mental health dialogue change

Transcription

mental health dialogue change
Brain
mental
health
Development
&
Lifespan
Repair
curriculum
ACCESS
Resilience
Research
Advocacy
Public
Integration
Interprofessional
HELP
Dialogue
CHANGE
SKILLS
DEPRESSION
University of Toronto Psychiatry
Annual Report 2011-2012
Published by the Department of Psychiatry
250 College Street, 8th Floor
Toronto, ON M5T 1R8
Editor: Suzanna Chang
Phone: 416-979-4275
E-mail: suzanna.chang@utoronto.ca
http://www.utpsychiatry.ca/
Design: Sheila Dalton
http://sheiladalton.com/
table of contents
The Chair’s Report
Awards & Honours
Vice-Chair and Education Reports
4
7
11
Report of the vice-Chair, Clinical
11
Report of the Vice-Chair, Education
14
undergraduate medical education
20
Postgraduate Medical Education
22
Fellowship Program
29
Continuing mental health education
32
Divisions
36
Division of Adult Psychiatry & Health systems
36
Division of brain and Therapeutics
38
division of child psychiatry
41
division of consultation liaison Psychiatry
45
division of equity, gender and population
50
Division of Forensic PSychiatry
54
division of geriatric psychiatry
57
The Division of Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship (PHES)
61
Fully Affiliated Sites
65
Baycrest
65
CAMH
68
hospital for sick children
74
mount sinai hospital
77
St. Michael’s Hospital
81
University health network (UHN)
89
women’s college hospital
93
Community Affiliated Sites
97
George Hull Centre
97
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
99
North York General Hospital
101
surrey place centre
105
Faculty Listing
Funding
PublicationS
109
131
176
Journal Articles
176
Book Chapters
223
books
228
Publications232
Administration
Fast Facts
233
234
The Chair’s Report
Metamorphosis
The past year has been one of
transformation. Our Department has undergone immense
changes over the course of a
few short months. Our major
teaching hospitals are settling
into bright new clinical facilities across the city – most
notably CAMH, which opened
three new buildings at the Queen Street Site in the
spring of 2012. Fundraising and awareness campaigns
have also been launched by several of the hospitals;
and while they are sure to have a positive impact financially, the changes taking place in the community
will be invaluable.
With the unveiling of our five-year strategic plan, the
department has undertaken a process that will engage
a broad community in articulating our core strengths
and creating an actionable, inspiring vision. As a
group, we will explore the difference we aim to make
in the world and what will we focus on to do that.
The four priorities outlined in this plan — integration, development, brain and dialogue — will help to
steer us in the right direction until 2017.
Our focus will be on continually improving our education programs, focusing our research on all stages of
development, recognizing and reinforcing the importance of neuroscience in our field, and increasing
dialogue in public and professional spheres. For a full
outline of our strategic plan, please visit our website
at http://www.utpsychiatry.ca/about/strategic-plan/.
As with all visions, they are easier to articulate than
achieve. However, I believe that we will all remain
committed to realizing the goals of this plan; the future success of our department depends on it.
Following a process of extensive review, consultation
with stakeholders, discussion at the Executive and
Senior Advisory Committees, we reorganized our
department structure from 14 programs to 8 divisions.
We are excited about this endeavor and expect it will
bring positive changes by increasing collaboration in
closely related areas. This realignment will expand on
current strengths and facilitate growth in new areas of
scholarship and will help us to foster: integration, cohesion, inter-professionalism, engagement and meaningful partnerships. Central to this development is a
commitment with our hospital partners to align the
University Department of Psychiatry and the hospitals’ respective strategic plans, support and resources.
On the education front, we have remained a leader
in post-graduate training with three newly accredited subspecialty programs: Geriatrics, Forensics,
and Child/Adolescent Psychiatry. I am proud to say
that the University of Toronto is the only university
to receive accreditation from the Royal College of
Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) for all
three psychiatry subspecialties. I would be remiss not
to reiterate the exemplary efforts and planning of the
program directors and their committees. It is through
their hard work and dedication that this accreditation
was achieved. I cannot place enough emphasis on the
importance of our education programs: we are mentoring the next generation of researchers, clinicians,
and educators, whose efforts will change the world.
As outlined in the report from the Vice-Chair of
Research, Allan Kaplan, the department’s research
contributions have been tremendous. According to
the 2010 Thomson ISI rankings, the Department of
Psychiatry was ranked first in all of Canada in terms
of both publications and citations. Research funding
for the 2011-2012 academic year continued to be impressive, with our faculty securing over $79 million in
Chair’s report
total research funding — the majority of which is peer
reviewed. This represents a 7.7 % increase from last
year. Research is a major focus of this University, and I
am proud that our department continues to contribute
to our reputation as the number one research university in Canada.
AWARDS
One of the great pleasures of heading up such a wonderful department is acknowledging the numerous
achievements our members have garnered. If I were
to mention every one of them, my message would be
more of an epic novel. Instead, I will highlight just a
few which are truly outstanding:
• Dr. Ivan Silver has been awarded the President’s
Teaching Award for 2012. This university-wide
Award recognizes sustained excellence in teaching, research in teaching, and the integration of
teaching and research. Congratulations Ivan on this
prestigious honour!
• Dr. Ari Zaretsky has been selected to receive the
2012 Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy and Mentorship in Postgraduate Medicine.
• Dr. Bruce Pollock - Designation of Fellow of the
Canadian Psychiatric Association (2012)
• Dr. Claire De Souza has been awarded the 2012
Association for Academic Psychiatry (AAP) Junior
Faculty Award. This award recognizes promising junior faculty who have significant teaching responsibility and who show interest in and potential for
a continuing academic career. The award ceremony
will take place at this year’s AAP Annual Meeting
on October 11, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee.
• Dr. David Goldbloom is the recipient of the
Diamond Jubilee Medal for 2012. The Queen
Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal is a new
commemorative medal created to mark the 2102
celebrations of the 60th anniversary of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s accession to the Throne as
Queen of Canada. The Medal is a tangible way for
Canada to honour Her Majesty for her service to
this country and also serves to honour significant
contributions and achievements by Canadians.
• Dr. Gail Robinson became a distinguished fellow
of the Canadian Psychiatric Association
• Dr. Gary Rodin received the Life Time Achievement Award for making exceptional and enduring contributions to psychosocial oncology &
was appointed to the Editorial Board of PsychoOncology.
• Dr. Joel Sadavoy has just been awarded the 2012
American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
Diversity Award (AAGP)
• Dr. Mark Halman - recipient of the 2012 Casey
Award
• Dr. Sagar Parikh, Dr. Gail Erlick Robinson, Dr.
Joel Sadavoy, and Dr. Ari Zaretsky were each
named as Fellow of the CPA in recognition of
their exemplary contributions towards excellence
in psychiatry.
• Dr. Susan Lieff (Vice-Chair, Education) has been
recognised by the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada with the 2012 award for Outstanding Contribution to Faculty Development in
Canada.
• Dr.Daniel Blumberger- NCDEU New Investigator Award, May 2012 from the American Society
of Clinical Psychopharmacology
PROMOTIONS
Dr. Peter Giacobbe, Dr. Kim Miller, Dr. James Downar
was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1,
2011.
Drs. Ofer Agid, Paul Arnold, Kenneth Fung, Sonu
Gaind, Romina Mizrahi, Ronald Ruskin, and Vicky
Stergiopoulos” were promoted to Associate Professor
effective July 1, 2012
Dr. Roger McIntyre was promoted to Full Professor
effective July 1, 2012.
LEADERSHIP POSITIONS
This year there have been a number of important leadership appointments among our faculty members:
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
5
Chair’s report
• Dr. Ari Zaretsky has been appointed as Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre, effective September 1, 2012.
thoughts in the full report that follows. I would also
like to thank the administrative staff; their efforts are
integral to all we have accomplished.
• Dr. Paul Links was appointed as Chair/Chief of
the Department of Psychiatry in the Schulich
School of Medicine & Dentistry effective January
2012
We have the capacity to transform the future of Psychiatry, and are poised at this pivotal moment. There is
an increasing need for mental health care, and public interest in mental health issues is growing. As we
begin a new academic year, I know each of you will
continue to be progressive through interdisciplinarity,
collaboration, and risk taking. Together, we can make
lasting contributions to our communities in areas of
research, education and clinical care.
• Dr. Robert Madan has been appointed as Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Baycrest Hospital, effective April
2012
As I mentioned, these are but a few of the many
wonderful achievements our members have received
in recognition of their work. A complete list can be
found towards the end of this book.
These remarkable accomplishments oblige us to provide increasing levels of support. In an increasingly
cold financial climate, we will continue to look for
ways to support our department members and their
work. Plans for an advancement officer are well underway, and our executive leaders continue to try and find
ways to make the most of our budgets.
COMINGS And GOINGS
After more than 15 years of service in this department,
Dr. Brenda Toner has accepted the position of Graduate Coordinator at the Institute of Medical Science.
The Fellowship Program has been well-served by
her outstanding leadership since December 1st, 2003.
Brenda has truly made an indelible contribution to our
department. Under her direction the Fellowship Executive Committee has doubled in size, and the quality
of programming has been exemplary.
For her dedication, passion, enthusiasm, and many
more wonderful traits, she will be deeply missed.
In closing
At the end of my second year as Chair, I would like to
thank the members of my Executive and Senior Advisory Committees for their continued hard work and
support, and the site chiefs and faculty members for all
their contributions to the department. They share their
I invite you to review the full report of our activities
for 2011-2012, and see for yourself the exciting things
we have accomplished. Thank you for your interest
and your support.
With best wishes,
L.Trevor Young, MD, FRCPC
Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry
Awards & Honours
Dr. Gili Adler Nevo received the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Canadian
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry annual meeting CFAK Junior Scholar Award
Drs. Ofer Agid, Paul Arnold, Kenneth Fung, Sonu Gaind, Romina Mizrahi, Ronald Ruskin, and Vicky
Stergiopoulos were approved by the Provost for promotion to the rank of Associate Professor.
Dr. Jericho Asinas successfully completed her CNA Certification in Mental Health.
Dr. Michaela Beder – Resident Psychotherapy Award: Best clinical case report submitted by a Resident
Dr. Michaela Beder, a PGY-4 resident in our residency training program was just awarded the 2012 Association
of Academic Psychiatry Fellowship Award. This prestigious award is a testament to Michaela’s outstanding work
as a heath advocate who has created innovative ways to teach and effectively communicate her ideas to other
physicians, other mental health professionals and the greater community at large.
Dr. Joe Beitchman and E.B. Brownlie received The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA)
Journal Editors’ Award, August 2011. Dr. Daniel Blumberger - NCDEU New Investigator Award, May 2012 from the American Society of Clinical
Psychopharmacology
Dr.Virginia Boquiren received a UHN Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care Travel Award.
Dr. Alice Charach received the Dalhousie Award
Dr. Tziporah Cohen – Physician Development Award, Medical Staff Association. March 2012
Dr. Sarah Colman – Mary Seeman Award for Achievment in the area of Psychiatry and Humanities
Dr. Claire De Souza has been awarded the 2012 Association for Academic Psychiatry (AAP) Junior Faculty
Award. This award recognizes promising junior faculty who have significant teaching responsibility and who
show interest in and potential for a continuing academic career. The award ceremony will take place at this year’s
AAP Annual Meeting on October 11, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee.
Dr. Gina Dimitropoulos has taken on the role of Clinical Specialist in the Eating Disorders Program and is now
the Family Therapy Lead within Eating Disorders.
Dr. James Downar was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1, 2011.
Dr. Elyse Dubo was the inaugural winner of the Sunnybrook Education Action Committee’s Patient and Family
Education Award. This is awarded to a member of staff who has demonstrated an outstanding and excellent
contribution to enhancement of patient and family education over the past year.
Dr. Kim Edelstein received the UHN Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care Travel Award.
Dr. Robin Forbes was promoted to Social Work Practice Leader.
Dr. Alan Fung – Marjory Morphy Award, Medical Staff Association. March 2012
Dr. Kenneth Fung was promoted to Associate Professor effective July 1, 2012.
Dr. Sonu Gaind was promoted to Associate Professor effective July 1, 2012. He was awarded the Jane
Chamberlain Award for outstanding contributions to General Hospital Psychiatry and the Toronto French
School Le Prix de Distinction des Anciens Elévès Award for making an impact in both his professional field
and community. He was reappointed Chair of the Canadian Psychiatric Association Standing Committee on
Economics for a second term.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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Awards & Honours
Lynn Gauthier received a PhD Fellowship Award from the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation and the Ontario
Graduate Scholarship Award from York University.
Drs. Jim Kennedy and Tony George were appointed co-directors of The Division of Brain and Therapeutics
effective January 1, 2012
Dr. Philip Gerretsen – Division of Geriatric Psychiatry Resident Award
Dr. Peter Giacobbe was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1, 2011.
Dr. David Goldbloom is the recipient of the Diamond Jubilee Medal for 2012. The Queen Elizabeth II
Diamond Jubilee Medal is a new commemorative medal created to mark the 2102 celebrations of the 60th
anniversary of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s accession to the Throne as Queen of Canada. The Medal is
a tangible way for Canada to honour Her Majesty for her service to this country and also serves to honour
significant contributions and achievements by Canadians.
Dr. Ariel Graff- XXII National Research Award, GlaxoSmithKline and Mexican Health Fundation (Premio
Nacional de Investigación Fundación GSK-FUNSALUD), Mexico City, Mexico (2011)
Dr. Mark Halman - recipient of the 2012 Casey Award
Dr. Breffni Hannon received a UHN Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care Travel Award.
Dr. Angelo Ho – Best Paper in Community Consultation for the Division of Child Psychiatry
Dr. Brian Hoffman – Jane Chamberlin Award for outstanding contributions to General Hospital Psychiatry
(GHPS).
Dr. Doris Howell received the CAPO Award of Educational Excellence & was cross appointed as Associate
Professor to Dalla Lana School of Public Health & Health Policy Management & Evaluation, University of
Toronto.
Dr. James L. Kennedy (Full Professor) received a $19.5 million research award that included $7 million from
the Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation and a private donation from Larry and
Judy Tanenbaum as well as CAMH matching funds. These funds will be used for a 7 year project to develop
personalized and pharmacogenetic health care in psychiatry.
Dr. Ron Keren was appointed Medical Director, Geriatric Rehabilitation, Toronto Rehab for a 5 year term in
2011.
Dr. Nicola Keyhan – Paul Steinhauer Award for Best Postgraduate Teacher in Child Psychiatry
Dr. Diana Kljenak received the Best Poster 3rd place award from the Canadian Psychiatric
Dr. Nicole Kozloff, a PGY-3 resident in our residency training program, was just awarded the 2012-2014
American Psychiatric Association Fellowship in Public Psychiatry. The selection committee was very impressed
by Dr. Kozloff ’s qualifications and was confident that this two year fellowship will contribute to her success in
the field of public psychiatry.
Dr. Eileen LaCroix received the inaugural Educating Sunnybrook Award from the Sunnybrook Education
Advisory Council (SEAC).
Dr. Molyn Leszcz recieved the The American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA) Distinguished
Fellowship designation.
Dr.Yvonne Leung received UHN Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care Travel Award; a CIHR postdoctoral
Fellowship Award and was nominated for a Royal Society of Canada Alice Wilson Award.
Dr. Susan Lieff (Vice-Chair, Education) has been recognised by the Association of Faculties of Medicine of
Canada with the 2012 award for Outstanding Contribution to Faculty Development in Canada.
Awards & Honours
Dr. Paul Links was appointment as Chair/Chief of the Department of Psychiatry in the Schulich School of
Medicine & Dentistry effective January 2012
Dr.Yona Lunsky - Fellow - American Association of Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Dr. Joanna Lynch received the Research Challenge Award and successfully completed her CNA Certification in
Mental Health.
Dr. Marie-Josee Lynch – Juan C. Negrete Award in Addiction Psychiatry: Outstanding Resident in Addiction
Psychiatry
Dr. Robert Madan has been appointed as Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Baycrest Hospital, effective April 2012
Dr. Bonnie Madonik – Awarded the Canadian Certified Physician Executive (CCPE) credential. The CCPE
credential is awarded to physicians from across Canada when they have fulfilled the eligibility criteria and
demonstrated through a peer review/assessment process that they have the knowledge, skills and leadership
accomplishments not only worthy of national recognition but also needed to influence and bring about change
in today’s complex health-care environment. April 2012
Dr. Roger McIntyre was promoted to Full Professor effective July 1, 2012.
Dr. Roger McIntyre has been promoted to the rank of Full Professor effective July 1, 2012
Dr. Diane Meschino – Psychotherapy Award for Excellence in Supervision
Dr. Kim Miller was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1, 2011.
