Dr. Enoch Gordis has devoted his career to studying the causes,
prevention, and treatment of alcohol abuse and alcoholism. In 1986, he was
appointed Director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
NIAAA, a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' National
Institutes of Health, is the principal federal agency for research on the
causes, consequences, treatment and prevention of alcohol-related problems.
Dr. Gordis has served as Professor of Clinical Medicine at Mount
Sinai School of Medicine in New York since 1979 and as Adjunct Professor and
visiting physician at Rockefeller University in New York since 1971. He has
conducted research on the metabolism of alcohol and alcohol withdrawal and
published articles on the clinical evaluation of alcoholism treatment,
biological markers of drinking, disulfiram therapy, and the relationship
between science and social policy.
Dr. Gordis is a well-known lecturer and author on alcohol abuse and
alcoholism. He has served as associate editor of Alcoholism:
Clinical and Experimental Research since 1979 and reviews manuscripts
for the Clinical Investigation Journal of Lipid
Research, Medical Letter, the European Journal of Clinical Textbook of Addictive Disorders.
He also serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Studies
on Alcohol and Molecular Psychiatry and on the international editorial
advisory board for Addiction Biology.
Gordis E, Beresford, TP (1992). Alcoholism
and the elderly patient. In Oxford Textbook of Geriatric
Medicine. Oxford, England: Oxford Medical
Publications.
Gordis E, Fuller RK (1994). Alcoholism. In
Current Therapy in Gastroenterology and Liver Disease,
4th edition. Boston: Mosby.
Gordis E, Fuller F (1997). Therapeutic
principles and problems - Alcoholism. In Current Therapy in
Adult Medicine, 4th edition. Boston: Mosby.
Gordis E (1998).
What we know: Conceptual advances in alcoholism research. Principles of Addiction Medicine (second ed.). Chevy Chase,
MD: American Society of Addiction Medicine.