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Michael
Fitzgerald is Henry Marsh Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
at Trinity College, Dublin. He was the first Profesor Of Child
Psychiartry in Ireland. A Clinical and Research Consultant to
the
Irish Society for Autism and an Honorary member of the Northern Ireland
Institute of Human Relations, he has a doctorate in the area of autism
and has been a researcher in this area since 1973. He trained at St.
Patrick’s Hospital Dublin, Chicago Medical School, and The Maudsley
Hospital and the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases in London. He
has clinically diagnosed over 2000 individuals with autism and
Asperger’s syndrome and has served on the Government Task Force on
Autism and the Family. He has contributed to National and International
Journals on autism and is the author of over 120 publications. He has
written or co written 20 books.
Michael
undertook his internship at the Chicago Medical School U.S.A. in 1970
and worked as a junior doctor at St. Patrick’s Hospital Dublin from
1972 onwards. Then he worked at the Bethlem Royal and Maudsley Hospital
London and the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen’s Square,
London 1975 to 1978. Then in 1979 he was a senior registrar in
Psychiatry King’s College Hospital London and Hospital for Sick
Childrens Group in London. He has been a consultant psychiatrist for
the National Children’s Hospital Dublin (and later incorporated into
the Adelaide and Meath Hospital), Our Lady’s Hospital for Sick Children
Dublin, and the South Western Area Health Board in Dublin. He received
an M.B. from the University College Galway and an M.D. from T.C.D. He
is a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in England.
In 1996
he became the first professor of child psychiatry in Ireland – the
Henry Marsh Professor of Child Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin. He
is the clinical and research consultant for the Irish Society for
Autism. He became an associate member of the British Psychoanalytic
Society and the International Psychoanalytic Association in 1980 and
remains the only psychoanalyst recognised by the International
Psychoanalytic Association in the Republic of Ireland (2005) and was
the first to practice here with this recognition. He is a member of the
British Institute of Psychoanalysis.
He initiated the first Masters programme in Adult Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy in the 1980’s. In the 1990’s he developed with Dr. Mary
Smith a Masters programme in Child and Adolescent Psychoanalytic
Psychotherapy at Trinity College Dublin and with Nessa Childers, Ross
Skelton, Ann Murphy and others a Masters programme in Adult
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at Trinity College Dublin. He founded the
Journal the Irish Forum for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy and the Irish
Journal for Child Psychotherapy. He founded the Irish Standing
Conference on Psychotherapy. He was co-chair of the Irish
Institute of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. He has been a tutor in
Psychotherapy Queens University Belfast. He has supervised staff in
training in psychotherapy at St. Ita’s Hospital, St. Loman’s Hospital,
Artane Day Centre, Vergemount Hospital and St. Patrick’s Hospital
Dublin. He had a long period of experience as consultant child
psychiatrist to an Inpatient Unit for child and
adolescent
psychiatric problems as well as Autism and Learning Disability in
Dublin. he has also consults to two Child Psychiatric Clinics and has
consulted to one over 25 years. He also consults to two Paediatric
Hospitals.
He is on the Editorial Advisory Board of the European Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry Journal, Journal of the Irish Psychiatric
Association, and the Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine. He is a
past chairman of the Child Psychiatry Section and Psychotherapy Section
of the Irish Division Royal College of Psychiatrists and of the
Association of Child Psychology and Child Psychiatry Irish Branch. He
has been a member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in London
Psychotherapy Section, Psychotherapy Training (PTSAC) Committee,
Learning Disability Executive and Child Psychiatry Executive of the
Royal College of Psychiatrists. He was also a founding member of the
European Association of Psychotherapy (EAP) in Holland. He was involved
in the early stages with the development of the European Federation of
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy.He has worked in the field of autism since
1973. His other special interest is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder.
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