Message from the Chair
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In this University, and particularly in this Department, we are in a
period of academic renewal. We are in the process of
enhancing all of our clinical, educational, and research programs and
have recently reorganized the department along “mission lines” for
clinical, educational, and research affairs to highlight our commitment
to each of these critical areas. There is a very positive spirit
in the Department now and there is optimism and opportunity in each of
the many areas in which we are active.
I am particularly pleased with the successful recruitment of several
new members of the department in the past few years. In the past
year, alone, at least six new psychiatrists, three new clinical
psychologists, and two new basic scientists have joined the
department. These new departmental members are focusing in a
variety of areas including, but not limited to, Child & Adolescent
Psychiatry (Drs. Hirsch, Woodard-Faust, Smyth), Consultation Psychiatry
(Dr. Tobin), Forensic Psychiatry (Dr. Yohanna), Anxiety Disorders
(Dr. Phan), Aggressive Disorders (Dr. Noblett), Eating Disorders (Dr.
Chen), Behavioral Genetics (Dr. Jacobson), and Molecular
Neuropsychopharmacology (Dr. Dulawa). In the upcoming year we
plan to recruit even more new faculty in targeted areas including mood
and other disorders. All in all, there is good reason to be
optimistic about our academic activities, and we are looking forward to
the future.
Organization of the Department
The Department has recently been reorganized along “Mission Lines” and,
accordingly, there is now a Director for each of our basic Missions
(Clinical, Education, and Research). Acting in concert with the
Mission Directors are two clinical sections (General Psychiatry and
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry) and two research sections
(Translational & Molecular Neuroscience and Genetics &
Molecular Psychiatry).
Mission Directors:
Director of the
Clinical Mission: Daniel Yohanna, M.D. Dr. Yohanna is a
recent recruit from Northwestern University where he was Medical
Director of the Stone Institute of Psychiatry. Dr. Yohanna is
board certified in both General Psychiatry and in Forensic
Psychiatry. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the American
Psychiatric Association and a Fellow of the Institute of Medicine of
Chicago. Currently, Dr. Yohanna is the President-Elect of the
Illinois Psychiatric Society.
Director of the
Education Mission: Deborah Spitz, M.D. Dr. Spitz has had a
distinguished career in medical education, including Director of
Residency Training at Tufts University and Director of Medical Student
Training here at the University of Chicago. In addition, Dr.
Spitz has received many honors for her work in the field education
including Outstanding Teacher of the Year by both Medical Students and
Psychiatric Residents at Tufts University and by Psychiatric Residents
here at the University of Chicago. Dr. Spitz is board certified
in General Psychiatry and is a Distinguished Fellow of the American
Psychiatric Association. Dr. Spitz is also on the Editorial Board
of the leading peer-reviewed journal for psychiatric education,
Academic Psychiatry.
Director of the
Research Mission: Emil Coccaro, M.D. (Interim). Dr.
Coccaro is the Ellen C. Manning Professor and Chair of the
Department. Dr. Coccaro is the recipient of numerous NIMH and
Foundation Grant Awards and is currently PI on multiple grants from the
National Institute of Mental Health in the area of the biology,
genetics, and treatment of impulsive aggression. Dr. Coccaro is
board certified in General Psychiatry and is both a Distinguished
Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and a Fellow of the
American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. He is currently in
the process of recruiting a permanent Director of the Research
Mission.
Section Chiefs and Clinical Directors:
General Psychiatry: Daniel Yohanna (Interim). The
department is in the processing of recruiting a new Section Chief and
Clinical Director of General Psychiatry and Dr. Yohanna is serving in
this capacity in the context of this process.
Child
& Adolescent Psychiatry: Sharon Hirsch, M.D. Dr.
Hirsch is the Clinical Director and Section Chief (Interim) of Child
& Adolescent Psychiatry. Dr. Hirsch is a recent recruit from
Children’s Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Dr. Hirsch is board
certified in both General Psychiatry and in Child & Adolescent
Psychiatry. Dr. Hirsch specializes in mood, anxiety, and attention
deficit disorders and has been the principal investigator on a number
of clinical psychopharmacological trials in these areas. Dr.
Hirsch is the recipient of a number of awards including Outstanding
Young Women in America and, most recently, Teacher of the Year for the
Child Psychiatry Residency at the Northwestern University School of
Medicine.
Translational
& Molecular Neuroscience: Emil Coccaro, M.D. The
department is in the processing of recruiting a new Section Chief for
this research section and Dr. Coccaro is serving in this capacity in
the context of this process.
Genetics & Molecular Psychiatry: Elliot Gershon, M.D.
Dr. Gershon is the Foundations Fund Professor of Psychiatry and an
acclaimed psychiatric geneticist. Dr. Gershon has been declared a
“Highly Cited Author” by the Center for Scientific Information.
