Strassman (September 19, 1922 – January 30, 2011) was a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, medical educator, and clinical researcher.
He is the father of ventriloquist David Strassman.Strassman, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War, is best known for his documentation of a syndrome that eventually became known as posttraumatic stress disorder, a result of insights gained from interviews with prisoners of war who had been held in North Korea.
He described the condition in the paper "A Prisoner of War Syndrome: Apathy as a Reaction to Severe Stress", published with two colleagues in June 1956 in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
Strassman conducted the interviews over several months aboard a hospital ship.
He concluded that the prisoners had not been "brainwashed", as some people had alleged.
Rather, they withdrew as a defensive adjustment to the stress of being a prisoner of war.
The withdrawal and suppressed emotional responses, he noted, could become so severe and complete that it could lead to a “maladaptive state of dependency in which he (the prisoner) ceases to take care of himself even to the point of death.” He labeled the syndrome “apathy” and distinguished it from a catatonic stupor, or depression.He was a staff physician at the Veterans Administration (VA) Center in Los Angeles and an instructor in clinical psychiatry at the medical school of the University of California, Los Angeles when he published the paper.