Psychiatry Polak had a wide and varying career in medicine, which included a stint as a deputy
coroner and as a medical officer in
Melrose,
Scotland. But his biggest contributions were in the field of
psychiatry, which he practiced for 23 years in
Colorado. In the late 1960's, Polak headed the Research Department at the
Fort Logan Mental Health Center in Denver Colorado. It was while he was working at Fort Logan, that Polak developed a new treatment model he called
Social Systems Intervention. The model was based on studies he had done at the Research Department. He wanted to compare the way psychiatrists, patients and their families looked at the problems they were dealing with. To do this, he surveyed patients at Fort Logan, their families and the psychiatrists who were treating them. He found that patients and their families described the issue in the same way, typically ascribing the problem to interpersonal conflicts between members of the family. Not surprisingly, the psychiatrists said the problem was caused by things like unconscious inner conflicts from childhood. To fully investigate how the psychiatrists thought about their patients, he asked the psychiatrists to predict what the patients and their families would say the problem was. It was assumed that, even though psychiatrists might have had a more sophisticated view of the issue, they certainly would have been able to predict what the patient and family would say about the problem. To his surprise, psychiatrists couldn't do it. No matter how hard they tried, they couldn't predict what their own patients would say. This could mean only one thing: psychiatrists weren't actually listening to their patients and were instead basing their treatments on preconceived notions of the problem. Polak wondered what would happen if psychiatrists actually listened to their patients and treated the problems they were describing. To figure that out, he founded the Crisis Intervention Unit at Fort Logan. The Crisis unit treatment regime was structured to insure that the therapist were always paying attention to what the patient and their families said. The therapists were required to document the patient and family's description of the problem. They were encouraged to bring the families into the therapy sessions and even work with extended families when it appeared that other relatives were playing a role in the situation. What Polak discovered was that psychiatric problems were often caused by internal stresses in a family situation, and that focusing on those problems and treating the whole family resulted in quick and lasting changes. In addition, Polak observed that the worst thing you could do was admit someone to a hospital. When you did that, the hospital provided a buffer between the patient and family, and once that buffer was in place it was very difficult to remove. The patient and family would become dependent on that buffer to protect themselves from interpersonal conflict and upset emotions. The longer a patient was hospitalized, the more institutionalized they would become and the more difficult the treatment. On the other hand, helping people confront family conflict and deal with the associated emotion, lead to lasting changes that eluded other therapy techniques. With these insights in mind, Polak went on to found the Southwest Denver Community Mental Health Center in 1971. At the center, he shifted treatment away from hospitals and into the community. The clinic was deliberately structured so it had minimal space for offices and therapy rooms, to push programs out of the clinic and into the community and homes of their clients. Even in situations where the patient needed more intensive care for medical or psychiatric reasons, he created what he called "In Patient Alternatives." The clinic would rent rooms in private homes to serve as an alternative to in-patient care. The clinic chose homes with nurturing, supportive families, who had the strengths to handle people dealing with various crises. At the same time, there were no structured activities or programs in the homes to prevent the patients from becoming too attached or dependent on the alternative. Over time, the clinic's programs expanded into all sorts of aspects of the community. For example, they started a community-corrections program where they worked with inmates to help them make the transition between prison and the community. Polak's ideas have spread around the world and his techniques are widely used, especially in Britain, where it is one of the models used by the UK's National Health Service. It also widely used in Australia. All told, he has published more than seventy articles on psychiatric research, psychiatry, and
community mental health.
Social entrepreneurship After a trip to
Bangladesh, Polak was inspired to use the skills he had honed while working with homeless veterans and mentally ill patients in Denver to help serve the 800 million people living on a dollar a day around the world. Employing the same tactics he pioneered as a psychiatrist, Polak spent time “walking with farmers through their one-acre farms and enjoying a cup of tea with their families, sitting on a stool in front of their thatched-roof mud–and–wattle homes”.
iDE Based on extended conversations with more than 3,000 small-acreage farmers in developing countries, Polak devised the simple operating principles that formed the foundation for
iDE, which he founded in 1982. iDE has helped more than 45 million people who survive on less than a dollar a day to move out of poverty.
D-Rev In 2007, Polak stepped down as CEO of iDE and co-founded
D-Rev with Silicon Valley technologist Kurt Kuhlmann “to create a design revolution by enlisting the best designers in the world to develop products and ideas that will benefit the 90% of the people on earth who are poor, in order to help them earn their way out of poverty”. D-Rev is a non-profit product development company that designs and delivers market-driven products to improve the health and incomes of people living on less than $4 per day. D-Rev's headquarters are in
San Francisco, California.
Windhorse International In 2007 Polak founded Windhorse International; a private company based on his ideas that business could benefit the bottom billions. The first division of Windhorse International, Spring Health Water (India) Ltd., sells affordable safe drinking water to rural Indians through local kiosk owners using a simple
electro-chlorination technology. Spring Health aims, within ten years, to reach at least 100 million customers who live on less than $2 a day. Spring Health has received investment from
First Light Ventures.
Other Paul was a mentor of
The Girl Effect Accelerator, a two-week
business accelerator program that aims to scale startups in
emerging markets that are best positioned to impact millions of girls in poverty. Paul was also a writer for Unreasonable Group’s UNREASONABLE.is platform, a blog for
social entrepreneurs. His writings include business at the
bottom of the pyramid, operations of
social enterprise, poverty and
international development. Likewise, he served as a 2014 mentor for the Unreasonable Institute. Three principles guide Paul Polak Advisors, Windhorse International and the breadth of Polak's work: • To have a sustainable impact on global poverty, businesses should treat poor people as customers and producers rather than as recipients of charity; • Businesses can generate positive returns for investors by serving consumers in
base-of-the-pyramid populations with average household income in the range of $1–$2 per day; and, • By changing how they design, price, market, and distribute their products, businesses can make a transformative contribution to ending extreme poverty while making profits for their investors. ==Awards, honors, and accomplishments==