Dr. Rinat Nissim was the recipient of the Psychosocial Oncology Research Training (PORT) Award, and Max
Alexandroff Award in Psychiatry, Health & Disease for Excellence in Research.
Dr.Valerie Taylor and Dr. Sam Noh, have been appointed as Co-Directors of the Equity, Gender and Population
Division
Dr. Sagar Parikh, Dr. Gail Erlick Robinson, Dr. Joel Sadavoy, and Dr. Ari Zaretsky were each named as Fellow of
the CPA in recognition of their exemplary contributions towards excellence in psychiatry.
Dr. Bruce G. Pollock has been re-appointed for a second term as Director of the Division of Geriatric
Psychiatry at the Department of Psychiatry
Dr. Bruce Pollock - Designation of Fellow of the Canadian Psychiatric Association (2012)
Dr. Bruce Pollock - Geriatric Psychiatry Research Award from the American College of Psychiatrists (2011)
Dr. Gail Robinson became a distinguished fellow of the Canadian Psychiatric Association
Dr. Gary Rodin received the Life Time Achievement Award for making exceptional and enduring contributions
to psychosocial oncology & was appointed to the Editorial Board of Psycho-Oncology.
Dr. Joel Sadavoy has just been awarded the 2012 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry Diversity Award
(AAGP)
Dr. Ivan Silver has been awarded the President’s Teaching Award for 2012. This university-wide Award recognizes
sustained excellence in teaching, research in teaching, and the integration of teaching and research. Award
winners are designated by the University as members of the Teaching Academy for a period of five years, and as
members, they are periodically called upon to discuss teaching-related matters and to advise the Vice-President
and Provost.
Dr. Mark Sinyor received the Canadian Chairs of Department of Psychiatry annual Resident’s Research Award.
Dr. Mark Sinyor received the Canadian Chairs of Department of Psychiatry annual Resident’s Research Award.
Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam received the CMA Award for Young Leaders in the early career category in 2012.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
9
Awards & Honours
Dr.Vicky Stergiopoulos, Psychiatrist-in-Chief at St. Michael’s Hospital has been appointed as head of the
Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems
Dr. Alyson Stone – Dr. Max Alexandroff Award
Susan Strong – Goering Collaborative Research and Knowledge Translation Award in Mental Health and
Addictions
Walter Swardfager, PhD – selected by the SGS committee for the 2012 Governor General’s Gold Medal.
Dr.Valerie Taylor (Co-Investigator) secured a National Institute of Health grant “Early Psychosis in India
and Canada: Investigating outcomes and family factors.” This study involves research collaboration between a
developed country, Canada and a developing country, India for the purpose of understanding whether and why
schizophrenia has different outcomes in different cultural settings.
Dr.Valerie Taylor (Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Women’s College Hospital) was appointed Head of Women’s Mental
Health
Dr.Valerie Taylor has received an inaugural Mental Health Commission of Canada’s (MHCC) training
fellowship in knowledge exchange.
Dr. Jennifer Taylor-Kent received the Bolton Family Nursing Scholarship Award in 2011.
Dr. John Teshima received the Roberts Award for Inspirational Mentorship in Academic Psychiatry.
Dr. Brenda Toner has accepted the position of Graduate Coordinator at the Institute of Medical Science
Dr. Rachel Tyndale (Full Professor): Grant Wilkinson Lecture; In memory of Grant Wilkinson,Vanderbilt
University, April, 2012, Wendy and Stanley Marsh 3 Endowed Lectureship in Pharmacology and
Neurochemistry of Substance Abuse/Addiction Disorders, March 2012, Society for Research in Nicotine and
Tobacco Langley Award; presented every three years for groundbreaking advances in basic nicotine research,
March 2012, Canadian College of Neuropsychopharmacology Heinz Lehmann Award; presented for research in
neuropsychopharmacology, 2011
Dr. George Voineskos - Awarded by the Canadian Psychiatric Association “Distinguished Fellowship Award”
Dr.Victoria Wing – Best Accomplishment by a Fellow
Dr. Mikhail Zaitsev completed the UHN Positive Leadership Program in May 2012.
Dr. Ari Zaretsky has been appointed as Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, effective
September 1, 2012.
Dr. Ari Zaretsky has been selected to receive the 2012 Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy and Mentorship in
Postgraduate Medicine.
Dr. Camilla Zimmermann was awarded the Rose Family Chair in Supportive Care at U of T/UHN and her
abstract was selected as the Best by the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Report of the vice-Chair, Clinical
OVERVIEW
A central component of the responsibilities of the
Vice Chair, Clinical is to foster communication,
alignment and integration of clinical and academic
resources across the 8 Divisions of the University
Toronto, Department of Psychiatry and across the
University of Toronto affiliated teaching hospitals.
The Vice Chair, Clinical is also the Executive Committee sponsor for the Pillar 4 component of the new
University Strategic Plan, focusing on improving Dialogue around mental health, advocacy and fulfilling
our social responsibility. This has included coordinating a position paper for the University Department
of Psychiatry addressing federal government changes
that reduce health care coverage for immigrants and
refugees.
Division Structure
This academic year marked the first year of the newly
aligned Divisional structure of the University Toronto,
Department of Psychiatry, moving from 14 Divisions
and Programs to a complement of 8, with the leadership of the Divisions meeting together in the Council
of Divisions, chaired by the Vice Chair, Clinical. Each
Division is lead by a Director(s) and through a 3year transition period pre-existing programs that are
integrated into the new Divisions will continue with
their existing leadership.
Through the 2011-12 academic year, searches were
conducted for the Director of the Division of Adult
Psychiatry and Health Systems and Dr.Vicki Stergiopoulos was appointed effective July, 2012, with
Dr. Trevor Young serving as Acting Director through
2011-12. Dr.Valerie Taylor was appointed as Co-Director of the Division of Equity, Gender and Population following a search process and co-leads that
Division with Dr. Sam Noh. A collaborative search
linking the Hospital for Sick Children and CAMH is
underway for the Director of the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Dr. John Langley has served as Acting
Director during this past year. The University Department has benefitted greatly from the leadership of the
Acting Directors.
The new Division structure expands on historic
strengths and facilitates growth in new areas of scholarship aligned with the new strategic plan of the University Department, as well as supporting the sub-specialty training programs in Forensic Psychiatry; Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry; and, Geriatric Psychiatry.
Each Division provides leadership in the area of
education at all levels including undergraduate, postgraduate, fellowship and continuing education; in research; creative professional activity and public policy
where appropriate; and, in the provision of exemplary
clinical care. Each Division will seek to establish an
endowed Chair(s).
Each Division serves and functions as the academic
home for its members and provides opportunities for
collaboration and professional development amongst
the Division members, recognizing the challenges and
opportunities that emerge within a very large and
widely spread out Department.
The Divisional structure aligns with the strategic
plans of the respective hospitals that serve as the base
for the Divisions and the Division Leadership to leverage the combined university and hospital resources
to support the academic development of the Divisions.
As we embark on implementation of a new university
strategic plan, the Divisions are integrating their academic activities into the key foci of the strategic plan
which includes four key pillars that will shape the
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
11
Vice-Chair Reports
Department over the next 5 years: Integration; Development; Brain and Dialogue.
The eight Divisions are:
1. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Dr. John Langley
has served as the acting Director in 2011-12.
2. Forensic Psychiatry, Director, Dr. Sandy Simpson
3. Geriatric Psychiatry, Director, Dr. Bruce Pollock
4. Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry, Director, Dr. Jon
Hunter
5. Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems, Director, Dr.
Vicki Stergiopoulos.
6. The Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education
Scholarship, Director Dr. Susan Lieff and Associate
Director, Dr. Paula Ravitz
7. Equity, Gender and Population, Co-Directors, Dr.
Sam Noh and Dr.Valerie Taylor.
8. Brain and Therapeutics, Co-Directors, Dr. Jim
Kennedy and Tony George– bringing together the
pre-existing programs in Addictions, Mood and
Anxiety, Neuroscience and Schizophrenia. The
Mood and Anxiety academic area is lead by Dr.
Zindel Segal and the Schizophrenia academic area
is lead by Dr. Gary Remington.
The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry underwent an
external 5 year review. The Division and Dr. Bruce
Pollock were cited for excellent achievement across
the educational, research and clinical domains and for
providing outstanding academic leadership and creating a well integrated Division with high morale.
The Mental Health and
Addictions Acute Care
Department Alliance
One of the central integrative clinical programs in
the University Department is the Mental Health and
Addictions Emergency Department Alliance which renamed itself The Mental Health and Addictions Acute
Care Department Alliance reflecting the expansion of
activities beyond emergency psychiatry into the broader continuum of care within acute care psychiatry.
This alliance brings together seven hospital partners
including; The Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health; Mount Sinai Hospital; St. Michael’s Hospital;
St. Joseph’s Hospital; UHN; Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; and Toronto East General Hospital. The
Alliance was established to improve the quality of care
and the efficiency with which care llnnis provided to
patients accessing emergency and acute care services in
our respective hospitals, recognizing the value in collaboration and more efficient utilization of resources.
The Alliance is governed by a steering committee that
consists of representatives of each of the hospitals and
is co-chaired by Dr. Peter Voore representing the hospitals; Dr. Molyn Leszcz representing the University;
and Jan Lackstrom as
the administrative lead.
As we embark on
The Alliance Executive
implementation of a
includes Adair Robnew university strategic
erts as Administrative
plan, the Divisions
Director and Dr. Don
are integrating their
Wasylenki as Medical
academic activities
Director.
into the key foci of the
strategic plan which
includes four key
pillars that will shape
the Department over
the next 5 years.
Activities of the Alliance include maintaining a central bed registry and interhospital
bed access model to
reduce ED wait times
and facilitate patient
flow; implementation of a common assessment form;
compilation of reliable data capturing the nature and
volume of acute care activities; and systems improvements in collaboration with health care providers and
with the police. Regular meetings also occur between
the Inpatient Directors focused on the dissemination
of best practices for inpatient care; improving discharge
planning; and, fostering a spirit of stronger collaboration.
Initially supported directly by the hospital partners, the
University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry and
AFP Innovation Funding, the Alliance was also awarded a grant from the Toronto Central LHIN (TCL-
Vice-Chair Reports
HIN) to focus more specifically on frequent users of
the Emergency Room. We have used this funding to
develop a Frequent Users Working Group bringing
together hospital and community partners across the
TCLHIN; learning from existing innovative programs
that engage patients effectively addressing core psychosocial needs in the area of mental health and addictions
care, while taking a systems-wide view of the provision of care to this patient population. Similar advances
have occurred in regard to the ED assessment of
seniors presenting with mental health and addictions
concerns through innovative training and education of
front line providers.
health, mental health, addictions, physical health and
other services. The role of the TCM includes outreach,
assessment, service-planning, linking, crisis management and program evaluation. CATCH-ED is intended to support participants for approximately 12-16
weeks, until they are well-connected to their nonED-based supports. The Alliance also secured funding through a competitive process from BRIDGES, a
joint MOHLTC and University of Toronto Faculty of
Medicine initiative to evaluate the intervention. This
evaluation, lead by Dr.Vicki Stergiopoulos will compare the CATCH-ED intervention with care as usual
in a randomized control trial.
The Frequent Users working group collaborated to
develop the Coordinated Access to Care from the
Hospital – Emergency Department (CATCH-ED)
initiative. This is a pilot program that responds to
people who are visiting Emergency Departments
(EDs) frequently assisting them in accessing health
resources in the community with the goal of reducing
preventable ED visits and improving access to community-based care. Our focus is on individuals who have
5+ visits to an Emergency Department (ED) at any of
the pilot sites within a year, with at least one of these
visits having been for a mental health and/or addiction
problem. The pilot sites include St. Michael’s Hospital,
the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH)
and St. Joseph’s Health Centre, in collaboration with
Toronto North Support Services, Reconnect Mental
Health Services, Sound Times Support Services, Community Resource Connections of Toronto, COTA
Health, Parkdale Activity and Recreation Centre; and
four Community Health Centres, specifically South
Riverdale, Regent Park, Central Toronto, and Parkdale
Community Health Centres.
We expect to continue to build on these larger scale
clinical and academic partnerships to improve the
systems of care we provide in acute mental health and
addictions.
Molyn Leszcz, MD. FRCPC
Professor of Psychiatry
Vice Chair, Clinical
CATCH-ED Transitional Case Managers (TCMs)
provide direct service to people who use Emergency
Departments frequently to meet their health care
needs. Each CATCH-ED Transitional Case Manager
(TCM) works with one of the three pilot hospital
Emergency Department sites and Toronto community
agencies to help connect frequent users to appropriate
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
13
Report of the Vice-Chair, Education
Overview
“The past academic year has been characterized by
outstanding work in all the education portfolios in
the Department of Psychiatry.”
Undergraduate Medical
Education
The Undergraduate Program continues to flourish under the leadership of Dr. Raed Hawa. Curriculum within the Clerkship Program has been
successfully standardized and is highly rated across the
training sites. Exit surveys of the graduating classes
across the country indicate that University of Toronto
students are very satisfied with their undergraduate
psychiatric education. The Psychiatry Institute hosted
25 students from across Canada, and received overwhelmingly positive feedback from the participants.
This year also saw the successful launch of the Psychiatric Longitudinal Experience (PSYC-Le) which
offers medical students the opportunity to shadow a
psychiatrist in either an office or hospital setting to
develop a sense of what it is like to be a psychiatrist as
well as enhance students’ comfort with patients with
mental illness. Another highlight this year was the
fact that over 100 electives were taken from students
across Canada and internationally in the Department
of Psychiatry.
Postgraduate Medical
Education
The Postgraduate Program continues to innovate in
order to provide residents with a high quality educational experience. Under the leadership of Dr. Ari
Zaretsky, a new mentorship program has been developed, new assessment tools are being developed and
implemented to enhance feedback for residents and
the M-BRITE wellness curriculum was successfully
piloted. Additionally workshops on entrustable professional activities and a new faculty orientation were
provided to faculty members. These are only a few
examples of the multiple initiatives evolving in our
program.
Continuing Mental Health
Education
A main highlight
from the year is the
inaugural Donald
Wasylenki Faculty
Development Day for
Teachers and Educators
that took place in
February, 2011...
The Day focused on
developing the skills,
career plans, and
potential collaborations
of the many talented
teachers and educators
in the Department.
The Continuing Education Program is extraordinarily successful
and among the largest in the Faculty of
Medicine. Under the
leadership of Dr. Sagar
Parikh, this program
offers a wealth of both
short-term and longterm continuing education courses and has
been recognized with
a number of awards.
Fellowship
Proram
Dr. Brenda Toner continued to develop the
Fellowship Program of the Department which now is
one of the largest in the Faculty of Medicine. Under
Dr. Toner’s leadership the Fellowship Program has had
many more centralized activities than before including the Fellows’ Research Day, an annual reception
and a number of awards and bursaries available for
outstanding fellows.
Education Council
The Education Council of the Department of Psychiatry comprises all of the above named Directors
Vice-chair reports
and the Vice-Chair of Education. Together this group
plans the major educational directions for the Department. In the past academic year the Education
Council has been dedicated to identifying opportunities for alignment of the education portfolios with the
priorities of the Department’s strategic plan, developing a departmental strategy for educational awards and
rationalising the budgets.
Other Developments
The end of this academic year has also brought significant leadership changes. The Education Council is
pleased to announce the addition of Dr. John Teshima
as the first Director of Faculty Development in the
Department. Dr. Brenda Toner has finished her term
as Director of the Fellowship Program. The Education
Council welcomes Dr. Arun Ravindran as the new
Fellowship Director. After 8 years in the position of
Director of the Postgraduate Program, Dr. Ari Zaretsky
announced that he will be stepping down to become
Chief of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Science
Centre. Dr. Leslie Wiesenfeld, the Associate Director of
the Postgraduate Program will be the interim Director
until Jan 2013 when a new Director will start.
preparing for the first cohort of subspecialty residents
to arrive in the next academic year. Drawing on their
expertise as leaders in psychiatric education in Canada,
they have presented on and/or are preparing to present their experiences of establishing new educational
programs at local rounds and both national and international meetings.
The academic partner of the educational administrative structure is the RISE program (Research, Innovation, and Scholarship in Education) within the
Division of the Psychotherapies, Humanities and
Education Scholarship which continues to contribute
to the quality and best practices of education across
the Department. At the end of this year, RISE saw
the appointment of its new Program Lead, Dr. Sophie
Soklaridis who is a skilled education researcher. With
this new leadership in place, RISE will move to foster
an intimate relationship with the existing Education
Portfolios.
