
Mitchell S. Rosenthal, M.D.
President Mitchell S. Rosenthal, M.D.
is a pioneer in the field of substance abuse treatment,
who introduced treatment methods at Phoenix House that
have become standard throughout the field. For more than
35 years, he has been engaged in building Phoenix House
into the nation's leading private, non-profit substance
abuse services agency.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Dr. Rosenthal earned his
B.A. from Lafayette College in 1956 and his M.D. from
the State University of New York's Downstate Medical
Center in 1960. After completing residencies in adult
psychiatry at Kings County Psychiatric Hospital and child
and community psychiatry at the Staten Island Mental
Health Society, he was commissioned lieutenant commander
and assigned as staff psychiatrist to the U.S. Naval
Hospital in Oakland, California in 1965.
Dr. Rosenthal's work with substance abusers began at
the Oakland Naval Hospital, where he established the
armed service's first therapeutic community for the treatment
of alcoholism, drug addiction, and character disorders.
He left the Navy in 1967 to become deputy commissioner
for rehabilitation of New York City's newly created Addiction
Services Agency, where he built Phoenix House into a
city-wide network of residential treatment facilities
and storefront centers.
When New York City's growing fiscal problems forced
the Addiction Services Agency to curtail support for
this treatment network in 1970, Dr. Rosenthal resigned
his government post to head the non-profit Phoenix House
Foundation that took over operation of the system. Since
that time, Phoenix House has grown in size and scope,
developed a broad array of services and expanded operations
beyond New York City and to seven additional states.
Long a leading authority and spokesman for the treatment
field, Dr. Rosenthal chaired the New York State Advisory
Council on Substance Abuse from 1985 to 1997. He has
been a White House advisor on drug abuse, a special consultant
to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and a
special consultant to the New York State Assembly's Standing
Committee on Mental Health.
Dr. Rosenthal was among the first to recognize the
vital role families play in arresting drug abuse. His
1972 book, Drugs, Parents, and Children: The Three-Way
Connection, is considered the seminal work on this subject,
and he has regularly appeared on NBC's Today Show to
discuss issues of childhood and adolescence.
A lecturer in psychiatry at Columbia University College
of Physicians and Surgeons, he has served as president
of the American Association of Psychoanalytic Physicians
and chaired the New York Regional Chapter of Therapeutic
Communities of America.
Dr. Rosenthal is a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations. He received the George Washington Kidd Award
in 1972 from Lafayette College and was honored by the
New York Regional Chapter of Therapeutic Communities
of America in 1976. In 1995, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
presented him with the Director's Community Leadership
Award, and in 1998, The Bridge honored him with their
Special Recognition Award. In 2002, he was awarded an
honorable degree (Doctor of Humane Letters) by the State
University of New York's Downstate Medical Center.
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