Landy
F. Sparr, M.D., M.A., F.A.P.A.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychiatry, OHSU
Director, Forensic
Psychiatry Training Program, OHSU
| 1966 |
B.S.,
History, University of Wisconsin |
| 1973 |
M.A., History, University
of Wisconsin Graduate School of History |
| 1976 |
M.D., University
of Wisconsin School of Medicine |
1976-77
|
Internship, Medicine
& Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine |
1977-79
|
Psychiatry Residency,
Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine |
Complete CV
Clinical and Academic
Interests:
Dr. Sparr joined the
OHSU Department of Psychiatry faculty in 1979. He was a staff psychiatrist
and Director of the Emergency Room Psychiatry Program at the Portland
VA Medical Center from 1979 to 1983. In 1983, he became Acting Chief
of the Mental Health Outpatient Clinic at the VA, and shortly thereafter,
Assistant Chief of Psychiatry Service. In 1987, he was appointed
Chief of Psychiatric Outpatient Services, and in 1994, Acting Chief
of Psychiatry Service. He served as Acting Clinical Director of
the Mental Health Division at the Portland VA from 1995-2000.
Dr. Sparr's clinical
interests are in the areas of psychiatric evaluation, psychodynamic
psychotherapy, and forensic psychiatry. In 1982, Dr. Sparr and his
colleagues were the first to describe and predict the onslaught
of post-traumatic stress disorder disability claims in the Veterans
Administration (VA); they developed a protocol that has been widely
used for the assessment of these claims. In 1983, they were the
first to describe the condition that has become known as factitious
post-traumatic stress disorder whereby individuals make fraudulent
claims of military combat service in Vietnam. In 1989, they published
an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association
describing a hospital protocol for violence reduction among high
risk patients. This protocol has been adopted by hospitals throughout
the United States. Dr. Sparr has written at least three journal
articles that are now considered seminal works.
In 1998, because of
his academic interest in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and
the law, Dr. Sparr was contacted by a lead prosecutor at the United
Nations International War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
to testify in what is known as the Celebici case. His testimony
in that case led directly to his interest in the use of psychiatric
defenses in international criminal law. Dr. Sparr currently teaches
forensic psychiatry to residents and medical students, and is Director of the OSHU Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship Program.
Dr. Sparr's research
interests are in the study of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, and
the international use of mental incapacity defenses. He currently serves as
a journal referee for ten psychiatric publications and has served
as an intramural grant reviewer for VA merit review research proposals
on PTSD.
Honors:
Fellow in the American Psychiatric Association (FAPA), 1990
Distinguished Service Award, Oregon Psychiatric Association, 1994
Distinguished Service Award, Portland VA Medical Center, Mental
Health and
Neuroscience Division Patient Care Line Manager’s Group
Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association, 2003
Memberships:
American Psychiatric Association
Oregon Psychiatric Association
American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
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