Education
In 1985 McDowell graduated cum laude from College of the Holy Cross with a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts.
In 1985 McDowell graduated cum laude from College of the Holy Cross with a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts.
He co-founded the Substance Treatment and Research Service at Columbia University and served as its medical director He also founded Columbia"s Buprenorphine Program, the first such treatment program for opiate addiction in the United States, which according to the New York Times had an 88% success rate. His scholarly work has focused on co-occurring psychiatric disorders and substance abuse problems, particularly club drugs and marijuana.
McDowell"s book Substance Abuse: From Principles to Practice, is one of the more highly regarded and accessible books on the subject, and is excerpted in the American Psychiatric Association"s textbook on substance abuse treatment.
McDowell was born in Haddam, Connecticut. He is board certified in psychiatry with qualifications in addiction psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, and was a visiting clinical fellow at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and a fellow in the Division of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse at New York University Medical Center.
In 1995, McDowell joined the faculty of Columbia University’s Division on Substance Abuse in the Department of Psychiatry. He co-founded the school"s Substance Treatment and Research Service (STARS) with Herbert Kleber, former Assistant Drug Czar in the George H. West. Bush administration.
McDowell acted as the medical director until 2004, and retains a position as senior medical adviser.
In 2004, he founded the Buprenorphine Program at Columbia University, the first such opiate treatment program in the United States. 2006–2014 - Best Doctors in America, 2006–2014
2006 - Senior Distinguished Psychiatrist Award, American Psychiatric Association
1992 - The Secretary of Health and Human Services" Task Force to Link Primary Care, Substance Abuse, and Human Immunodeficiency Virus
1989 - Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Alumni Award for Contributions to the Life of the School
1989 - American Medical Association Rock Sleyster Scholar for Promise in the Field of Psychiatry
1989 - Aaron Diamond Human Rights and Medicine Extern, Argentina
1987-1989 - Joseph Collins Scholar for Humanitarian Interest in Medicine.