Susan Lieff Md, MEd, MMann
Vice-Chair, Education
A main highlight from the year is the inaugural Donald Wasylenki Faculty Development Day for Teachers
and Educators that took place in February, 2011 at The
Old Mill. The Day focused on developing the skills,
career plans, and potential collaborations of the many
talented teachers and educators in the Department.
The Day was very well received by the breadth of Faculty who attended and participants had many ideas for
faculty development events to come.
Another exciting development was that the University of Toronto, Department of Psychiatry is the only
university thus far in Canada to have received accreditation from the Royal College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Canada for the following three subspecialties: Geriatric Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry and Forensic Psychiatry. Dr. Rob Madan,
Dr. John Langley and Dr. Lisa Ramshaw along with
their respective committees have worked diligently in
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
15
Report of the vice-chair, research
Overview
The Department of Psychiatry at the University of
Toronto is one of the largest in the world and has
over 700 active faculty members, 30% of whom
are engaged in full time academic activities. Faculty
members who are engaged in research are situated in
one of the 17 affiliated teaching hospitals/ institutions
in the Department. Each faculty member has an academic home in one of the Department’s 8 academic
divisions, each of which overseas the research activities of its faculty.
Within the Faculty of Medicine, the Department of
Psychiatry has a very strong track record of high quality research. Over the past several years, Psychiatry has
been in the top three Departments in the Faculty of
Medicine in terms of funding for research.
Currently, there are 22 Endowed Chairs and Professorships in the Department. Over 80 members of the
Department hold appointments at the Institute of
Medical Science in the School Graduate Studies, allowing these faculty to supervise graduate students.
In terms of publications, according to the 2010
Thomson ISI rankings, the Department of Psychiatry was ranked first in all of Canada in terms of both
publications and citations, 3rd in publications and 4th
in citations for all public US and Canadian University Departments of Psychiatry, and 6th in terms of
publications and 8th in terms of citations for all Departments of Psychiatry, private and public, in North
America.
Research Funding
Research funding for the 2011-2012 academic year
continued the recent trend of annual growth as
measure by both peer and non peer reviewed funding. This past academic year the department attracted
over $79 million (Table 1) in total research funding,
the majority of which is peer reviewed. This represents a 7.7 % increase from last year. $45 million of
this funding represents PI funding, and an increase of
27% from last year. Figures 1-4 show the funding by
agency, division, hospital and category, respectively.
Publications
In the academic year 2011-2012 members of the
Department published 770 peer reviewed journal
articles, 97 book chapters and 29 books. (See “Publications” at the end of the Annual Report).
38th Annual Harvey Stancer
Research Day
The Office of the Vice Chair, Research, along with
the Head of the Organizing Committee Dr Jeff
Daskalakis, are responsible for organizing and coordinating the Annual Harvey Stancer Research Day.
This year’s Plenary Address was given by Dr. John H.
Krystal, MD, Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry,Yale University, who spoke on:“Glutamatergic
Treatment Strategies for Schizophrenia and Depression: A Translational Neuroscience Perspective”.
The winners of the Research Day Awards are listed in
Table 6 and they should all be congratulated for their
achievements.
Allan S. Kaplan MD FRCP(C)
Vice Chair, Research
TABLE 1: By AGENCY TYPE By Agency Type
TABLE 2: By DIVISION Sub-total
Federal
$35,473,800
(Total Tri-Council Funding = $22,732,197)
Provincial
$11,906,855
University or Hospital
United States
$3,423,206
$7,854,738
Equity, Gender and Population
$5,002,688
$3,565,215
TOTAL FUNDING
$34,469,926
Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
$16,675,903
Fellowship / Personal Award
Brain and Therapeutics
$734,231
$3,402,401
Miscellaneous
$16,727,021
$9,370,672
$584,248
Industry
Sub-total
Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
(Total NIH Funding = $7,356,606)
International (non-US)
By Division
Forensic Psychiatry
$360,605
Geriatric Psychiatry
$8,400,659
Psychotherapies, Humanities and
Educational Scholarship
$2,442,614
TOTAL FUNDING
$80,197,391
$80,197,391
TABLE 4: PI Funding only : Peer, NonPeer, Fellowship
TABLE 3: By HOSPITAL/SITE By Hospital/Site
Baycrest
Centre for Addiction &
Mental Health
Sub-total
By Category
Sub-total
$726,830
Peer Reviewed
$33,682,252
$42,120,065
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
$614,875
Hospital For Sick Children
$3,516,459
Mount Sinai Hospital
Non-Peer Reviewed
$8,975,533
Fellowship / Personal Awards
$3,115,733
TOTAL FUNDING
$45,773,518
$821,830
St. Michaels Hospital
$2,989,980
TABLE 5: PI and Co-I funding : Peer, NonPeer, Fellowship Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
$2,575,953
CATEGORIES:
University Health Network
$6,839,680
PEER REVIEWED FUNDING
University of Toronto
$4,626,056
1 - Federal Agency
Non-TAHSN and Other Universities
$15,180,985
Women’s College Hospital
$184,678
TOTAL FUNDING
$80,197,391
(Total Tri-Council Funding = $22,732,197)
2 - Provincial Agency
3 - University or Hospital
TABLE 6: Harvey Stancer Research Day
Award Winners
$35,473,800
4 - US Agency
$11,906,855
$734,231
$7,854,738
(Total NIH Funding = $7,356,606)
Award
Winner Name
5 - International Agency
Best Overall Poster Presentation
Melanie Guenette
Total Peer Reviewed Funding
Best Presentation/Paper by a
Fellow
Shaul Lev-Ran & Elia
Abi-Jaoude
NON-PEER REVIEWED FUNDING
Best Presentation/Paper by a
Resident
Nicole Kozloff &
Daphne Voineskos
6 - Industry Agency
Dr. Peter Prendergast - Ontario
Shores Prize in Quality Improvement
Dr. Kate Strasburg & Dr.
Petal Abdool
7 - Miscellaneous Agencies
$16,675,903
Total Non-Peer Reviewed Funding
$20,078,304
The Heather Munroe-Blum
Award for Best Presentation/
Paper by a Graduate Student
Dan Felsky
The John M. Cleghorn Newly
Established Researcher Prize
(Best Presentation/Paper by a
New Investigator)
Tarek Rajji
$584,248
$56,553,872
$3,402,401
FELLOWSHIP / PERSONAL AWARDS
Fellowship / Personal Award
$3,565,215
Total Fellowship / Personal Awards
$3,565,215
TOTAL FUNDING
$80,197,391
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
17
Vice-chair reports
Vice-chair reports
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
19
undergraduate medical education
Overview
My term as Director of Undergraduate Medical
Education in the department of Psychiatry began July
2011, and it has been a pleasure. Over the next 5 years
the UG program will work to improve recruitment,
enhance our students’ assessment tools and increase
our involvement within the medical school locally
as well as with the national and international educational bodies.
PRECLERKSHIP
BRAIN AND BEHAVIOUR
Dr. Albert Wong continues as the Brain and Behaviour Psychiatry Coordinator and the psychiatry
component of Brain and Behaviour continues to be
highly rated by first year medical students.
MMMD COURSE- MECHANISMS,
MANIFESTATIONS AND MANAGEMENT OF
DISEASE
Dr Nikola Grujich has taken over from Dr Ayal
Schaffer as a Coordinator for the psychiatry section in
MMMD with a focus on anxiety, mood and substances for second year medical students. This section
continues to be rated highly by the students.
ASCM I/ASCM II/DOCH 2
Our staff continue to contribute their energy and
talent to make these preclerkship courses a success
with emphasis on the importance of involvement of
psychiatrists in medical student teaching, whether it is
in interviewing skills or research projects.
THERAPEUTIC COMMUNICATIONS
Dr Solomon Shapiro has decided to step down as a
leader for this ongoing course that has been running
for over 17 years. This will open new opportunities
to create a program for first and second year medi-
cal students to have them engaged in a longitudinal
exposure to “therapy” and “communication” with
patients.
PSYCHIATRY LONGITUDINAL EXPERIENCEPsyCLE
The UG office created an opportunity for first year
medical students to shadow a psychiatrist in a hospital
or office setting. We had, over the last academic year,
27 students selecting to spend 3 half days with psychiatrists in different specialties, and the feedback about
their experiences has been very positive.
CLERKSHIP
CENTRALIZED CORE CURRICULUM
The centralized core teaching, under the leadership
of Drs Kien Dang and Pat Colton, and the revamped
Child Psychiatry curriculum, under the leadership
of Dr Suneeta Monga continue to thrive. Talented
teachers recruited from each site, continue to contribute to a revised syllabus, a set of
learning objectives and interactivity that prepare our
students to the complex and yet exciting world of
psychiatric care.
UTM INVOLVEMENT
Credit Valley Hospital and Trillium Health Centre
have been involved in the delivery of clinical training
for 3rd year medical students over the last year. Dr.
Karen Petruccelli and Dr Sashikala Senthelal have
been appointed as the undergraduate site coordinators as CVH and THC respectively. The students have
rated their clinical experiences very positively. Over
the next academic year 24 medical students will be
placed at the 2 hospitals for their clinical rotations.
ELECTIVES/ SELECTIVES
education
Dr Jon Novick continues to be actively involved in
coordinating electives offered through our department to local, national, and international students. Dr
Monica Scalco has been an excellent addition to our
undergraduate program coordinating selectives offered
through the Transitions to Residency (TTR) block.
RECRUITMENT
Drs Claire DeSouza and Lisa Andermann and the
Recruitment Committee continue to host Psychiatry
Interest Group nights, medical student dinners, and
movie nights. The Recruitment Committee has been
considering other options and ideas to enhance recruitment beyond The Summer Psychiatry Institute.
TEACHING TO TEACH
Our staff continue to
contribute their energy
and talent to make these
preclerkship courses a
success, with emphasis on
the importance of involvement
of psychiatrists in medical
student teaching, whether
it is in interviewing skills or
research projects.
Two mandatory half day sessions continue to be provided annually to the junior and senior resident
groups on Teaching to Teach. This program introduces
the residents to different approaches of teaching medical students in different settings.
CSI- CLINICAL STIMULATION INITIATIVE
Our UG program has been the first Canadian program to collaborate with ADMSEP in creating clinical
scenarios/ e-modules to be published by MedEdPORTAL and provide a national database for use in Psychiatry curricula nationwide.
SPECIAL THANKS
I would like to extend my thanks to the administrative
support of Rachel MacKenzie and Rachel Delaney
who have been running the UG office smoothly and
worry-free. My sincerest thanks go to all members of
the UG committee as well as to all the staff who continue to share their experiences with our students and
provide excellent role models.
Raed Hawa MD FRCPC DABSM DABPN
Director, UG Medical Education, Department of
Psychiatry
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
21
Postgraduate Medical
Education
Overview
During 2011-2012 academic year, the Psychiatry
Residency Program Committee (PRPC) worked on
new strategies to assess resident performance across
all CanMEDS roles and closely collaborated with the
three new Subspecialty Program Directors in Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry, Geriatric Psychiatry and
Forensic Psychiatry as they successfully applied for accreditation status from the Royal College.
Evidence of the residency training program’s ongoing
strength and vitality was the very successful October
2011 Internal Review of the Program (in preparation for the Royal College review in April 2013), the
nomination of the program for the 2012 PAIRO Program Excellence Award for a fourth year in a row, and
the residency program successfully filling 32 Canadian
Medical Graduate and International Medical Graduate positions in the first iteration of the 2012 CaRMS
match.
Education Reports
PRPC Subcommittee Activities
2011-2012
The PRPC continued to function effectively through
the strong efforts of its subcommittees with the Resident Evaluation, Committee for Supervisor Evaluation
and Support, Resident Selection, Site Feedback and
Safety Subcommittees all being extremely busy over
the past academic year.
The Supervisor Evaluation Subcommittee, chaired by
Dr. Gail Robinson, was transformed into the Committee for Supervisor Evaluation and Support. This new
committee is now co-chaired by Dr. Robinson (Postgraduate Chair) and Dr. Flak (Undergraduate Chair)
and is composed of faculty representatives from both
postgraduate medical education and undergraduate
medical education. Both the Directors of Postgraduate
Medical Education and Undergraduate Medical Education attend ex-officio to these meetings depending
on whether the problematic supervisor issue pertains
to a postgraduate or an undergraduate issue.
Dr. Nadiya Sunderji effectively chaired the Site Feedback Subcommittee and has modified the site feedback
review process in order to ensure that it continues to
function as a sustainable and very meaningful quality
assurance activity.
Postgraduate Site Coordinators have continued to be
very responsive to issues raised by residents and overall resident satisfaction based on rotation effectiveness
scores and teaching effectiveness scores from POWER,
as well as bi-annual PRAT surveys, has remained very
high. Julia Bella, Nithya Ravi together with Postgraduate Site Coordinators have also been very effective in
ensuring that supervisor timeliness and overall supervisor ITER completion rates remain very high despite
the challenges of overseeing up to 400 postgraduate
supervisors per year.
The Safety Subcommittee, under the able leadership of
Drs Heather Flett and Dr. Lesley Wiesenfeld, together
with thoughtful PRAT input, were extremely active in
revising and enhancing the Department of Psychiatry
Resident Training Safety Guidelines in order to ensure that there is increased attention to safety during
community visits. In addition, there is now a rigorous
process to ensure that all supervisors and Postgraduate
Site Coordinators utilize a formal checklist in order to
comprehensively orient residents to a new site at the
beginning of a rotation.
The Resident Selection Subcommittee co-Chaired by
Dr. Lesley Wiesenfeld and Dr. Susan Abbey together
with Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam, Director of IMG Training, had another extremely successful CaRMS Match.
Our residency filled all 27 Canadian Medical Graduate
and 5 International Medical Graduate spots. All candidates who were selected were extremely competitively
ranked.
Changes in Faculty Involved in
Residency Education
Dr. Julie Maggi left the PRPC in order to assume the
important new role of Director of Postgraduate Medical Education at SMH. Dr. Mark Hallman has assumed
the role of Postgraduate Coordinator role for SMH.
Dr. Erin Carter succeeded Dr. Nadiya Sunderji and Dr.
Adriana Carvalhal as new the Postgraduate Site Coordinator for WCH. Dr. Robyn Waxman has succeeded
Dr. Laura Gage at Ontario Shores. Dr. Jason Joannou
became the Interim Postgraduate Site Coordinator
for CAMH, covering for Dr. Heather Flett during her
maternity leave. Dr. Andrew Howlett, a recent graduate from our residency, is currently overlapping with
Dr. Nhagi Ghabbour as the Postgraduate Site Coordinator for SJH. Greg Lodenquai has succeeded Ruth
Stertzinger as the Postgraduate Site Coordinator for
George Hull.
New Developments in Residency
Education
Over the past year there have been a number of
important new developments within the residency
program.
Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam was given the responsibility
to chair an ad-hoc working group to reform resident
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
23
Education Reports
call in order to make it more equitable and educationally sound. After broad consultation with expert
faculty, site coordinators, PRAT and residents and after
a special summit and resident town hall meeting cochaired by Dr. Zaretsky and Dr. Sockalingam, a number of significant refinements to call were approved by
the PRPC.
These changes included having residents generally assigned to do call at their own “daytime” sites, having
PGY-1s assigned to some limited overnight call, having
Chief Residents deliberately attempting to pair junior
and senior residents on call and extending UHN’s online resident and supervisor on-call feedback system to
all relevant hospital sites. The most dramatic change in
the new on-call system was the creation of a new set
of explicit guidelines regarding expectations for junior
residents, senior residents and staff psychiatrists who
are on-call. These new guidelines, which will become
operational in the fall of 2012, will enhance graded responsibility for residents within our training program.
Based on resident feedback and concern about fragmentation during PGY-4 training, Consultation Liaison Psychiatry was modified for 2012-2013 to become
a 6 month rotation consisting of 3 months of inpatient
CL work and 3 months of ambulatory CL with collaborative care integrated into the 3 month ambulatory
CL for at least 2 days a week. The senior Addiction
Psychiatry training was also modified during Chronic
Care in order to make the training less fragmenting
while still retaining the unique expertise of Addiction
Psychiatrists as supervisors.
Dr. Andrea Waddell joined the PEAC as the Chair of
a brand new subcommittee: the Resident Assessment
Subcommittee. This new subcommittee with broad
representation from educators across the PEAC, was
specifically inaugurated to develop a comprehensive
system of assessment and feedback across all of the
CanMEDS roles, particularly the non-medical expert
ones.
