After studying at Stanford University, Loren R. Mosher received his MD from
Harvard Medical School in 1961. His psychiatric training took place at Harvard
and at the National Institute of Mental Health's Intramural Program in Bethesda,
MD. After working with Anna Freud, John Bowlby, R. D. Laing, and others in
London, Dr. Mosher served as Chief of the Center for the Studies of
Schizophrenia at the NIMH from 1968 to 1980 during which time he designed and
implemented the Soteria Project. He also established and was first
editor-in-chief of the Schizophrenia Bulletin. In 1980, he studied Italy's
radical new mental health law. From 1981 to 1988, he was professor of psychiatry
at the Uniformed University of the Health Sciences (Maryland). From 1988 to 1998
he was medical director of two county-wide public mental health systems in
Maryland and California. His last posts were as clinical professor of psychiatry
at the University of California at San Diego and director of Soteria Associates
in San Diego. Soteria was complete and at the publisher when Dr. Mosher died in
2004.
After earning his undergraduate degree in American Studies with a minor in
sociology from California State University-Fresno, Voyce Hendrix, LCSW, took an
MS in social work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Before completing his
formal studies, he worked in the field of mental heath in state institutions,
private hospitals, and community-support programs. Hendrix took part in research
examining alternatives to treatment in psychiatric hospitals in the community
(Soteria) and at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto. This research was
funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Hendrix also worked as a
licenced psychiatric technician and served as an administrator. He is now a
licenced clinical social worker practicing in Wisconsin. His 40-year career has
offered him comprehensive experience with a wide spectrum of services and models
for helping those who suffer and experience alternative states of reality and
has taught him that there are no simple answers for disturbed and disturbing
persons in pain.
Washington, D.C.-area freelance writer and editor Deborah C. Fort earned her
PhD in comparative literature from the University of Maryland in 1974. After a
decade of teaching English and writing at the college level, she turned
full-time to writing and editing, specializing in science, education, and
women's issues. Of the numerous books on which she has worked, she is proudest
of her service as association editor on Gifted Young in Science: Potential
Through Performance (National Science Teachers Association, 1989) and A Hand Up:
Women Mentoring Women in Science (Association for Women in Science, 1993, 1995).
Among other projects, she is currently working on a study of the influence of
Paul F. Brandwein on science education in America.