Enoch Calloway
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Enoch Calloway | |
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Born | |
Occupation | Advisory Board, Erhard Seminars Training Psychiatrist, Traditions Behavioral Health |
Dr. Enoch Calloway is a medical doctor, specializing in the field of psychiatry. Dr. Calloway is currently on the medical staff[1] at Traditions Behavioral Health, in California. Traditions Behavioral Health provides psychiatric and psychological care to adult and geriatric patients in both acute and subacute settings in California. Dr. Calloway was formerly a member of the advisory board of Werner Erhard's est/Erhard Seminars Training.
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[edit] Involvement, Kirsch/Glass psychiatric article
Dr. Calloway called Dr. Michael Kirsch to speak about the soon to be published article Kirsch wrote with Dr. Leonard Glass. Kirsch and Glass were psychiatrists at San Francisco's Langley Porter Psychiatric Hospital, and wrote an article on the psychological affects of Erhard Seminars Training/est, which appeared was published by the American Psychiatric Association in the American Journal of Psychiatry, March 1977:
Glass and Kirsch decided to write an article describing est-related cases and arranged for it to appear in the prestigious "American Journal of Psychiatry" which is published by the American Psychiatric Association. Shortly before sending the article to the journal in the summer of 1976, Kirsch got a phone call from Dr. Enoch Calloway, Langley Porter's research director who also happened to be an est enthusiast and a member of est's advisory board. Calloway told Kirsch that est officials were "very interested" in seeing a copy of the article before its publication. Kirsch quickly declined Calloway's request; thereafter est officials tried to convince the journal's editor not to publish the article on the grounds that its research could not be authenticated. Persuaded by est's arguments, the editor informed Glass and Kirsch that the article would not be accepted. She changed her mind, however, after hearing from three other medical experts who argued for the article's publication[2].
[edit] References
- ^ Traditions Behavioral Health, Medical Staff, 2006
- ^ Pressman, Steven, Outrageous Betrayal: The dark journey of Werner Erhard from est to exile. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993. ISBN 0-312-09296-2
[edit] External links
- Medical Staff, Traditions Behavioral Health, 2006