Dr. Gershon is the recipient of numerous NIMH and Foundation Grant
Awards and is currently PI on multiple grants from the National
Institute of Mental Health in the area of the genetics of bipolar and
other mood disorders. Dr. Gershon is board certified in General
Psychiatry and is a Fellow of the American College of
Neuropsychopharmacology. Most recently Dr. Gershon received the
Anna-Monika Prize (Berlin, Germany) for his ground-breaking research on
the role of genetics in bipolar disorder.
Clinical Programs:
General
Psychiatry. The section of General Psychiatry includes
both Hospital-Related Services and Outpatient Services.
Hospital-Related services include a 16-Bed Inpatient Unit currently
focusing on Neuropsychiatry and General Psychiatry, a Consult
Psychiatry Service that interacts with both medical/surgical services
and with the Emergency Department, and an ECT Service that performs ECT
on both inpatients and outpatients. The outpatient service is
staffed by psychaitrists, clinical psychologists, clinical
neuropsychologists,.and licensed clinical social workers. The
outpatient service provides mental health assessment and treatment
services that include state-of-the-art psychopharmacology and a variety
of psychotherapies, including cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy.
The program includes a variety of clinics in mood, anxiety and
personality disorders, schizophrenia, geropsychiatry, neuropsychiatry,
and others.
Child &
Adolescent Psychiatry. The section on Child &
Adolescent Psychiatry, currently, focuses on outpatient and
consultative services for children and adolescents. The section
is staffed by C&A psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, clinical
neuropsychologists, and licensed clinical social workers. The
clinical service provides mental health assessment and treatment
services that include state-of-the-art psychopharmacology and a variety
of psychotherapies. The program includes a variety of clinics in
mood and anxiety disorders, disruptive behavior disorders, attention
deficit disorders, eating disorders, and developmental disorders.
Clinical research in the section includes active NIH funded programs in
eating disorders and in disruptive behavior
disorders.
Research Programs:
Translational &
Molecular Neuroscience. This research section conducts NIH
funded research both in basic and clinical science. Within the
section are seven laboratory groups including four clinically-oriented
research groups and three basic science research groups. The
clinically-oriented groups focus on impulsive aggression, unipolar mood
disorder, anxiety disorder, personality disorder, and addictive
disorder. The basic science groups focus on human and animal behavioral
psychopharmacology and on the molecular mechanisms of action for mood
altering agents.
Genetics &
Molecular Psychiatry. This research section also conducts
NIH funded research both in basic and clinical science. Within
the section are four laboratory groups including one
clinically-oriented research group in the area of the behavioral
genetics of mood disorders, particularly bipolar mood disorder, and
three basic science research groups working in a variety of molecular
genetics areas of relavance to mood, psychotic and cognitive disorders.
Opportunities for
Residents in Research. Opportunities exist for residents
to work with investigators in any of these groups, particularly in the
latter years of the residency. In the last few years, no less
than ten residents have worked with faculty in these two research
sections on a variety of research projects. Just this year we
have established a program that allows residents the opportunity to
spend the equivalent of an entire year in research by funding a fifth
year of training.
Commitment to Teaching
We are investing considerable resources in the revitalization of our
training programs. Education has been elevated up to Mission
Status and has its own Mission Director, Deborah Spitz, M.D. As
such Dr. Spitz oversees all education activities in the department with
specific education directors (e.g., Medical Student Education) under
her. Other training programs in the Department include an
Internship in Clinical Psychology and practicum experience for
second-year social work students.
Clinical Excellence
We believe that clinical excellence follows from broad experience, good
teaching, and scientific savvy. The scientific basis of clinical
excellence will be central to our teaching program. This is
essential for graduates, because they must, over the four or five
decades they practice, be familiar with and critically evaluate
developments and therapies. Beyond that, our faculty is committed
to providing an example of the highest moral and “the secret of the
care of the patient is found in caring for the patient.”
Academic Excellence
Clinical excellence and academic excellence go hand-in-hand as one
informs the other. However, beyond training excellent clinicians
or goal is to train researchers who are able to make academic
contributions to our field. Trainees are afforded intellectual
and scientific stimulation to develop their critical skills and the
depth and breadth of their academic knowledge. While we have
provided research opportunities for all residents, the department now
can support at least one full year of research as past of a
research-track.
The Coming Years
The Department is on track on its own academic renewal. In
addition to strengthening current areas of excellence, we will be
recruiting new faculty to the department so as to broaden our overall
expertise. In addition, new initiatives have been created to
increase the strength of the junior faculty through the creation of
mentorship committees that work to guide the development of this most
important group within our faculty. In addition, to our diverse
Grand Rounds Program which include outside speakers and clinical case
presentations, the department has begun semi-annual “Psychiatry Days”
assembled to keep the full department, including trainees, up to date
on the clinical programs and the research currently taking place in the
department.