ $$a2003-12-12 000003248 336__ $$aInterview 000003248 520__ $$aGeorge Saslow, M.D., Ph.D., discusses both career and family life, beginning with a recount of his early employment as a teacher and his later work with members of the Psychiatric Security Review Board, an institution that decides how criminals who plead insanity are treated and supervised. Dr. Saslow goes on to discuss the failings of Freud and psychoanalysis and how this led to an interest in psychotherapy. He was also an early leader in group therapy, and talks about his time as a psychiatrist for the scientists at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory during the Manhattan Project Years. Saslow then recounts the creation of the Department of Medical Psychology at the University of Oregon Medical School and his falling out with Dr. Joseph Matarazzo. Saslow concludes with a discussion of his family, including his father, wife Julia, and young granddaughter, Sarah Saslow Brown. 000003248 540__ $$fCC BY-NC 000003248 542__ $$fIn Copyright - Educational Use Permitted 000003248 650__ $$aPsychiatry$$024823 000003248 650__ $$aPhysicians$$024116 000003248 691__ $$aOregon Health & Science University. School of Medicine$$010634 000003248 7102_ $$aOregon Health & Science University$$010958 000003248 720__ $$7Personal$$aAtkinson, Roland M., 1936-2020$$eInterviewer$$041739 000003248 720__ $$7Personal$$aSaslow, George$$eInterviewee$$010758 000003248 8564_ $$9cb76faf5-0378-446e-ba57-b2e2e17d47f0$$s191397$$uhttps://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3248/files/oralhist_79.pdf 000003248 901__ $$aOral histories are considered historical materials. They are the personal recollections and opinions of the individuals involved and, therefore, may contain offensive language, ideas or negative stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a person, period or place. Oral histories should not serve as the sole source of information about an institution or particular historical events. These narratives should in no way be interpreted as the official history of Oregon Health & Science University, nor do they necessarily represent the views of the institution. 000003248 905__ $$a/rest/prod/6t/05/3g/28/6t053g28n 000003248 909CO $$ooai:digitalcollections.ohsu.edu:3248$$poral-history-program 000003248 980__ $$aOral History Collection