IPA Bulletin
Editor's Note -
Changing of the Guard
David J. Ames
We are in the happy position of having more articles
for this issue and the next than we can easily fit into
the space available. However, it is appropriate that I
say a word about the world situation, IPA’s Tenth
Congress in Nice, our new editor, assistant editor for
occupational therapy matters and treasurer-elect.
Words like “awful,” “terrible” and “outrageous” seem
banal and inadequate to describe the emotions many
of us felt and continue to experience in relation to the
events of September 11, which burst upon our Tenth
Congress in mid-afternoon.
Born amid the controversies of an earlier international
conflict, IPA’s constitution appropriately mandates
that the organization be neutral in matters of politics
and religion. (See Sandy Finkel’s articles on the early
history of IPA in the June and September issues of IPA Bulletin, together with his concluding article in this
issue.) I have striven to uphold these rules during my
editorship—even at the price of removing some very
mild jokes at the expense of Freudian psychoanalysis
and Karl Marx, from an earlier editorial! I am dictating
this column within a few hours of the initial air
assaults on Afghanistan. Whatever we think about the
desirability and appropriateness of the world response
to the attacks of September 11 (and I think the large
IPA membership will encompass most possible shades
of opinion), it is my personal belief that one cannot
practice psychogeriatrics in a humane and compassionate
manner without endorsing the proposition
that deliberately flying airplanes full of civilians,
including children, into crowded buildings occupied
by ordinary men and women going about their daily
working lives, with the intention of causing massive
loss of life, is evil and wicked. Such acts are not the
only evils in our world, but they were the wrongs
uppermost in IPA consciousness last September.
I have written in this column previously about the
inter-connectedness of everyone and everything and
how, as members of IPA, this allows us to help older
people around the world by helping each other. I have
also written in other places of how dependent those of
us who deliver services to older people are on the wider
context of a healthy economy and intact society. With
the cancellation of several international meetings and
a marked reluctance of many individuals to travel at
the present time, the fragility of our activities and
their dependence on freedom of movement and the
rule of law has never been more starkly apparent. This
might be a good time for many of us to read or reread
Karl Popper’s The Open Society and its Enemies.
If we lose our relatively open society there won’t be
much future for IPA.
Nice, Concertos and What’s Important
I very much regret that in this column and other settings,
the marvellous scientific and social program for
IPA’s Tenth Congress, so capably stage managed by
Philippe Robert and his organizing committee, has
been overshadowed by world events. Despite the events
of September 11, the Congress was a great success in
scientific, educational, financial and social terms.
The Côte d’Azur is one of the loveliest places in the
world and I have repeatedly found the French, if one
makes the tiniest attempt to be open and friendly, one of
the warmest, most life affirming and delightful groups
of people on the planet. Driving to Vence and back on
September 12, my wife and I had a marvellous conversation
in broken French with our taxi driver on the subjects
of food and music. As Beethoven’s Third Piano
Concerto emanated from his CD player, I ventured the
opinion that “Le Troisième Concerto de Beethoven, c’est
magnifique, n’est ce pas,” to which he made the unanswerable
and timely reply “tout Beethoven est magnifique”!
I am not sure about Wellington’s Victory or
Christ on the Mount of Olives, but I wholeheartedly
endorse the thrust of his argument! Here was a man
who knew what was important in life.
New Editors to Introduce
Many of you have been wondering who will be the
next editor of IPA Bulletin. It is with tremendous
pleasure that I can now confirm that David Folks, an
IPA member from Omaha, Nebraska, USA, was unanimously
selected by the IPA Board of Directors from a
strong field of applicants to take over from me as
editor for the June 2002 issue for the next four years.
David has a strong track record in administration,
publishing and the practice of our specialty and gave
an excellent talk in a symposium at our Lorne meeting
last February. He will, I am sure, prove an excellent editor of IPA Bulletin. I hope all of you will join
me in giving him every assistance, especially in sending
him articles and snippets of news. David can be
reached at: dgfolks@unmc.edu.
Among other appointments, I am pleased to
announce that we have found an assistant editor for
occupational therapy matters: Jenny Chung, Assistant
Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences,
Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Jenny, who can be
reached at rsjchung@polyu.edu.hk, has already sent
in an excellent article and promises to be one of our
most active and productive assistant editors.
I am also delighted to welcome Thea Heeren as IPA
Treasurer-Elect. She will assist Eric Caine in the important
and difficult task of running the IPA finances,
which appear to have been further strengthened by the
diligence of Philippe Robert and his colleagues through
the financial success of our Nice Congress.
To those of you who have asked in the context of the
rapidly approaching end of my term as IPA Bulletin
editor “whither David Ames,” I can now confirm that
although a life of semi-retirement on a beach somewhere
in Southern Australia becomes a more alluring
prospect by the day, I have agreed to assist my friend
and colleague, Robin Eastwood, who edits IPA’s flagship
publication International Psychogeriatrics, as
deputy editor of that organ until at least mid-2003.
The editor of International Psychogeriatrics and his
very able assistant, Judith Sylph, can be reached at
IPAJ.editor@btinternet.com. I encourage you to make
this the first destination for any research or review
articles you wish to submit to a peer-reviewed journal!
David J. Ames, Editor of the IPA Bulletin, can be contacted at
the Department of Psychiatry, 7th Floor, Charles Connibere Building, Royal
Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Vic 3050, Australia (tel: +61 3 9342 2515,
fax: +61 3 9387 9201, e-mail: dames@unimelb.edu.au).
David Ames
Reprinted from IPA Bulletin, Volume 18, Number
4
Copyright 2012 International Psychogeriatric Association