The subcommittee has met steadily over the latter six
months of the academic year and has been utilizing
a competency framework based on the concepts of
entrustable professional activities and milestones. These
new concepts that have recently been embraced across
many countries by postgraduate medical educators
(including psychiatry educators in the UK and Australia) as a novel strategy to enhance competency assessment and address progressive professional responsibility.
New tools for residency competency assessment will
deployed in 2012-2013, including a new multi-source
feedback assessment for residents in Geriatric Psychiatry. The topic of the Postgraduate Education retreat in
May 2012 was Entrustable Professional Activity and
was presented by both Dr. Andrea Waddell and Dr.
Brian Hodges.
Dr. Zaretsky and Robinson organized a well attended
inaugural half-day pragmatic faculty development
workshop for all PGY-5 graduating residents in order
to orient them to the postgraduate educational system
and the responsibilities and common challenges associated with being a new resident supervisor.
Finally, Dr. Mark Fefergrad, the Resident Advisor for
our residency program, organized an inaugural longitudinal mentoring system for all PGY-2 residents starting in the 2012-2013 academic year. 30 faculty mentor
volunteers from the Department were hand-picked for
this exciting new program and were each paired with
one to two PGY-2 residents. Dr. Karen Leslie delivered
an enthusiastically received faculty development workshop for these new volunteer mentors.
2011-2012 Faculty of Medicine/
Department of Psychiatry
Teaching/Education Awards
Paul Steinhauer Award for Best
Postgraduate Teacher in Child Psychiatry
Dr. Nicola Keyhan
Division of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry Community Consultation
Paper Award
Dr. Angela Ho
Education Reports
Excellence in Teaching/Supervising
in Psychotherapy
Dr. Diane Meschino
The Psychotherapy Award for Academic Excellence
Dr. Graeme Taylor
Robin Hunter Memorial Award
Dr. Lescia Tremblay
Paul E. Garfinkel Caversham Booksellers Prize for Excellence in Resident Leadership
Dr. Angela Ho & Dr
Iram Ahmed
Juan C. Negrete Award in Addiction
Psychiatry: Outstanding Resident in
Addiction Psychiatry
Dr. Marie Josee
Lynch
Resident Psychotherapy Award: Best
clinical case report submitted by a
Resident
Dr. Michaela Beder
Mary Seeman Award for Achievement in the area of Psychiatry and
Humanities
Dr. Sarah Colman
Division of Geriatric Psychiatry Resident Award
Dr Philip Gerretsen
MSH Junior Resident Teaching
Award
Dr. Caitlin McKeever
Best MSc Poster and Best Community-based Poster, at Institute
for Health Policy Management and
Evaluation Student Research Day.
Dr. Jennifer Hensel
Marie Mara Award for Residents
Advocacy
Dr Mark Fefergrad
Donald A. Wasylenki Award for the
Best Sociocultural Psychiatry Grand
Rounds
Dr Priya Raju
Robin Hunter Postgraduate Teaching Dr Mara Goldstein
Award
Peter Prendergast - Ontario Shores
Prize in Quality Improvement
Dr Petal Abdool &
Dr Kate Strasburg
Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy
and Mentorship in Postgraduate
Medical Education
Dr. Ari Zaretsky
2011-2012 National and
International Resident and
Faculty Awards
• Dr. Michaela Beder was awarded the 2012 Association of Academic Psychiatry Fellowship Award.
• Dr. Nicole Kozloff was awarded the 2012-2014
American Psychiatric Association Fellowship in
Public Psychiatry. • Dr. Jonathan Lee won the 2011 American Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry /Canadian
Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Best Presentation by a Member-in-Training.
• Dr.Vanessa Lentz won the 2011 American Society of Addiction Medicine, Ruth Fox Memorial
Endowment Fund Scholarship.
• Dr. Gwyneth Zai was awarded $65, 000 salary support from the Ministry of Health after residency
graduation for involvement in the Clinical Investigator Program. Dr. Zai also won 2012 Pharmacogenetics in Psychiatry (PIP) Young Investigator
Travel Award.
• Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam won the 2011-2012 Canadian Medical Association Young Leaders Award
List of PGY-1 to PGY-5 Residents
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Alasiri
Rahaf
PGY1
Al Fakeh
Sulhi Ali
PGY1
Aljassem
Kinda
PGY1
Bai
Shari
PGY1
Bahathig
Ali
PGY1
Benassi
Paul
PGY1
Boyle
Matthew
PGY1
Broad
Kathleen
PGY1
Charach
Nathaniel
PGY1
Gabilondo
Cedric
PGY1
Hapke
Emma
PGY1
Harrigan
Claire
PGY1
Hayer
Lovneet
PGY1
Holiff
Jacqueline
PGY1
Khanna
Robin
PGY1
Kitamura
Christopher
PGY1
Klein
Hannah
PGY1
Krishnan
Uday
PGY1
Lachance
Laura Renee
PGY1
Marlborough
Michelle
PGY1
Mills
Rosanne
PGY1
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
25
Education Reports
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Mumtaz
Soraya
PGY1
Sheehan
Kathleen
PGY2
Neszt
Michael
PGY1
Sum
Denise
PGY2
Nica
Elena (Irina)
PGY1
Sutton
Wesley
PGY2
O’Brien
Jonathan (Darcy)
PGY1
Thoma
Jessica
PGY2
Richards-Bentley
Christopher
PGY1
Twose
Richelle
PGY2
Riva-Cambrin
Jeremy
PGY1
Vegda
Ketan
PGY2
Sawyer
Amanda
PGY1
Vukin
Iva
PGY2
St. Jacques
Arianne
PGY1
Walton
Georgia
PGY2
Uy
Paul
PGY1
Weizenberg
Evan
PGY2
Varicheva Haggith
Yevgeniya (Gina)
PGY1
Williams
Laura
PGY2
Wang
Karen
PGY1
Zamir
Orit
PGY2
Wilson-Ewing
Tessa
PGY1
Last Name
First Name
PGY3
Last Name
First Name
PGY2
Abdool
Petal Shaheba
PGY3
Alenezi
Shuliweeh
PGY2
Al-Humoud
Abdulmohsen
PGY3
Bingham
Kathleen
PGY2
Alsayegh
Ammar
PGY3
Chapman
Elizabeth
PGY2
Barron
Jacquelyn
PGY3
Crookall
Jake M
PGY2
Bega
Sivan
PGY3
Fantus
Claire
PGY2
Chau
Heidi
PGY3
Fergusson
Mary Ellen (Ellen)
PGY2
Chen
Anna
PGY3
Friedman
Meri Kinneret
PGY2
Choptiany
Maxym
PGY3
Golas
Angela
PGY2
De Oliveira
Roberta
PGY3
Hamer
Debra
PGY2
Fink
Jennifer
PGY3
Harel
Avital
PGY2
Ho
Angela
PGY3
Holdar
Mohammad
PGY2
Ismail
Plabon
PGY3
Hosseini-Tabatabaei
Mehr-Afarin
PGY2
Jovanovic
Marijana
Karas
Kheraj
Naheed
PGY3
Klein
Ryan
PGY3
PGY2
Kozloff
Nicole
PGY3
Alexandra
PGY2
Lakatoo-Hunt
Sophia
PGY3
Knox
Matthew
PGY2
Lawson
Adrian
PGY3
Laidlaw (nee Ford)
Jennifer
PGY2
Lee
Kar Ming
PGY3
Lee
Jonathan
PGY2
Lynch
Marie-Josée
PGY3
Lentz
Vanessa
PGY2
McIntyre-Stewart
Sarah Mishelle
PGY3
Park
Joseph
PGY2
McKeever
Caitlin
PGY3
Pinto
Crystal
PGY2
McMaster
Rob
PGY3
Ptashny
Rachel
PGY2
Mitchell
Rachel Berman
PGY3
Ross
Dana
PGY2
Nixon
Andrea
PGY3
Roy
Anvesh
PGY2
Perera
Jerome
PGY3
Rudolph
Kaila
PGY2
Pink
Deborah
PGY3
Sadler
Dafni
PGY2
Rodie
David
PGY3
Education Reports
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Sandhu
Navraaj
PGY3
Sapirman
Vivian
PGY4
Somal
Kirandeep
PGY3
Stiglick
Amanda
PGY4
Strasburg
Kate
PGY3
Toews
Adam
PGY4
Swartz
Shari
PGY3
Whitty
Carolyn
PGY4
Tang
Ryan
PGY3
Wijeyesinghe
Angelo
PGY4
Vatsya
Pracha
PGY3
Zai
Gwyneth
PGY4
Villela
Renata
PGY3
Al-Mosyab
Nemer F.H.
PGY5
Voineskos
Daphne
PGY3
Al-Ozairi
Abdulla S.S.
PGY5
Yanofsky
Richard
PGY3
Betlen
Cerasela
PGY5
Younker
Marika
PGY3
Brown (Polson)
Cara
PGY5
Yuen
Gloria
PGY3
Burra
Tara
PGY5
Monica Arrina
PGY5
Zhou
Yanying
PGY3
Choi
Abdul-Kader
Sayed
PGY4
Dembo
Justine
PGY5
Ahmad
Yusra
PGY4
Gerretsen
Philip
PGY5
Ahmed
Iram
PGY4
Guttman
Rachelle
PGY5
Alghamdi
Waleed Ahmad
PGY4
Howlett
Andrew
PGY5
Seema
PGY5
Allen
Albert
PGY4
Khan
Banayan
David
PGY4
LeBlanc
Serge
PGY5
Beder
Michaela
PGY4
Leon
Chloe
PGY5
Bhattacharyya
Monidipa
PGY4
Lin
Judy
PGY5
Citynski
Hollie
PGY4
Matveyev
Aliaksandr
PGY5
Colman
Sarah
PGY4
McEvilly
Rebecca
PGY5
Delwo
Justin
PGY4
Morgan
Andrew
PGY5
Elbohy
Manar
PGY4
Mottaghian
Mojgan
PGY5
Hassan
Ahmed Nabeel
PGY4
Nefsky
Colman
PGY5
Hensel
Jennifer
PGY4
Nicolici
Diana Felicia
PGY5
Hirsch
Jennifer Eve
PGY4
Papadopoulos
Yousef
PGY5
Koziel
Nicole
PGY4
Paton-Gay
Caroline Lindsay
PGY5
Krishnadev
Upasana
PGY4
Perez-Youssoufian
Steven
PGY5
Leong
Marissa Mei Ling
PGY4
Raju
Priya
PGY5
Lo
Patrick
PGY4
Salim
Syeeda
PGY5
Mik
Helene
PGY4
Sinyor
Mark
PGY5
Miula
Elena
PGY4
St. Angelo
Lisa
PGY5
Ng
Karen
PGY4
Sullovey
Amanda
PGY5
Nguyen
Hoa
PGY4
Tremblay
Lescia
PGY5
Ooi
Cara Lianne
PGY4
Vasdev
Shawn
PGY5
Patyk
Izabella
PGY4
Wagg
Leanne Allison
PGY5
Preisman
Mary
PGY4
Wanono
Oshrit
PGY5
Salama
Arielle
PGY4
Wasserman
Lori
PGY5
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
27
Education Reports
Last Name
First Name
current pgy
Weisberg
Lori
PGY5
Willer
Chris
PGY5
Wong
Leslie
PGY5
Zaheer
Juveria
PGY5
List of Clinician Scientist Stream
and Program Residents
Program
Resident
Last Name
Resident
First Name
Current
PGY
CSP
Gerretsen
Philip
5
CSP
Hensel
Jennifer
4
CSP
Lamba
Wiplove R.
5
CSP
Younker
Marika
4
CSP
Zaheer
Juveria
5
CSP
Zai
Gwyneth
4
CSP - Status
Only
Tremblay
Lescia
5
CSS
Bega
Sivan
3
CSS
Benassi
Paul
1
CSS
Bingham
Kathleen
2
CSS
Chau
Heidi
3
CSS
Fantus
Claire
2
CSS
Hapke
Emma
1
CSS
Hassan
Ahmed Nabeel
4
CSS
Ismail
Plabon
3
CSS
Knox
Matthew
2
CSS
Kozloff
Nicole
3
CSS
Lachance
Laura
1
CSS
Lee
Jonathan
2
CSS
Ooi
Cara
4
CSS
Ptashny
Rachel
2
CSS
Thoma
Jessica
2
CSS
Voineskos
Daphne
3
CSS - Status
Only
Mitchell
Rachel
3
CSS - Status
Only
Nguyen
Hoa
3
CSS - Status
Only
Sheehan
Kathleen
2
PRAT Executive 2011-12
The residency program would like to thank the entire
PRAT executive for all of their tireless and collaborative work over the past academic year. The residency
program especially appreciates the outstanding leadership demonstrated by the 2011-2012 PRAT co-Presidents Dr. Iram Ahmed and Dr. Angela Ho.
Co-Presidents:
Iram Ahmed,
PGY4
Angela Ho,
PGY3
Co-Vice Presidents:
Maxym Choptiany, PGY3
Meri Kinneret
Friedman, PGY2
Communications:
Orit Zamir,
PGY2
Jacqueline Holiff, PGY1
Treasurer:
Joseph Park,
PGY2
Social:
Denise Sum,
PGY2
Michelle Marlborough, PGY1
COPE:
Oshrit Wanono,
PGY5
Vanessa Lentz,
PGY2
I will be stepping down as the Director of Postgraduate Medical Education on September 1, 2012. The
residency program remains in the very capable hands
of Dr. Lesley Wiesenfeld, who has functioned as a
superb Associate Program Director since July 2011. Dr.
Wiesenfeld will assume the role of Interim Director
of Postgraduate Medical Education from September 1,
2012-December 31, 2012. Over the last 7 years it has
been an enormous honour and a great privilege for
me to lead the largest psychiatry residency program
in North America. I would like to thank the PRPC/
PEAC for their enduring support and also thank Dr.
Trevor Young and Dr. Susan Lieff for their passionate
commitment to postgraduate medical education.
Ari Zaretsky, MD, FRCPC
Director, Postgraduate Medical Education
Fellowship Program
Overview
The Fellowship Program provides an opportunity for
advanced academic training in specific clinical and/
or research areas in Psychiatry. Fellowships are usually
undertaken for two years, although a small number of
candidates choose a one-year Fellowship.
The Fellowship Program receives applicants from
within the Department as well as nationally and
internationally. There is a standard application process
and each Fellow works with a primary supervisor in a
specific Program within the Department. Each Fellow
must submit an annual report on their scholarly
activities and an award is offered each year based on
this report.
The Fellowship Director reports directly to the ViceChair, Education and sits on the Education Council.
The Fellowship Executive consists of representation
from hospital sites as well as representation from
Programs, Fellows and Psychiatry Residents.
Awards Available to Fellows
and Supervisors
This was a very busy year for organizing competitions
and offering awards and developing new awards.
Fellows had the opportunity to nominate supervisors
for the “Paul E. Garfinkel Award for Best Fellowship
Supervisor” online, producing several nominations
this year. This year’s winner was Dr. Jeff Daskalakis. We
continued to offer “Best Accomplishment by a Fellow
Award”. This award is based on the best submission
of an annual report from a Fellow in the Program.
This year the award went to Dr.Victoria Wing. We
were pleased to offer several travel awards this year
to Fellows who were presenting their research at
scientific meetings.
Events
On April 23rd, we were pleased to present a
Mindfulness and Neuroplasticity workshop led by
Dr. Wanda Bowman Taylor. The event was extremely
well-attended and productive. We will strive to offer
even more workshops and seminars in the next year.
The Annual Fall Reception was held on November
2nd, 2011, and provided the opportunity for Fellows
from all of the diverse hospital sites to meet one
another. In addition, Fellows had the opportunity to
meet and exchange ideas about the Program with
the Director, Executive Fellowship Committee and
Faculty and Trainees.
During this year, we are planning events based on
feedback from Fellows as well as events that seemed
to receive positive feedback in past years. Fellows
who serve on the Executive have begun to organize
seminars, networking events and dinners throughout
the year. We would like to recognize Clement Zai and
Vanessa Faria De Oliveira for taking the lead on this
initiative.
The Fellowship Program hosted a Fellowship
Academic Day on April 6th, 2012. This event gave
Fellows the opportunity to present their scholarly
work to other fellows, supervisors and the fellowship
executive. Six of our fellows gave presentations, and
the event was attended by Fellows, as well as some of
the supervisors. The event also provided a forum for
academic and social exchange among Fellows.
Works in Progress
The Fellowship Program continued to emphasize
the importance of consistent effective evaluation and
report procedures throughout this academic year.
This initiative will continue to expand within the
new academic year. The Director of the Fellowship
Program is now a member of the Faculty of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
29
Divisions
PGME Fellowship Educational Advisory Committee
(FEAC), which continues to provide standard
guidelines for Fellowships across the Departments in
the Faculty of Medicine.
