Biographical Statement
I was born in Maui on August 9, 1953, to the Rev. Abraham Akaka, a Chinese–Native Hawaiian Protestant minister and community activist, and Mary Louise Jeffrey, a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. His East and her West had met as summer camp counselors in Rocky Mountain National Park. She crossed the Pacific in wartime to marry him. I was their fifth child, the only son—Dad was happy. I grew up surfing and bicycling. I sold newspapers, worked in a bicycle shop, and worked in the Pineapple Cannery. At Case-Western Reserve University in Cleveland, I dated, did endocrine research, and volunteered in a free clinic.
After graduating, I pedaled my bicycle across Canada from Niagara Falls to Vancouver before catching a plane back to Hawaii and University of Hawaii Medical School. From 1980-83, I completed five Hawaii Ironman Triathlons. Clerkships in San Francisco, Cooperstown, New York City, and New Orleans led to an internal medicine internship and psychiatric residency at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. I then did house calls on psychiatric emergencies in all five boroughs for the City of New York, usually with social workers, sometimes with locksmiths and police, rarely with SWAT teams.
My wife, Gayln, and I love New York, but we returned to Honolulu in 1991 so that our children could grow up surrounded by our families. I became medical director of the Diamond Head CMHC. I train medical students and residents there as an associate clinical professor of the University of Hawaii department of psychiatry. On 9/9/2001, I flew to Hawaii from Dulles after an APA meeting on the same flight that 36 hours later was hijacked on 9/11. Since then, I spend many more evenings at home with my family than I used to. Greatest source of pride: my family.
Candidacy Statement
The recorder of the Assembly is the keeper of our history. Our records are the embodiment of our debate, our efforts to define the best of whom we are and what we seek to accomplish. What kind of history will we leave for those who follow?
In old Hawaii, the island of Kahoolawe sustained human life. The remains of fishing villages and stone factories can still be seen. But the land was devastated, rendered barren by decades of bombing practice by the U.S. Navy; the fresh water table below it was cracked and ruined.
We physicians have also taken huge hits. Many colleagues have given up. But neither Kahoolawe nor our predecessors gave up. On Kahoolawe, hardier plants are beginning to sprout by shifting to nourishment by rain. Our predecessors left us a history to use as pillars upon which we can lean as we restore our strength and upon which we can climb again to restore the vision of APA. Our turn is now.
I joined the APA Assembly in 1992, as deputy representative of the Caucus of American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian Psychiatrists. I have served on the Assembly committees on Public and Community Psychiatry, Procedures, Planning, and MURs (chairing it twice) and currently serve on the Assembly Executive Committee as Area 7 deputy representative. I also served on the Committee on Government Relations and the Joint Commission on Government Relations, and now serve on the APAPAC board and as an APA delegate to the AMA.
Two Hawaii governors appointed me to Hawaii's Medical Advisory Board: I served as chair during my second term. President Clinton appointed me to the President's Committee on Mental Retardation.
I understand the art of politics. I know how political organizations are structured. I have used this understanding both to get the job done and to prevent harm. In every organizational setting in which I have worked—whether presiding as vice speaker of the House of Delegates of the Hawaii Medical Association or working in a committee, board, council, or delegation, whether testifying before APA, the AMA, my state legislature, or the Congress of the United States of America—I have been relentless in advocating for our patients and our profession. Over 10 years ago I persuaded a U.S. senator to become one of the earliest to cosponsor Sen. Pete Domenici's parity bill. Thirteen years ago I put together a coalition that grew to include physicians, patients, parents, psychologists, nurses, social workers, and business, community, and government leaders. On March 8, 2005, 13 years later, this coalition yet again defeated the Crash Course Prescribers in the home state of their chief national architect.
Vision. Energy. Tenacity. I have gotten the job done. I am confident that I will serve you well as Assembly recorder.
Please entrust to me the keepership of our history. Please give me your vote for the recorder of the Assembly of APA.
Aloha and Mahalo.
