ROBERT
L. DU PONT, M.D., For more than 30 years, Robert L. DuPont, M.D. has been
a leader in drug abuse prevention and treatment. Among his many contributions
he was the first Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (1973-1978)
and was the second White House Drug Chief (1973-1978). Following this gaovernment
career, in 1978 Dr. DuPont became the founding president of the Institute for
Behavior and Health, Inc. (www.ibhinc.org), and in 1982, with his longtime colleague,
Peter Bensinger, he founded Bensinger DuPont & Associates.
Dr. DuPont has written for publication more than two hundred professional articles and eighteen books and monographs on a variety of health-related subjects. His books include Getting Tough on Gateway Drugs: A Guide for the Family, A Bridge to Recovery: An Introduction to Twelve-Step Programs (written with John P. McGovern, M.D.) and The Selfish Brain: Learning from Addiction. In 2005 Hazelden, the nation's leading publisher of books on addiction and recovery, will publish three books on drug testing by Dr. DuPont: Drug Testing in Drug Abuse Treatment, Drug Testing in Schools, and Drug Testing in the Criminal Justice System.
His activities in the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM), where
he is a Life Fellow, include chairing the forensic science committee and having
been a founding member of the Medical Review Officer Committee. He is also a
Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and was chairman of
the Drug Dependence Section of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) from
1974 to 1979.
Dr. DuPont maintains an active psychiatric practice specializing in addiction
and the anxiety disorders and has been Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the
Georgetown University School of Medicine since 1980. His recent books on anxiety
disorders, published by John Wiley & Sons, include: The Anxiety Cure: An
Eight-Steph Program to Getting Well and The Anxiety Cure for Kids: A Guide for
Parents.
Dr. DuPont graduated from Emory University and then received an M.D. degree
in 1963 from the Harvard Medical School. He completed his psychiatric training
at Harvard and the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. He worked
for the District of Columbia Department of Corrections heading parole and half-way
house services before founding the DC Narcotics Treatment Administration, the
city-wide addiction treatment program that was the model for the nation's unprecedented
commitment to drug abuse treatment in the early 1970s. Dr. DuPont's signature
role throughout his career has been to focus on the public health goal of reducing
the use of illegal drugs.
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© Bensinger, DuPont & Associates 2004