Last Name
First Name
Program
Ameis
Stephanie
Child Psychiatry/
Neuroscience
Awoke
Asnake Limenhe
General Psychiatry
We also continue to place emphasis on the importance
of financial support for our Fellows. The new funding
minimums put in place for international medical
graduates — at the recommendation of the FEAC
— is a step in the right direction, and will ensure that
fellows can concentrate on training and development.
Moving forwards, similar evaluations of funding for
other fellows will take place.
Bohra
Miqdad Hussain
Health & Disease
Boroujerdi
Mehrnaz
Neuroscience
De Jesus
Danilo Rocha
Addiction Psychiatry
Ellis
Janet Winifred
Maude
Psychiatry, health &
Disease
Faria
Vanessa
Neurosciences
Fitzgerald
John Peter
Psychiatry, health &
Disease
Foussias
George
Schizophrenia
The Travel Awards continue to provide assistance to
our best and brightest fellows, and to offer them the
means to make connections outside of the university,
and showcase their work on a much larger stage. This
year, eight travel awards were given out.
Gabel
Kevin David
Child Psychiatry
Hahn
Margaret Karolina
Schizophrenia
Haji Azim
Mohammad
CIP Clinical
Henderson
Julie
Child Psychiatry
Iaboni
Andrea
General Psychiatry &
Psychiatry, Health &
Disease
Kadmon
Gili
General Psychiatry
& Psychiatry Health
and Disease
Kaduri
Pamela Allen
Addiction Psychiatry
Kaki
Fatima Mohammed
Addiction Psychiatry
Kolla
Nathan
Addiction Psychiatry
Fellows
Please refer to tables below for a listing of Fellows by
Program or Division. There were 54 registered fellows
this academic year.
Fellows Enrolled in the Program:
Academic Year 2011-2012
Last Name
First Name
Program
Kumar
Sameer
General Psyhciatry
Abebe
Solomon Teferra
General Psychiatry
Lachmann
Mark
Geriatric Psychiatry
Abi-Jaoude
Elia
CIP Research
Lamba
Wiplove
Addiction Psychiatry
Abualross
Hani Saleh
Child Psychiatry
Leung
Yvonne
Al Henaki
Sulieman Nasser
Abdullah
Consultation Liaison
Psychiatry, Health &
Disease
Lev-Ran
Shauli
Addiction Psychiatry
Aldaoud
Abdullah Mohammed
Mood & Anxiety
Disorders
Mazi
Baraa Abdulkareem
Women’s Mental
Health
Alghamdi
Samirah Ali Saeed Child Psychiatry
Mousa
Fahad Hamad
Addiction Psychiatry
Hanan Mohammed G.H.
CIP Clinical
Allohidan
Al-Ozairi
Abdulla Sadad
Sabri
Neuropsychiatry
Nakajima
Shinichiro
Addiction Psychiatry
Paradiso
Monica Celina
Schizophrenia
Alsuwaidan
Mohammad
Resrch, Inn &
Scholar Edu
Phanasathit
Muthita
Geriatric
Alwahibi
Abdulrhman Saleh Geriatric Psychiatry
R. Riopel
Marie Eve
Geriatric Psychiatry
Salim
Syeeda Shahana
Child & Adolescent
Psychiatry
Divisions
Last Name
First Name
Program
Santiago
Marcia Helena
Alves Maciel
Geriatric
Seller
Cathlene
Child Psychiatry
Solty
Heidi Lynn
Geriatric Psychiatry
Takeuchi
Hiroyoshi
Child Psychiatry
Thirlwell
Celeste
Child & Schizophrenia
Tseng
Michael
Health & Disease
Uemura
Takuji
Neurosciences
Wass
Caroline
Schizophrenia
Wheeler
Anne
Schizophrenia
Wing
Victoria
Addiction Psychiatry
Wochamo
Zai
Zuzarte Luis
Teketel Tegegn
Clement
Pedro Miguel
Psychiatry, Health
and Disease -- HIV
Psychiatry
Neurosciences
Mood & Anxiety
The Fellowship Program
continued to emphasize the
importance of consistent
effective evaluation and report
procedures throughout this
academic year. This initiative
will continue to expand within
the new academic year.
The Director of the Fellowship
Program is now a member
of the Faculty of Medicine
PGME Fellowship Educational
Advisory Committee
In my final report as director of the fellowship
program, I want to say how proud I am of all the
Fellows who have entered and completed the program,
how grateful I am to all the dedicated supervisors and
mentors across the department, and how honored I am
to have been part of it all.
Brenda B.Toner, PhD
Director, Fellowship Program
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
31
Continuing mental health education
Overview
Psychiatry’s Continuing Mental Health Education
(CMHE) goals are consistent with University of
Toronto CEPD goals, involving advocacy of best
practices in education; promotion of scholarship and
research; expansion of the scope of CMHE; and support for faculty development in CE.
The CMHE committee therefore acts as a mentoring
group, fostering the development of its members who
in turn spearhead multiple activities across our vast
department.
As it has for most of the past decade, the Department
of Psychiatry is the largest provider of accredited CE
programs in the faculty of Medicine, as well as the
largest academic provider of accredited CE programs
in psychiatry world-wide.
While 60 Department of Psychiatry programs (listed
in the appendix) are shown as accredited through the
University of Toronto in the table, there are numerous
additional unlisted accredited events such as Grand
Rounds.
The major 60 programs span the range of formats,
including 6 large conferences aimed predominantly
at a wide audience, 24 longitudinal courses designed
to develop skills in participants from the local area, 28
intensive, 2-3 day training institutes designed to impart very specific skills, usually in psychotherapy, and
2 retreats.Most of the longitudinal courses were webbased. A fuller description of these programs, with
course brochures, is available on the CMHE website:
http://www.utpsychiatyr.ca/Education/ContinuingEducation/default.asp
The department remains active in Knowledge Translation (KT), with a number of individuals holding
CIHR grants in this area, and additional interest in
KT fostered by the 2011 CMHE retreat on KT. Finally, scholarship in education is further demonstrated
by various recent educational research publications.
Public education is another important area, with a
major provincial series of talks on Bipolar Disorder
designed by the U of T and delivered under the partnership with Mood Disorders Association of Ontario.
Signficant public and provider initiatives were also
done to combat stigma associated with mental illness.
The Ivan Silver Award is the premiere recognition
in the Department of Psychiatry for scholarship in
Continuing Education, based on innovation in design,
educational formats, excellence in teaching delivery,
and measurement of outcome.
This year, two events were nominated that included
programs in negotiating difficult patient interactions
for community-based practitioners and handling oncall responsibilities for faculty members.
The 2012 Ivan Silver Award was awarded to Dr. Diana Kljenak for the half day workshop on Succeeding
at “Difficult” Clinician-Patient Interactions: Tips for
Clinicians.
Further development of faculty was fostered through
the 2012 CMHE Annual Retreat, which featured
university simulation programming expert Dr. Adam
Dubrowski explaining various practical uses of simulation in psychiatry.
The CMHE committee also provides modest support for research projects and for members to attend
conferences connected to scholarship in CE.
Sagar V. Parikh, M.D., FRCPC
Director of CMHE
Education Programs
APPENDIX – 2011/2012 CME EVENT LIST
Event Date
Event Name
Sponsoring Institution
July 1, 2011 – June 30, 2013
Opioid Dependence Treatment Certificate Program
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
July 1, 2012 – June 30, 2012
Opioid Dependence Treatment Core Course
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
July 18, 2011 – July 22, 2011
A Problem Based Introduction to Mental Health
Services Research
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
25-Jul-11
Part ODT Certificate – Interactions between Psychiatric Medications and Drugs of Abuse
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 1, 2011 – August
30, 2012
Motivational Interviewing 1:
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 1, 2011 – September 1, 2012
Youth and Drugs and Mental Health
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 1, 2011 – June 30,
2012
TEACH Certificate 2011-2012
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 8, 2011 – April 30,
2012
Fundamental Psychoanalytic Perspectives
Toronto Psychoanalytic Society &
Institute
Introduction
September 12, 2012 – June 24, Advanced Training Program in Psychoanalytic Psy2013
chotherapy
Toronto Psychoanalytic Society &
Institute
September 12, 2011 – September 12, 2012
Concurrent Disorders Core Course
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 15, 2011 – September 16, 2011
Social Determinants of Mental Health in Northern
Ontario
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 16, 2011 – September 17, 2011
Mentalization-Based Treatment Workshop
Mount Sinai Hospital
17-Sep-11
A Day in Applied Psychoanalysis:
Mount Sinai Hospital
Father Hunger
September 22, 2011 – September 23, 2011
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy – Basics (Part A)
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
September 22, 2011 – September 22, 2013
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Certificate 20112013
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
October 1, 2011 – June 30,
2012
Advanced Issued in Opioid Dependence Treatment
Workshop
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
October 1, 2011 – November
27, 2011
Mindfulness-Based Group Practice
Mount Sinai Hospital
October 5, 2011 – October 5,
2012
Interactions between Psychiatric Medications and
Substances of Abuse
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
October 20, 2011 – October 21, The Essentials of Simulation – An Introduction
2012
Ontario Simulation Network
October 27, 2011 – October 28, Dialectical Behaviour Therapy:
2011
Intermediate Level Training (Part B)
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
33
Education Programs
Event Date
Event Name
Sponsoring Institution
November 7, 2011 – November
8, 2011
Health and Wellbeing in Developmental Disabilities:
Surrey Place Centre
Engaging Health Care Professionals
November 10, 2011 – November The Frame of Simulation, Briefing, Debriefing and
11, 2011
Facilitation
Ontario Simulation Network
11-Nov-11
Therapeutic Writing
Mount Sinai Hospital
11-Nov-11
2nd Youthdale Adolescent Brain Development and
Behaviour Conference
Youthdale Treatment Centres
November 14, 2011 – March 2,
2012
TEACH OTRU Online Course – Tobacco and Public
Health:
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
From Theory to Practice
November 14, 2011 – March 2,
2012
Core Course – A Comprehensive Course on Smoking Centre for Addiction and Mental
Cessation:
Health
Essential Skills and Strategies (TEACH)
November 17, 2011 – March 2,
2012
TEACH Specialty Course – Integrated Chronic Disease Prevention: Addressing the Risks
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
17-Nov-11
Interventions for Individuals at Risk for Suicide –
Current Progress and Future Possibilities
St. Michael’s Hospital
November 17, 2011 – November TEACH Specialty Course – Tobacco Interventions
18, 2011
with Aboriginal Peoples
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
November 25, 2011 – November University Health Network – Acceptance and Com26, 2011
mitment Therapy Training
University Health Network
2-Dec-11
Brain Sciences Day 2011
Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre
2-Dec-11
Psychotherapy Supervisors Annual Retreat
Mount Sinai Hospital
January 1, 2012 – December
31, 2012
Sleep Medicine Fellowship Rounds
University of Toronto
January 3, 2012 – January 3,
2013
Integrating a Concurrent Disorders Approach into
Withdrawal Management
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
January 3, 2012 – January 3,
2013
Legal Issues in Mental Health Care in Ontario
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
6-Jan-12
Neuroscience Day
University of Toronto
January 16, 2012 – June 18,
2012
Transitional Space Multidisciplinary Psychotherapy
Supervision Group
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
20-Jan-12
Mindfulness Core Concepts
University Health Network
24-Jan-12
Ontario Community Workshops for Improved Opioid
Use
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario
February 3, 2012 – February 4,
2012
Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy for Physicians
University Health Network
10-Feb-12
The Donald Wasylenki Faculty Development Day
University of Toronto
February 23, 2012 – February
24, 2012
Simulation Centre Wizardry From Soup to Nuts
University Health Network
Education Programs
Event Date
Event Name
Sponsoring Institution
February 27, 2012 – February
29, 2012
TEACH Cours de base: Cours sur l’arret du tabagisme : competences et strategies essentielles
(Francophone Version)
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
29-Feb-12
Cultural Psychiatry Day
University Health Network
March 1, 2012 – March 2,
2012 TEACH
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
Specialty Course – Helping Pregnant Women Quit
Smoking: A Woman- Centred Approach
March 1, 2012 – March 2,
2012 TEACH Specialty Course – Entretien motivationnel
et arret du tabagisme (Francophone Version)
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
March 5, 2012 – October 19,
2012 Knowledge Translation Professional Certificate
The Hospital for Sick Kids
10-Mar-12
Toronto Psychopharmacology Update 2012
University of Toronto
March 26, 2012 – March 28,
2012
Baycrest Annual Neuroscience Research Conference – Mild Cognitive Impairment
Baycrest Centre for Geriatric
Care
March 26, 2012 – March 30,
2012
E-Simulation
Ontario Simulation Network
April 7, 2011 – May 26, 2012
Mindfulness-Based Psychotherapy in Women’s
Mental Health
University of Toronto
13-Apr-12
On Call Survival Skills – Faculty Update
University Health Network
April 16, 2012 – April 16, 2013 Basic Pharmacology in Mental Health and Substance Use Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
21-Apr-12
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
Safer Prescribing, Dispensing and Administering of
Opioids for Non-malignant Chronic Pain
April 27, 2012 – June 23, 2012 Cognitive-Behavioural Analysis System of Psychotherapy
Mount Sinai Hospital
May 11, 2012 – July 14, 2012 Psychological Trauma
Mount Sinai Hospital
May 17, 2012 – May 18, 2012 Tobacco interventions for Patients with Mental
Health and-or Addictive Disorders
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
May 21, 2012 – May 21, 2013
Collaborating with Families Affected by Concurrent
Disorders
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health
June 14, 2012 Harvey Stancer Research Day
University of Toronto
21-Jun-12
CMHE Retreat 2012
University of Toronto
June 26, 2012 – June 28, 2012 Hot Topic Conference – Obesity and Mental Health
University of Toronto
June 28, 2012 University Health Network
Succeeding in Managing Non- Adherent and
Substance-Abusing Patients: Tips for Clinicians
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
35
Division of Adult Psychiatry & Health systems
Overview
The Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems
is the second-largest division within the Department
of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. It is the
academic home of acute care psychiatry, involving the
continuum of care between psychiatric emergency
services, inpatient services, and outpatient care.
into a continuum of care. With regard to education,
the Division sponsors academic lectures and colloquia
and trains clinical and research fellows. Seminars for
psychiatric residents are presented in the departmental
core curriculum and residents may structure career
rotations in the program.
The Division provides core training in psychiatry for
residents and framework for clinical and academic
coordination across a range of sites within the City of
Toronto. Major sites include:
With regard to undergraduate education, a half-day
workshop on the mental health system is presented in
the Determinants of Health course. Resident training
in dual diagnosis service delivery is also provided by
program staff.
• Mount Sinai Hospital
DIVISIONAL EXPERTISE
• North York General Hospital
The 191 members of the Division model and promote broad-based and integrative education, research,
and clinical care in an era that emphasizes subspecialization. Within the Division, advanced work in
Suicidology, Emergency Psychiatry, Psychological
Trauma, Cross-Cultural Health, Integrated Therapy,
and Inpatient Psychiatry.
• Ontario Shores Mental Health Centre
• St. Joseph’s Health Science Centre
• St. Michael’s Hospital
• Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
• Surrey Place Centre
The purpose of the Division is to foster the many
roles of the academic generalist and to facilitate the
utilization of scientific information to improve the
delivery of mental health and addiction services. The
Division’s commitment to nurturing clinical excellence and comprehensive responsiveness to the needs
of society is demonstrated by the wide array of clinical services.
Research in diverse areas such as Inner City Health,
Suicide, Dual Disorders, Clinical Treatments, Population Health, Ethics, and Integrative Psychotherapy/
Medication models is pursued. Members are also extensively involved in activities related to public agendas. The program has developed effective working
relationships with decision-makers at national, provincial and local levels. Activities include the provision of
technical assistance for planning processes, advice and
consultation to government departments, commissions and task forces, and information to guide public
policy development in the mental health field.
Our members support the development of programs
which are community-focused, which target individuals with severe and persistent mental illnesses and/
or substance use disorders and which are integrated
The Division exemplifies interprofessional practice
and is proud to advance and disseminate the theoretical perspectives, methodologies, and evidence-based
knowledge that informs this important domain of
• the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
• the University Health Network
• Women’s College Hospital
Divisions
modern health care delivery. Largescale coordinated activities like the
MH&A ED alliance epitomize the collaborative efforts of medical and allied
health staff as do the individual hospital
and community-based clinical activities
of our staff.
In addition to the creation of new
knowledge in the service delivery
field, the Division emphasizes knowledge transfer and exchange as well
as the integration of qualitative and
quantitative research methodologies.