Biographical Statement
Hard work has been second nature for me starting at an early age. A combination of scholarship money and four years of work/study efforts helped pay for college and for medical school loans, and hospital jobs paid the bills.
During the period I attended University of Alabama Medical School, psychiatry was not held in high regard. When revealing a desire to be a psychiatrist, I was told, “Psychiatry is what you do when you don't want to hurt someone.” That was not the case at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, where I became chief resident.
I was hired as a faculty member at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, and after several formative years running the Outpatient Clinic at the University of Louisville Hospital, I went into private practice. I have been a teacher of medical students and residents over the years and now am a clinical associate professor.
I divide my day seeing both inpatients and outpatients and in the past have had work experiences including five years as a director of an inpatient unit, a chemical dependency group leader with ASAM certification, and even for a time the director of a mental health management group. Seeing a significant geriatric population, I am certified with added qualifications in geriatric psychiatry.
I met my wife when we were both crisis-center volunteers in my third year in medical school. She is obviously a saint to still love and care for me for 29 years. I have three terrific children; although now grown, they fortunately do not live far away.
I am an active volunteer in the community and on several boards, including the Kentucky Mental Health Association. I teach Tai Chi to seniors twice weekly and am also a hospice volunteer.
Candidacy Statement
It is an honor to be a candidate for recorder of the Assembly, a wonderful institution I have served for 16 years with passion and dedication. As an Area representative, I have been privileged to guide Area activities, and as the chair of the Committee on Planning, I am responsible for decisions ranging from the smallest Assembly details to broader budgetary and long-range planning issues. Continuous innovation and improvement, asking the tough questions, consensus building, and mutual respect have been hallmarks of both leadership roles. Because this is a critical time in our profession I have been actively working with Assembly leadership and the APA Board on scope-of-practice issues and equitable access and funding for psychiatric care. I continue to fight aggressively any interference in our practicing the best quality medicine possible. By authoring action papers with those in other Areas and founding the Assembly District Branch Best Practices Award, I have proven my commitment for sharing information and inclusiveness. I am a true believer in the collective wisdom of the Assembly and how our diversity and energy effectively represent membership. The following Assembly activities exemplify my past and current efforts, and I have listed only authored action papers that advocate for membership. Together we have become a powerful voice for our patients and profession, the most creative and vital force in APA, and I would greatly appreciate your vote.
Assembly Activity
•
Chair, Assembly Committee on Planning: 2003-
•
Assembly Executive Committee: 1999-
•
Area 5 Representative: 2003-
•
Area 5 Deputy Representative: 1999-2003
•
Kentucky District Branch Representative: 1993-99
•
Kentucky District Branch Deputy Representative: 1989-93
•
Action Papers: Principal or Co-author of Over 15 Passed Action Papers
•
Originator: Assembly District Branch Best Practices Award
•
Past: Assembly Liaison to the Ethics Committee Area 5 Representative to Assembly Managed Care Task Force Reference Committee Chair and Member
Authored Action Papers Advocating for Our Profession
•
APA Telemedicine Support, May 1993
•
Facilitating Assistance to APA Members for Economic Survival Using Secondary Markets Created by High Managed Care Penetration, May 1996
•
Psychiatrist Utilization in Insurance System Mergers, November 1996
•
Integrity and Ethics of Employers, Decision Makers, and Purchasers for Group Healthcare Systems, May 1997
•
Independent Review of Appealed Insurance Company Decisions, May 1998
•
Addressing Mental Health Needs of Psychiatrists, November 1998
•
Exclusion for Insurance Coverage Using a “Chronic Illness” Rationale for Some of Our Most Frequently Diagnosed Illnesses Including Major Depression and Schizophrenia, November 1998
•
APA Responsivity to Membership, May 2001
Other APA Activity
•
Kentucky Psychiatric Association: Held All Executive Committee Offices Including Ethics Chair
•
Past Member, Council on Healthcare Systems and Financing and Private Practice Committee, among others
•
Author, Consultation Section, APA Ethics Primer