Alexander Danilin
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Alexander Gennadievich Danilin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Генна́диевич Дани́лин) (b. March 12, 1960) is a Russian psychotherapist,[1] psychiatrist[2] and physician-narcologist, author of ten books, numerous articles, lectures and trainings on addiction psychology and existential psychotherapy.[3]
the Soviet Union (1960–1991)
Russia (1991–up to the present)
Alexander Gennadievich Danilin | |
|---|---|
| Александр Геннадиевич Данилин | |
| Born | March 12, 1960 |
| Citizenship |
|
| Medical career | |
| Profession | psychiatrist, narcologist, writer |
| Field | psychiatry, narcology |
He is married and has two sons.
Since 2003, Alexander Danilin has been an anchorman of radio program Silver Threads (Serebryanye Niti) that is broadcast by Radio Rossii[4] and is dedicated to the human soul in all its manifestations. A number of the media reported that the Danilin was engaged in practical psychotherapy in Moscow clinics for over 20 years. He is a member of the International Psychoanalytical Association and the head of the drug abuse unit in the Moscow drug abuse hospital No 17.[5] The media and websites of wholesale book-selling companies published information that the book by Danilin LSD: Hallucinogens, Psychedelia, and Addiction Phenomenon[6] was withdrawn from the market by the officers of the Federal Drug Control Service of Russia and Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation.[7] Danilin's articles by about problems of Russian psychiatry (Dead End,[8] Any Diagnosis in Psychiatry is a Myth,[9] etc.) often caused heated controversy.