The Program is delighted to have
over $16,727,021.00 in total research
funding for 2011-12. This represents
over 20% of the Department’s total
peer-reviewed and non-peer reviewed
funding for this year.
Research in
diverse areas
such as Inner City
Health, Suicide,
Dual Disorders,
Clinical Treatments,
Population
Health, Ethics,
and Integrative
Psychotherapy/
Medication
models is pursued.
Members are also
extensively involved
in activities related
to public agendas.
THE MENTAL HEALTH AND
ADDICTIONS EMERGENCY
DEPARTMENT ALLIANCE
The Division is extremely proud to host the leadership role in the Mental Health and Addiction Emergency Department Alliance (MH&A EDA) as part of
its mandate to improve clinical coordination across the
Toronto Central LHIN region.
The Alliance is a partnership of seven (7) Toronto
Central LHIN hospitals (i.e., The Centre for Addiction
and Mental Health, Mount Sinai Hospital, St. Joseph’s
Health Centre, St. Michael’s Hospital, Sunnybrook
Health departments devoted to improving the management of psychiatric and behavioral emergencies has
begun to guide future prospective research efforts and
hypothesis generation for the field, in part, by standardizing data collection across sites.
psychiatric emergencies and guide further
evidence-based system improvement activities in both the medical and psychiatric
emergency departments across the TCLHIN and the broader health system.
The goal of the MH&A EDA is to provide
the right acute mental health and addiction care, in the right place, at the right
time in a respectful, client-centred manner.
This goal is being accomplished through a
collaborative process aimed at optimizing
the use of the TC-LHIN’s existing acute
mental health and addiction service capacity. The TC-LHIN’s Emergency Departments are conceived of by the MH&A ED
Alliance not as the centre of mental health
and addiction care for TC-LHIN residents,
but rather, as emergency response centres and a key point of opportunity for connection of
people with acute mental health and addiction needs
to timely and appropriate alternatives and followup care through related inpatient, outpatient and/or
community-based services.
L.Trevor Young, MD, FRCPC
Acting-Director, Division of General Psychiatry
Such large scale, standardized data collection activities
provide massive structured databases and will greatly
assist our efforts to advance and transfer knowledge
about the assessment, management, and outcomes of
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
37
Division of brain and
Therapeutics
Overview
The Division of Brain and Therapeutics, effective
January 1, 2012 integrates the clinical, educational and
research activities of its four component Programs in
Neuroscience; Addictions; Mood and Anxiety Disorders and Schizophrenia. The new division is codirected by Drs. Jim Kennedy and Tony George and
is comprised of more than 220 full- and part-time
faculty across 8 GTA teaching hospitals.
These outstanding areas of academic, educational and
clinical foci will be strengthened through the added
opportunities for clinical, educational and research
collaboration and synergy that the new divisional
alignment seeks to achieve for the benefit of its faculty and trainees. A summary of progress in the past
year is given below in the areas of research, education,
and clinical care.
RESEARCH
The faculty of the Division of Brain and Therapeutics
brought in over 50% of the external funding generated by the Department of Psychiatry in 2011-12.
Division faculty published over 350 peer-reviewed
papers, and were highly successful in recent grant
competitions for CIHR, NIH, NARSAD, Ontario
DIVISIONS
Mental Health Foundation (OMHF) and the Schizophrenia Society of Ontario (SSO). In 2011-12, CIHR
operating grants were obtained by Drs. Jim Kennedy,
Tony George, Arturas Petronis, Trevor Young,Vincenzo
Deluca, Jeff Daskalakis, Daniel Blumberger, Benjamin
Goldstein, Bernard Lefoll, Jeffery Meyer and Christian Hendershot, and Dr. Deluca was awarded a 2012
CIHR New Investigator Award.
NARSAD 2012 Young Investigator Awards were
obtained by Drs. Marina Frantseva, Ana Andreazza,
Mahesh Menon and Arun Tiwari, and a NARSAD
Independent Investigator Award was obtained by Dr.
Albert Wong. Drs. Jim Kennedy and Daniel Mueller
led the establishment of the Tanenbaum Centre for
Pharmacogenetics through a $19.0 Million donation
from the Tanenbaum Family.
EDUCATION
The Division is a major conduit for the training of
undergraduate and graduate students in the Institute of
Medical Sciences (IMS, which is directed by Division
faculty member Dr. Allan Kaplan) and other medical
school graduate departments, and for medical students,
psychiatric residents and post-doctoral fellows in the
Department of Psychiatry. In fact, over 75% of Clinician-Scientist Stream (CSS) and Clinician-Scientist
Program (CSP) residents in the Department (led by
Dr. Jeff Daskalakis) have faculty members in the Division.
Faculty from the Schizophrenia, Mood and Anxiety
and Addictions Programs within the Division also play
important teaching roles with the UofT Psychiatry
Residency in PGY 1-5, and there are more than 40
post-doctoral fellows in working with Division faculty.
CLINICAL CARE
Division faculty participate in the care of patients
with a broad range of mood, anxiety, psychotic and
addictive disorders which has been recognized for
excellence in patient care at regional, national and
international levels. Our affiliated hospitals include The
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH),
University Health Network (UHN), Mount Sinai
Hospital (MSH), St. Michael’s Hospital (SMH), North
York General Hospital (NYGH), Baycrest Hospital,
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences,
and Sunnybrook Hospital.
AWARDS AND RECOGNITION
Division faculty obtained several notable awards and
recognition in 2011-12. Dr. Anne Bassett received the
John M. Cleghorn Award for Excellence in Psychiatric
Research from the Canadian Psychiatric Association.
Dr. Gary Remington was the winner of the 2012 Innovations in Neuropsychopharmacology Award from
the Canadian College of Neuropsychopharmacology (CCNP), and the 2012 Mel Silverman Award for
Outstanding Mentoring in the Institute of Medical
Sciences at UofT.
Dr. Daniel Mueller was elected to Associate Member
Status and Dr. Tony George was promoted to Fellow
Status in the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP). Dr. Rachel Tyndale was appointed
as Chair of the Pharmacogenomics Research Network
(PGRN) of the National Institutes of Health.
Dr. Franco Vaccarino (Vice-President of UofT Scarborough, and a long-standing member of the Neuroscience Division in the Department) was appointed
to the Board of Directors of Brain Canada (formerly
Neuroscience Canada), which has a $200 million
budget to enhance brain and neuropsychiatric research
across Canada over the coming years.
Finally, Dr. Ari Zaretsky, our post-graduate Director,
won the 2012 Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy and
Mentorship in Postgraduate Medicine (U of T Faculty
of Medicine).
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
The Division leadership is working on a Lecture Series
to bring leading experts in basic and clinical neurosciences and therapeutics to Toronto with the support
of the new Campbell Brain Institute at CAMH, and a
Chair in Clinical Neurosciences through the Campbell
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
39
DIVISIONS
Brain Institute is expected to be recruited by late 2012.
Start-up research awards for junior faculty and postdoctoral fellows will also be a priority for the Division
as well as the mentoring of the next generation of
translational and clinical psychiatric neuroscientists and
clinicians through our diverse training programs.
As it is clear, our new Division has a wealth of faculty expertise in basic and clinical brain sciences and
experimental therapeutics which is known worldwide,
and will help us take our Division and Department to
new heights.
Tony P. George, M.D., FRCPC
James L. Kennedy, M.D., FRCPC
Division Co-Directors
The faculty of the Division
of Brain and Therapeutics
brought in over 50% of the
external funding generated by
the Department of Psychiatry
in 2011-12. Division faculty
published over 350 peerreviewed papers, and were
highly successful in recent
grant competitions.
division of child psychiatry
Overview
Our Divisional goals emphasize exemplary training,
research, scholarship, and the discovery and dissemination of new knowledge in the context of compassionate care, scientific rigor, and evidence based treatment.
The Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is
comprised of ten sites: the Child,Youth and Family Program (CYFP) at the Centre for Addiction and
Mental Health; the Department of Psychiatry at the
Hospital for Sick Children (HSC); the Youth Psychiatry Program at Sunnybrook; the community based
programs at Hincks-Dellcrest,Youthdale Treatment
Centres, George Hull Centre for Children and Families, and the Child Psychiatry Programs at North York
General Hospital, Humber River Regional Hospital,
St. Joe’s Hospital, and Toronto East General Hospital.
St. Michael’s Hospital offers Selective Placements for
residents in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. During
the coming academic year we will add two new sites
to the division, the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
programs at Credit Valley Hospital and Ontario Shores
Centre for Mental Health Services.
HSC and CYFP constitute the hub at which the
majority of Divisional research occurs. Education and
clinical care is spread throughout the Division. The
range of clinical services includes specialized areas at
CYFP and HSC as well as more general services at
other sites.
While there is some overlap in the services provided
at CYFP and HSC, there are unique and distinct areas
of specialization between these two key sites. Programs
and services at HSC as distinct from CYFP include:
Eating Disorders, Neuropsychiatry (ADHD); Anxiety Disorders and OCD; Infant Psychiatry; CYFP as
distinct from HSC,Youth Addictions and Concurrent
Disorders; Mood disorders,Young Offender Assessments; Gender Identity Disorders, Early Onset Psy-
choses; Substance Abuse Prevention for African Canadian and Caribbean Youth (SAPACCY). HSC has
a psychiatric emergency service, an inpatient unit and
a consultation liaison service to medical and surgical
services.
CYFP provides outreach to community agencies and
offers a program for the treatment of children with
disruptive behaviour disorders, a well established firesetting prevention program and a general consultation
clinic. Planning for the CYFP move to the Intergenerational Building is well underway and will continue
to be a major focus in 2012. Discussions have focused
on developing ways to work collaboratively with
existing services to fill a gap in the continuum of care
for youth with concurrent disorders, both locally and
provincially. The new services for youth with concurrent disorders will open in July under the leadership of
Dr. Corrine Carlisle.
Community based Mental Health Centres at the
Hincks-Dellcrest,Youthdale, and George Hull provide
experience and training that complements the hospital
based experience at HSC and CAMH. For instance,
Hincks-Dellcrest provides community based prevention
programs to infants, and preschoolers and their families at two high density development areas in Toronto.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre has a new CEO, Ms. Donna
Duncan. Likewise, George Hull offers collaborative
mental health partnerships with community groups,
focused on early intervention and prevention programs
with children 0-6 years of age. Dr. Greg Lodenquai is
the new medical director at George Hull.
Drs. Langley and Ickowicz have consulted with the
Mental Health and Addictions Acute Care Alliance.
They would like to see a similar model of integrated
crisis services for children and youth. Dr. Langley is
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
41
DIVISIONS
hopeful that this issue will be a priority of the future
Director of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
Faculty have established strong working relationships
and collaborations with other departments within their
host institution as well as University-based programs in
neuroscience, pediatrics, psychology, and education and
others. This rich mixture of faculty and trainees from
diverse disciplines broadens the perspective, widens
our training horizon and is reflected in our research
and scholarship.
Postgraduate Education
The Division has had another excellent year providing high quality training in child psychiatry for career
track child psychiatry residents and for general psychiatry residents completing their core child psychiatry
requirements. Eight sites provide core and career track
child training. Toronto East General Hospital, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, and St. Michael’s
Hospital offer child senior selectives only.
This year the Division was asked to provide core child
psychiatry training for 38 PGY-3 residents. As the
psychiatry residency program continues to expand,
we have been asked to provide core training for more
residents. In order to address the increasing numbers
we have added Humber River Regional Hospital for
core and career rotations. Credit Valley Hospital and
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Services will
be offering core rotations and career track selectives
for the 2013-14 academic year.
Dr. John Langley, the postgraduate education training
director, is a member of the Royal College Specialty
Committee for the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Subspecialty. The Division of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry received full approval from the Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada to be
an accredited training site. The Division will accept
the first cohort of three subspecialty residents in July
2012. We are most grateful for the ongoing support
and expertise of the Division of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry Residency Program Committee and the
Subspecialty Curriculum Subcommittee. In addition,
we are also grateful for the work of Drs. Susan Lieff
and Andrea Waddell who have provided support and
guidance in developing our Subspecialty Residency
Program.
This year six residents completed their required career
training in child psychiatry. The career child psychiatry training program is the largest child psychiatry
program in Canada and one of the largest in North
America. We continue to stress the importance of a
balanced clinical experience for all core child psychiatry residents with children and youth of all ages and
with a variety of diagnoses. Goals and objectives for
the core child rotation are reviewed by all residents
and supervisors and the core child rotation-specific
ITER is used for evaluation. All residents use a clinical
log to monitor their clinical experience throughout
the rotation. The log is reviewed with their supervisors
on a regular basis.
All core and career track seminars occur on Thursdays
at the Hospital for Sick Children. The core seminars
are well attended and the faculty contribution is highly
rated by residents. There are 11 general topic seminars
and 10-11 psychotherapy seminars. The psychotherapy
seminars cover development and psychotherapy, CBT,
family therapy, and psychodynamic psychotherapy. Dr.
Priya Watson, the psychotherapy director, has conducted a review of the evaluations of the psychotherapy
seminars. The evaluations are uniformly excellent. The
Advanced Child Psychopharmacology Course continues to receive strong evaluations. One of the course
directors, Dr. Daniel Gorman, presented a symposium
with international faculty at this year’s joint CACAP/
AACAP conference, “International Perspectives on
Resident Training in Child Psychopharmacology.”
The divisional chief resident, Dr. Oshrit Wanono,
and her career child resident colleagues developed an
excellent seminar series for senior child residents. The
postgraduate education committee is thankful for Dr.
Wanono’s hard work and leadership.
DIVISIONS
Undergraduate Education
Undergraduate education in Child Psychiatry is taught
at six sites: The Hospital for Sick Children, Sunnybrook and Women’s College Health Sciences Centre,
The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (Child
Youth and Family Program), Hincks Dellcrest Centre,
The George Hull Centre and Youthdale. Each teaching
site has an undergraduate representative that participates in a bimonthly administrative meeting chaired
by, Dr. Suneeta Monga, the Director of Undergraduate
Education, of the Division of Child Psychiatry.
All University of Toronto year 3 clinical clerks participate in a Child and Adolescent Psychiatry course
which is embedded in their 3 year adult psychiatry
clerkship. A Centralized curriculum is taught across all
six teaching sites. Approximately 36 clerks are taught
during each of six clerkship rotations per year, with
the largest number allotted to HSC and CAMH.
A divisional undergraduate education retreat was held
in May to discuss electives at the various sites, improved teaching at all sites as well as to ensure that our
child and adolescent psychiatry exam question databank is up to date. Two departmental
initiatives, PsychLE and PedLE longitudinal experiences for medical students, were well subscribed and
several child sites participated.
Research and Fellowship
The Division has a new director for Research and
Fellowship, Dr. Amy Cheung. We are thankful for Dr.
Russell Schachar’s many years of leadership. There has
been outstanding growth in research and fellowship
activities within the Division. Faculty of the Division are actively involved in a wide range of research
activities from the most basic, e.g., genetic and neuroimaging studies to the most applied, e.g., clinical
trials and health services research. Faculty collaborate
widely within their own institutions (particularly at
HSC and CAMH), within the Division, nationally
and internationally as can be seen from authorship of
journal articles published by the faculty and by the
co-investigators on grants held by faculty. At CAMH,
a major focus of research efforts are directed toward
youth with concurrent disorders supported by CIHR
funding. In addition, Health Canada is supporting a
National initiative to enhance service provider CD
capacity, increase early intervention opportunities, and
improve pathways to treatment for youth and their
families.
The total value of the grants that are currently active
in the Division has grown from $24,000,000 in 2009
to over $34,000,000 in 2010 from Provincial, National
and International agencies. In this academic year alone,
these grants will bring $9,300,000 for research compared with $4,800,000 in the previous year.
Our Division hosts one of the largest fellowship
programs in child and adolescent psychiatry in North
America. In 2011, there were 6 Fellows spread among
the various sites in the Division. Fellows have diverse
educational backgrounds including psychology, psychiatry, nursing, and basic sciences. The program showed a
steady increase in the number of international fellows
and fellows from other Canadian universities. Over the
last year, Fellows presented at various prestigious meetings and achieved several honours. Recent graduates
of our Fellowship Program have gone on to establish
careers at York, Ryerson and McMaster Universities.
The Bell Chair in Youth Mood and Anxiety Disorders
has been established at Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre. A search for the first chair is currently underway.
Continuing Professional
Development
The CPD program in the Division of Child Psychiatry
provides accredited CPD events of high effectiveness
and innovations. Dr. Tony Pignatiello is the new director for CPD.
