
Psychiatr News December 7, 2007
Volume 42, Number 23, page 31
© 2007 American Psychiatric Association
Information on APA's Election: ABOUT THE CANDIDATES
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CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT-ELECTDonna M. Norris, M.D.

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Full-Time Private Practice, Child, Adult, and Forensic Psychiatry, 1974-
APA Secretary-Treasurer, 2006- Area 1 Trustee, 2003-06
APA Assembly Speaker, 1998-99 Chair, Task Force to Review
DSM-V Disclosures and Interests, 2006- Vice President,
Norfolk, Massachusetts Medical Society, 2006- AMA Delegate, 2007-
Policy Committee, Mental Health America, 2000- Clinical
Assistant Professor Psychiatry, Beth Israel/Harvard Medical, 2001-
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I am honored to be a candidate for APA president-elect. As APA president, I
will bring to this office over 30 years of steadily increasing APA leadership
and responsibility. My APA career began as a Falk Fellow. That initial
experience set me on a lifelong journey of mentorship of medical students,
members-in-training, and early career psychiatrists, all of whom embody so
much of our vitality and hope for the future.
An effective president needs to know how APA works. I have represented our
profession in clinical and academic settings, as well as before judicial,
legislative, and regulatory bodies, served on the APA Board of Trustees, as
Assembly speaker, as Area 1 trustee, and now as APA secretary-treasurer. In
these capacities and in full time private practice of child, adult, and
forensic psychiatry, I have been your advocate and an advocate for our
patients—children, elderly, chronic and persistently mentally ill,
minorities, and the underserved. As APA treasurer, I work to maintain
transparency regarding funding sources and a balanced budget. As APA
secretary, I chair the Task Force on Interests and Disclosures of Conflicts
for DSM-V to ensure strict disclosures of potential conflicts and to
maintain the integrity of our work.
This APA election is about strong advocacy for our patients and for those
who are uninsured or underinsured and have limited access to needed
nondiscriminatory psychiatric services. Our patients deserve the same mental
health benefits as they would receive for any other medical care. This
election is about ensuring that there are sufficient inpatient beds across the
country to meet our patients' needs. This election is about preventing the
continuous assaults on our patients' privacy and rights to confidentiality.
This election is about providing adequate support systems so that patients
receive the treatment they require and are not compromised by severely
restricted state formularies and the uncertain funding of Medicare and
Medicaid. This APA election is about a sustained fight against stigmatizing
our patients and our profession and about strong advocacy to address member
concerns regarding outside influences on medical practices such as pay for
performance and quality of care definitions. This APA election is about
constant vigilance to guard against attempts to severely restrict funding for
medical research and medical education. This APA election is about what we
individually and APA can do to meet these challenges. Additional legislative
priorities include (1) inclusion under Medicare Part D of medications which
our patients need, (2) scope of practice appropriate to training, (3)
increased funding for child psychiatry, for children's mental health parity
(SCHIP), and for the critical workforce shortages in child psychiatry, and (4)
improved access to mental health services for the military and their
families.
Our nation stands ready to reform our current health care system. We
understand best our patients' needs for integrated quality mental health
services and need to be a creative part of this process. Included in any
health care reform plan must be:
- Full parity
- Fairness in managed care reimbursement
- Reduced stigma for patients and the profession
- Elimination of disparities in health care
- Support for research and education
My three decades of APA leadership and advocacy experience uniquely qualify
me to collaboratively tackle the challenges facing our patients and our
profession. I ask for your help and your vote.
Primary Professional Activities And Sources of Income
Professional Activities
- 100%—Private practice of child, adolescent, adult, and forensic
psychiatry
Income
- 100%—Private practice of child, adolescent, adult, and forensic
psychiatry
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