Events
Child Psychiatry Day was held on Thursday, April 26,
2012 in the Hollywood Theatre at SickKids, “Mood
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
43
DIVISIONS
Swings” – psychodynamics, bipolar and mood disorders. Speakers included Drs. Susan Bradley, Benjamin
Goldstein, and Laurence Katz (U of Manitoba). The
conference was completely sold out. The Fotheringham Address was given by Dr.
Gabrielle Carlson, Stony Brook University, New York.
The Faculty Dinner following Child Psychiatry Day
was held in the Music Room at Hart House at 6pm.
The Divisional Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Faculty Retreat was held on Friday June 8, 2012 at The
Estates of Sunnybrook and focused on “Professionalism and the Business of Medicine”. Speakers included
Drs. Pier Bryden, Ross Berringer and Elia Abi-Jaoude
at this time. Dr. John Langley provided a faculty development workshop in preparation for the subspecialty
residency program. The retreat had record attendance
and received very positive evaluations.
Weekly Psychiatry Rounds have become Divisionwide Grand Rounds (rotating to all Divisional Child
Sites). Dr. Pignatiello is also considering webcasting
Grand Rounds.
Appointments, Awards, and
Honours
• Appointments:
• Lecturer: Marc Fadel, Stephanie Wiesenthal
• Promotions:
• Assistant Professor: Corine Carlisle, Diane Philipp,
Pamela Wilansky-Traynor
• Associate Professor: Bruce Ballon, Alice Charach,
Amy Cheung, John Strauss
• Full Professor: Paul Sandor
• Awards:
• Dr. Nicola Keyhan: Paul Steinhauer Award for excellence in postgraduate education in the Division
of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
• Dr. Angela Ho: Community Consultation Paper
Award
• Robert L Smith Prize in Child and Adolescent
Psychotherapies: Drs. Colman Nefsky, Andrea
Nixon, Nicole Kozloff, and Roberta De Oliveira.
• Stephanie Ameis: 2011 Exceptional Trainee Award
in the Program of Neurosciences & Mental Health
• Joe Beitchman: 2010 American Speech-LanguageHearing Association (ASHA) Journal Editors’
Award, August 2011
• Gili Adler-Nevo: 2011 annual meeting AACAP/
CACAP Junior Scholar Award
Department of Psychiatry
Strategic Plan
The department of psychiatry has developed a new
Strategic Plan. Drs. Russell Schachar and Amy Cheung
are the leads for the second priority of the plan, “Development: Expand understanding of early life development to enhance children’s lives and mental health
across the lifespan.” They have submitted their ideas to
Dr. Trevor Young, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, and they are moving forward with this initiative. A
number of divisional faculty will be leading subgroups
(e.g., research, education). The entire division will be
involved in the strategic planning process, hopefully
with the help of a consultant.
Finally, the search for a permanent director of the
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry has been
very successful. Three potential candidates will be interviewed in June.
John Langley, MD
Acting-Director
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
division of consultation
liaison Psychiatry
MISSION STATEMENT AND
DESCRIPTION
The Consultation & Liaison (CL) Division focuses on
the relationship amongst psychological, biological, and
social factors in the expression of symptoms in medical/surgical illness. This division’s mandate is to train
undergraduate and postgraduate students in the psychiatric care of patients with medical, psychosomatic
and medically unexplained conditions, to develop
and promote research, to establish and communicate
standards of care and to provide and support continuing education in the interface between psychiatry and
physical health.
The division draws the attention of physicians and
members of the community to the often undetected
and untreated psychiatric morbidity and psychosocial
distress in medical populations, and enhances the services and treatment available for such problems.
The CL division is based at several general hospitals,
one paediatric, and one rehabilitation hospital and
is staffed by academics and clinicians of many disciplines, including psychiatry, psychology and nursing.
Psychiatric CL clinical and teaching services, and specialized clinical and research programs are distributed
across these sites as follows, with leadership as noted:
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
45
DIVISIONS
The University Health Network
• Neuropsychiatry: Anthony Feinstein, MD
• CL Psychiatry & Transplantation: Susan Abbey
MD, Raed Hawa, MD
• Psycho-oncology: Janet Ellis MD
• Eating Disorders: Blake Woodside MD, Marion
Olmsted PhD
Women’s College Hospital
• Psychosocial Oncology: Andreia Scalco MD
• Neuropsychiatry and Sleep Disorders: Colin Shapiro MD
• Behavioural Cardiology: Robert Nolan PhD
The Hospital for Sick Children
• CL Psychiatry: Claire De Souza MD
• Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care: Gary
Rodin MD
The Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
• Bariatric surgery: Raed Hawa MD, Sanjeev Sockalingam MD
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENTS
Mount Sinai Hospital
• CL Psychiatry: Jon Hunter MD, Ellen Margolese
MD
• Psychosocial Oncology: Jon Hunter MD
• Gastrointestinal Disease: Ellen Margolese MD,
Robert Maunder MD
• HIV Psychiatry: Peter DeRoche MD
• Palliative Care Psychiatry: Bill Mah MD
• Pain Clinic: Peter Moran MD
• Diabetes and Obesity: Barry Simon MD
• Perinatal Psychiatry: Ariel Dalfen MD
Saint Michaels’ Hospital
• CL Psychiatry: Adriana Carvalhal MD, Kien Dang
MD, Shree Bhalerao MD
• HIV Psychiatry: Mark Halman, MD, Julie Maggi
MD
• Neuropsychology: Sean Rourke PhD
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
• CL Psychiatry: Robert Jaunkalns MD
• CL Psychiatry: Abe Snaiderman MD
Perhaps the most visible change in the last academic
year was the name change from the “Psychiatry, Health
and Disease Program” to the “Consultation-Liaison
Division”. As a consequence of the clinical realignment
exercise undertaken by the University Department, a
name was required that could represent the activities
of its members and convey to others –both within and
outside of psychiatry-the work we do.
This is no easy task, as the division includes disciplines as diverse as psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses,
and social workers, and clinical activities that include
CL general hospital and sub-specialty psychiatry,
sleep medicine, eating disorders, and neuropsychiatry,
amongst others.
Furthermore, we teach multiple disciplines at multiple
stages of their training, and our research and creative
professional activities (see below) encompasses a vast
reach. However, a review of the top 100 medical
schools in the world demonstrated that “Consultation
Liaison Psychiatry” was the most frequently utilized
name for similar programs.
Therefore, although by no means as inclusive as one
would hope for, it is the descriptive term that other
mental health professionals around the world are most
likely to recognize, and as such serves to convey the
nature of our work to others as effectively as is pos-
DIVISIONS
sible.
Regardless of what we call it, the Division continues
to be academically productive and innovative. A brief
overview reveals the following highlights. At UHN the
strength in Eating Disorders continues, as evidenced
by Marion Olmsted’s 5 peer-reviewed grants, 3 peer
reviewed publications, 3 book chapters and numerous
presentations here and abroad.
In Cardiac Psychiatry, Brian Baker continues his work
on the HARMONY study, examining stress reduction via mindfulness meditation and yoga, while Rob
Nolan holds grants in excess of three million dollars,
including an investigation into a crucial area of study
for CL psychiatry, namely issues that influence adherence to risk-factor modifications.
As well, Adrienne Kovacs is creatively addressing the
issues that confront individuals with congenital heart
disease as they transition to adulthood and the adult
health care system. Her participation on 2 funded
grants, 5 articles and 19 presentations is evidence of
her energetic activity in this area. In related work, Nicole Anderson became a Core Scientist with the Heart
and Stroke Foundation Centre for Stroke Recovery,
and supported her 2 CIHR grants with 9 articles and
a book.
The Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care team
at PMH also had a banner year with multiple members
participating in numerous research, educational and
clinical activities. Kim Edelstein continues her work
looking at vulnerability and resilience factors that bear
on the neuropsychological and neuro-imaging consequences of radiation treatment for childhood cancer
with 5 current research grants and 8 articles.
Lori Bernstein has also examined the consequences to
adults of head and neck radiation. Gary Rodin, Sarah
Hales and Chris Lo pursue the development of an
integrative psychotherapy model for patients with terminal illness (Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully; CALM) via a Canadian Cancer Society operating
grant. The utility of this model has led to workshops
training a cohort of practioners at PMH, and other
clinicians from Italy, Israel, Austria, Germany, and
Taiwan. In addition, Chris Lo has 3 first authored
publications, and has made an active contribution to
the Divisional steering committee, guiding the development and interpretation of a member’s survey.
Kim Miller led an interactive communication skills
course on communication confidence for 37 residents
in Oncology that was so well received that her group
has been asked to develop another course for PGY5s
in Hematology and Medical Oncology. This type of
trans-disciplinary education is a highly valued divisional activity.
Rinat Nissim contributes to the CALM study, as well
as using her expertise in qualitative analysis to understand the experience of patients, families, and volunteers in a cancer hospital, communicated via 5 peer
reviewed articles and a book chapter. Jennifer Jones
continued in her position as Director of Research for
the Cancer Survivorship Program and Associate Director of The ELLICSR Centre for Health, Wellness
and Cancer Survivorship at UHN with 9 peer reviewed publications and well over 1 million dollars of
research funding attesting to her ongoing productivity.
Mary Jane Esplen continues in her role as the Director of the de Souza Institute, adding 11 peer reviewed
publications and 3 book chapters to over 20 academic
presentations on topics ranging from psychological
consequences of cancer predisposition to how cancer
nurses experience the threat of their patients’ mortality. Mary Vachon contributed to 4 chapters addressing primarily the grief and burn-out of professional
care-givers.
At TWH the Bariatric Surgery Centre of Excellence
Psychosocial Team, the largest such team in Ontario, continues to assess and follow bariatric surgery
patients for up to five years post-surgery for patients
at TWH, SMH and TEGH. In 2011-2012 540 total
surgeries were completed for these sites. Raed Hawa
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
47
DIVISIONS
and Sanjeev Sockalingam participate in the team,
which includes 3 psychologists, 2 psychometrists, 3
nurse practitioners, 3 social workers, and a Psychosocial Director.
Unique to the field, each patient receives an intensive
multi-disciplinary evaluation (mental health, nutrition, and social work) prior to seeing a surgeon, and
has available to them extensive post-operative support,
including CBT support groups, in person or via the
telephone. A transition program led by psychologists
from HSC’s obesity and bariatric program, co-chaired
by Marlene Taube-Schiff, is tackling the systemic issue
of moving patients from the paediatric to the adult
system. An active research program is underway, with
3 peer reviewed publications, and participation in 11
national and 9 international conferences by members
of this active interdisciplinary team, which acts as a
model of mental health care integrated into a medical/surgical context.
Also at TWH, Raed Hawa became the Director of
undergraduate medical education for the Department
of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, and Sanjeev
Sockalingam was named the Chair of the Continuing
Professional Development Committee of the Canadian Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine.
The Hospital for Sick Children CL team, consisting
of 10 psychiatrists (full- and part-time), an advanced
practice nurse and social worker, is led by Claire
DeSouza and sees approximately 3000 in/out patient
visits per year. This year the team underwent an extensive self-evaluation, resulting in improvements in clinical functioning, integration within the hospital and
evaluative processes. As well, the scope for inter-disciplinary collaboration and education has grown, and
the academic production of the team is burgeoning, as
well as such significant professional activity as Arlette
Lefebvre’s participation in the Minister of Education’s
Advisory Council on Special Education.
At MSH Bob Maunder assumed a post on the Editorial Board of General Hospital Psychiatry, and, along
with Jon Hunter, participated in 2 grants examining
the traumatic and neurocognitive consequences of
ICU admission, as well as another grant evaluating the
benefit of individualized treatment planning for high
utilizers of the ER. Bob’s contributions to knowledge
translation this year include 8 peer reviewed articles
and 4 book chapters. In his role as Research Head of
the Division, Bob has instigated a monthly email to
divisional members, highlighting a recent publication
by one of our faculty, to improve mutual awareness of
our activities.
A review of the top 100
medical schools in the
world demonstrated
that “Consultation
Liaison Psychiatry” was
the most frequently
utilized name for
similar programs.
Therefore...it is the
descriptive term that
other mental health
professionals around
the world are most
likely to recognize,
and as such serves
to convey the nature
of our work to others
as effectively as is
possible.
Also at MSH, Bill
Gaynor’s team published the results of
their trial on a randomized controlled trial of
mindfulness-based stress
reduction to manage
affective symptoms
and improve quality of
life in gay men living
with HIV and are now
developing a pilot study
of an emotion-focused
meditation group to
better support HIV
positive men in coping with internalized
stigma related to HIV
and sexual orientation.
The MSH HIV clinic’s
affiliation with the
AIDS Committee of
Toronto (ACT) continues to develop their program for counselling at–risk
individuals in bath houses, and Scott Bowler and
Charlotte Chagoya are involved in a project developing a psychoeducational support group for serodiscordant couples, in affiliation with ACT, Family
Services Toronto, and the Centre for Spanish-Speaking
Peoples.
At Sunnybrook Health sciences Center, Anthony
DIVISIONS
Feinstein’s substantial contributions to understanding Multiple Sclerosis (MS) were recognized by his
appointment as the Chair of the Medical Advisory
Committee of the MS Society of Canada. This, and
his literary productivity, led to his being a keynote
speaker 6 times, both nationally and internationally.
The Division was enriched by the recruitment of several new staff . Janet Ellis joined the CL team at Sunnybrook, bolstering their capacity to address oncology
and trauma patients. Lailah Jamal has joined the CL
service at TEGH, and Andreia Scalco will join WCH
to do psychosocial oncology.
CL Division staff acquired distinction at many levels,
in multiple venues. Dr. Arlette Lefebvre was invited
to speak to the Senate about cyberbullying and also
received a Diamond Jubilee Award. Rebecca Pillai
Riddell won both the York University Faculty Association Merit Award and the American Psychological
Association Division 54 (Society of Pediatric Psychology) Routh Early Career Award for her ongoing and
extensive contributions to our understanding of infant
pain perception and management.
Dr Jane Irvine was listed amongst the top 11 female
clinical psychologists for research productivity in a
Canadian Psychological Association accredited academic program. At the Canadian Psychiatric Association’s 61st annual conference Anne Bassett won the
J.M. Cleghorn Award for Excellence and Leadership
in Clinical Research. Claire De Souza won the AAP
Junior Faculty Development Award and Bill Mah was
a recipient of this year’s Wightman-Berris Academy
Teaching Award.
Departmentally, Shree Bhalerao was nominated for
the Abe Miller Undergraduate Teaching Award, while
Raed Hawa and Nadiya Sunderji were both nominated for the Robin Hunter Postgraduate Teaching
Award-as was Mark Halman, who also gleaned a
nomination for the Ivan Silver Award for Excellence
in CMHE. Sherese Ali was a nominee for the Henry
B. Durost Award for Excellence in Creative Professional Activity, which was awarded to Sonu Gaind.
Divisionally, Peter Fitzgerald, a Fellow at PMH, won
the Fred Lowy Award, while another POPC member,
Alyson Stone, received the Max Alexandroff prize.
This summary only scratches the surface of the
breadth and depth of the CL Division’s activities. The
reach of the Division goes even farther- for instance,
many members are active participants in the implementation of the departmental Strategic Plan. As a
further example, Rob Nolan and Bob Maunder are
members of the Ontario Health Survey team, which
is constructing a powerful tool for health information
data collection from thousands of Ontarians that will
enrich future research immeasurably. As well, teams
in cancer, congenital heart disease and obesity are all
tackling the challenges of moving patients from the
paediatric to the adult system of healthcare, a previously neglected phase of vulnerability.
The most unexpected reply to the request for contributions to this report, emblematic of the diversity of
our activity, came from Saul Marks, as he assisted at
the London Olympics, (continuing his extensive work
on the mental health of elite athletes), who conveyed
the pleasure of being present for a Canadian Bronze
medal in diving!
Overall, divisional members continue to be productive
in research, educational and creative professional activities. The integration of expertise across disciplines,
areas of study, and patient populations will continue to
be a marker of CL division activity into the future.
Respectfully submitted,
Jon Hunter, MD, FRCPC
Director, Consultation Liaison Division
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
49
division of equity,
gender and population
Overview
The mission of the Division is twofold. It aims to
provide academic and clinical excellence in health
equity, which may be defined in many ways according
to diversities in populations, including culture, language, sex and gender, sexual orientation and identity,
disability, social class, religion, and race and ethnicity.
Health disparities are created by social structures
and policies that distribute limited resources, including health care services, unevenly but systematically
favour some groups while discriminating against
minority populations. The Division is also dedicated
to advancing the understanding, prevention and treatment of mental health problems of women and vulnerable populations through an integration of clinical,
educational, research and advocacy.
It is also dedicated to advancing the understanding,
prevention and treatment of women’s mental health
problems. This is done though a focus on social,
psychological and biological factors that will further
our understanding of the origin, expression, preven-
DIVISIONS
tion, and clinical treatment of mental health issues in
women’s lives.
Operation
The Division is currently led by Dr.Valerie Taylor and
co-directed by Dr. Samuel Noh and has representation
from a number of academic institutions: UHN – Dr.
Leslie Buckley, Dr. Kenneth Fung, Dr. Marion Olmsted,; St. Michael’s Hospital – Dr. Adrianna Carvalhal,
Dr. Samuel Law; Mt. Sinai – Dr. Lisa Andermann, Dr.
Ariel Dalfen; Women’s College – Dr. Simone Vigod,
Dr. Diane Meschino; SunnyBrook – Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis; CAMH – Dr. Kwame McKenzie, Dr. Peter
Voore, Linda Mohri
The Division encompasses a broad range of research
and clinical services. These include an inpatient unit
located at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
a Trauma Therapy Program, a Reproductive Life Stages
Program, and a Mental Health and Medicine Program
located at Women’s College Hospital, he maternal
Infant Program at Mt. Sinai and the newly expanded
Mother and Babies program at SunnyBrook.
The University Health Network continues to focus on
clinical, research, and educational activities directed at
a variety of women’s health and mental health issues.
At the Hospital for Sick Children, we are working
in partnership with the Division of Child Psychiatry
in the area of eating disorders. Under the leadership
of Professor Kussin, UHN Toronto Western Hospital
(TWH) has been running the Community Mental
Health Program (CMHP). Language-specific programs
are available to specifically serve Chinese-, Korean-,
Portuguese-, and Spanish-speaking populations.
In partnership with the Hong Fook Mental Health Association, the Asian Initiative in Mental Health (AIM),
Directed by Dr. Fung provides culturally-appropriate
services to Vietnamese and Cambodian Canadians.
At Mount Sinai Hospital, Drs. Andermann and Lo
offer cultural consultation services and direct care to
clients of diverse cultural and ethnic heritage. Drs. Law
and Andermann direct the MSH ACT team, serving
patients from Asian communities. Social and Epidemiological Research Department of CAMH consisted
of medical and non-medical faculty members who
lead research and training programs and contribute to
the PGY core lectures and seminars. Drs. McKenzie
and Noh direct the Social Aetiology of Mental Illness
(SAMI), a post-graduate and post-doctoral program
focusing on the social and cultural determinants of
mental illness and addiction.
The Women’s Mental Health Program encompasses a
broad range of services. These include an inpatient unit
located at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
a Trauma Therapy Program, a Reproductive
Working together, this
Life Stages Program,
year the members of
and a Mental Health
the Network created a
and Medicine Program
mapping of women’s
located at Women’s
trauma services in the
College Hospital, he
downtown Toronto area
maternal Infant Proand a new collaborative
gram at Mt. Sinai and
clinical project to bring
the newly expanded
organizations together
Mother and Babies
in provide betterprogram at Sunnycoordinated care for
Brook.
women.
The University Health
Network continues
to focus on clinical, research, and educational activities directed at a variety of women’shealth and mental
health issues. At the Hospital for Sick Children, we
are working in partnership with the Division of Child
Psychiatry in the area of eating disorders.
Events and Initiatives
Driven by the inspiration of Dr. Wasylenki, the previous Department Chair, and the enthusiastic support
of Dr. Ari Zaretsky, Director of the Post-Graduate
Programs, an annual award program, Donald Wasylenki Award for Best Sociocultural Psychiatry Grand
Rounds, was launched in 2009 to promote resident
interest in cultural psychiatry.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
51
DIVISIONS
The CCHS Program runs an annual Cultural Psychiatry Day. In the past four years, we organized multisite
interactive videoconferences for Cultural Psychiatry.
McGill University, University of British Columbia, and
University of Calgary participated in the conference
on February 29, 2012. The theme of Cultural Psychiatry Day Conference was The Complexity of Acculturation in Children and Adolescents. At the University of
Toronto, 150 registered and attended the conference,
including over 50 residents of psychiatry.
An initiative within this division was work done by
the Women’s Mental Health and Addictions Network,
a group of community and hospital-based services providing support and clinical care to women who have
experienced trauma. The members of the network
include The Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic,
Sistering Drop-In Centre,YWCA Toronto, the Centre
for Addiction and Mental Health, Women’s College
Hospital-Trauma Therapy Program, Jean Tweed Centre, Fred Victor Centre CDSS and The Toronto Western Hospital Addictions Program.
Working together, this year the members of the Network created a mapping of women’s trauma services
in the downtown Toronto area and a new collaborative
clinical project to bring organizations together in provide better-coordinated care for women. The Network
has met with the TCLHIN to present these projects
and seek support for their work and projects.
Postgraduate Training and
Education
The EGP Division offers core curriculum lectures to
residents at the PGY-1 and PGY-2 levels. The Division
also contributes to the undergraduate, graduate, and
post-graduate curricula offered by the Department of
Psychiatry, the Institute of Medical Sciences (IMS), and
other University departments including anthropology,
nursing, psychology, public health, sociology and social
work. It offers resident and medical student training, as
well as training in various research methodologies for
graduate students and post-doctoral fellows through
thesis supervision and opportunities for involvement in
research projects.
Research
For many years, the Division concentrated on the
epidemiology of immigrant mental health, including
the psychosocial adjustment of immigrant children.
Ongoing research include the long-term mental health
impact of exposure to traumatic stress for Aboriginal
youth and racial minority adolescents; settlement issues
and social determinants of health among immigrants
and refugees; identity, diversity, mental health and wellbeing within marginalized populations; mental health
practices in the settlement sector; culture, ethnicity, and
psychotherapy; pathways to mental health care; racialism and mental health; stigma of mental illness and
addiction; and, teaching cultural psychiatry and curriculum development.
Research in Women’s Mental Health encompasses a
variety of areas, representative of the scope of work
done by this program. Funded projects involve work
on secondary data base analysis, epidemiological
research, projects on innovative treatments for post
partum depression and projects involving RTMS and
basic science investigations.
The Division provides a unique post-doctoral research
training program in social determinants of mental
health, Social Aetiology of Mental Illness (SAMI).
SAMI is based on a CIHR strategic research training grant awarded to Dr. McKenzie and Dr. Noh, the
principal investigators of the grant.
Service
Members of the EGP are represented in the leadership
of the department:
• B Toner, Chair of Fellowship Committee
• L Andermann and K Fung, Co-chair Pillar 4- Dialogue, Departmental Strategic
• L Andermann and Claire Desouza, Co-Chair, Recruitment Committee
DIVISIONS
• S Law, China Project, Global Health Committee
The Division is now led by Dr.Valerie Taylor and codirected by Dr. Sam Noh and has representation from
a number of academic institutions: UHN – Dr. Leslie
Buckley, Dr. Marion Olmsted, St. Michaels Hospital –
Dr. Adrianna Carvalhal, Mt. Sinai – Dr. Ariel Dalfen,
Women’s College – Dr. Simone Vigod, Dr. Diane Meschino, SunnyBrook – Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis, CAMH
– Dr. Peter Voore and Linda Mohri
Samuel Noh
Valerie Taylor
Co-Directors
Division of Equity, Gender and Population
Health disparities are created
by social structures and
policies that distribute limited
resources, including health
care services, unevenly but
systematically favour some
groups while discriminating
against minority populations.
The Division is also
dedicated to advancing the
understanding, prevention
and treatment of mental
health problems of women
and vulnerable populations
through an integration of
clinical, educational, research
and advocacy.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
53
Division of Forensic PSychiatry
Current Activities
The Division of Forensic Psychiatry is the smallest
of the new divisions within the Department with
49 members. It includes 4 professors, including one
Emeritus, and 5 Associate Professors. The Division
includes a mix of psychiatrists and psychologists and 4
lawyers.
Research has 3 major bases: at Waypoint and in the
Sexual Behaviors Clinic at CAMH, and in relation
to issues of mental illness and offending behaviour at
CAMH. All groups have significant international and
national links. We are increasingly seen as the centre
for forensic psychiatry in Canada, for professional
leadership, policy contributions, teaching and research.
Prof Howard Barbaree has been appointed Executive
Vice President for academic affairs at the Waypoint
Centre for Mental Health Care to encourage the
development of an academic strategy at that facility which is mid way through an exciting rebuilding
program.
Our work over the last year can be summarized as
follows:
Research
We have established five significant lines of research
based at CAMH but with collaboration with Ontario
Shores and other Divisions within the Department,
and other academic centers in Canada and internationally. These Streams are:
Mental Health Systems Research: to study provincial
and national trends in forensic mental health service
usage and patterns of violence and criminality associated with serious mental illness. This includes important collaboration with colleagues in Psychiatry and
Health Systems and Brain and Therapeutics, including
CIHR funded work. Current and planned projects
include:
Study of homicide associated with serious mental illness in Ontario
Time trends in the forensic patient population in
Ontario (1990-2011) – flowing from the above (a),
we are documenting the rise in forensic patients in
Ontario during the past two decades, and test different hypotheses driving the rise (e.g., has there been
an increase in mentally abnormal homicide during
this time frame?).
Forensic community service provision in Ontario –
describing service models of forensic recovery adopted by community forensic mental health teams in
Ontario, and their overall effectiveness.
Risk, Motivation and Recovery Research: already
a major theme with existing projects, we are well
positioned to begin generating new knowledge in the
field of motivations for violence in SMI populations,
violence risk assessment and dynamic risk factors for
adverse safety outcomes in forensic patients. We are
the first site in North America to collect data on the
revised version of the HCR-20 (HCR,Version 3),
one of the most widely used violence risk assessment
tools in the world.
We are also linked with leading investigators in the
field of violence risk assessment, which will facilitate
collaborations and the dissemination of empirical
findings. Further, we plan on integrating our research
on violence risk with the recovery model of mental
health care to introduce a new conceptual framework
for investigating the clinical utility of risk formulations for patients’ violence.
Neuroimaging of Impulsive, Aggressive Individuals:
Positron emission tomography studies are currently
Divisions
underway that seek to understand the neurochemical
correlates of impulsive, aggressive behavior in individuals with borderline personality disorder or antisocial
personality disorder. These studies investigate monoamine oxidase A binding - a brain protein implicated
in aggression and impulsivity. Genetic analyses and
fMRI of these populations are also being pursued. Dr.
Jeff Meyer is the primary investigator working with
Dr. Nathan Kolla.
Sexual Behaviours Research: under the leadership of
Assoc Prof James Cantor are a series of studies into
the aetiology, neuro-imaging and classification of a
range of abnormal sexual behaviors and their assessment and treatment. They are using advanced MRI
techniques to study the role of the brain structure
in pedophilia. The results of this work have garnered
worldwide interest, yielding appearances on international news outlets, including CNN, and invitations to
present several prestigious keynote and other invited
addresses internationally. Currently in development
are an international collaboration to study very large
samples of still-incarcerated sex offenders using a
mobile MRI scanner and an entirely new program
of research in the CAMH Sexual Behaviours Clinic
examining the typology, assessment, and treatment of
hypersexuality and related phenomena.
Education
We have been planning for, in partnership with the
other sub-specialties and with the support of the
Department, the establishment of the Sub Specialty
Training Program in Forensic Psychiatry. It is the only
accredited forensic program in Canada, although others are planned. The training program is spread over
the 3 clinical partners for the Department: Waypoint,
Ontario Shores and CAMH. Four PGY 6 residents
have just commenced this training.
Educational scholarship is of increasing interest within
the Division of Forensic Psychiatry. We are very
actively involved in undergraduate, resident teaching,
and masters student through to post doctoral studies
and research.
Dr Simpson greatly enjoyed contributing to the Sri
Lanka initiative in February, participating in research
developments for residents in Colombo and providing
a short course in some core forensic skills.
Contribution to Department of
Psychiatry Strategic Directions
Forensic psychiatry is very much a particular form
of developmental psychiatry, and we know many
problems of adults with forensic needs commence in
childhood and before. We are very pleased with the
emphasis on Child and Youth mental health as child
and adolescent forensic work is also an area of increasing importance.
Research has 3 major
bases: at Waypoint and
in the Sexual Behaviors
Clinic at CAMH, and
in relation to issues
of mental illness and
offending behaviour at
CAMH.
All groups have
significant international
and national links. We
are increasingly seen as
the centre for forensic
psychiatry in Canada,
for professional
leadership, policy
contributions, teaching
and research
Forensic psychiatry
works with some of
the most marginalizes and stigmatized
people in the mental
health and criminal
justice systems.
The issues of public
perceptions, stigma
and violence as it
effects the lives of
people with mental
illness and the media
and public portrayal
of them are ones we
are very aware of.
The Division is
actively involved in
public advocacy for
improved services for mentally ill prisoners and for
improvements in law as it effects this population. WE
look forward to contribution to these initiatives this
coming year.
Achievements
The key achievements over the last year have been:
Development of the research program with small
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
55
Divisions
amounts of research funding
Research meetings of the whole division [totaling over
160 people attending] and a smaller planning meeting
focused on interdisciplinary research into Recovery in
forensic mental health services
One CIHR research clinical research scholar [Dr Kola]
helping to lead research has a psychiatric endeavour
with the younger psychiatric staff.
Planning for and establishment of the Sub specialty
Training Program in Forensic Psychiatry.
Contribution to public debate through media impact
and meetings including Catalytic Conversations, appearances before Commons and Senate Parliamentary
Select Committees by Division staff, Op-Ed pieces
including on CNN and a series of legal findings to
try and drive improved care systems in forensic mental
health.
Dr. Cantor has continued his role as Editor-in-Chief of
Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment and
has contributed invited sections to several edited works,
including the Oxford Textbook of Psychopathology, the
Encyclopedia of Clinical Psychology, and the Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality, and Principles and Practice
of Sex Therapy, each widely recognized as top references in their respective fields.
In what is a much anticipated and very timely contribution, Dr Hy Bloom and Justice Richard Schneider
are co-editing Law and Mental Disorder: A Comprehensive Approach, a comprehensive textbook of forensic psychiatry which will be an international resource
in the training and practice of forensic psychiatry. Many
Division members have contributed chapters to the
work. It is due for publication by Irwin Law later in
2012.
Sandy Simpson
The potential implications of Dr. Cantor’s research for
Director, Division of Forenisc Psychiatry
public safety and the prevention of child sexual abuse
have gathered great interest from public and multiple
media outlets. Most notable among these was his recent
appearance on CNN, which triggered multiple other
commentaries, including one in the LATimes referring
to Dr. Cantor’s comments as “brave and important.”
Increasing national and international profile of Division
staff, long been present in the sexual behaviour area, but
now increasingly in the forensic mental health area, in
organizations such as AAPL, CAPL, IAFMHS, GAP and
the Canadian Network of Forensic Mental Health.
Development of research and teaching links to Sri
Lanka.
We were thrilled that three physicians, Drs Chatterjee, Pearce and Ramshaw, were promoted to Assistant
Professor. In January 2012, Dr. Cantor was promoted at
CAMH to Senior Scientist.
Members of the Division contribute greatly across a
range of international research networks, and the development and refinement is issues in risk assessment.
division of geriatric
psychiatry
MISSION
The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry strives for excellence in research into mental disorders in late-life and
the education of health care practitioners who treat
elderly patients. As service providers to a growing and
relatively under-serviced patient population, we also
act as advocates for these individuals in the area of
health policy.
Organization
Bruce G. Pollock is Professor and Director of the
Division. There are six primary sites: Baycrest (Head,
Robert Madan), the Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health (CAMH; Head, Benoit Mulsant), Mount Sinai
Hospital (MSH; Head, Joel Sadavoy), Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre (Head, Nathan Herrmann),
the University Health Network (UHN; Head, Alastair
Flint) and St. Michael’s Hospital (SMH; Head, Corrine Fischer).
Clinical FUNCTIONS
The Division sites provide the full spectrum of clinical services for the management of elderly patients
with psychiatric illness. These include inpatient units,
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
57
DIVISIONS
outpatient services, day hospital, community psychogeriatric services providing domiciliary visits, and consultation liaison services to both acute-care and long-term
facilities. Corinne Fischer is chair of the clinical coordination committee, which seeks to better integrate levels
of care according to areas of specialization within the
Division.
Education FUNCTIONS
Formal educational activities are provided at the undergraduate, postgraduate, fellowship, and continuing
education levels. The undergraduate education coordinator is Vincent Woo. Division members are active
in all aspects of the undergraduate curriculum, which
includes the pre-clerkship, clerkship, and psychogeriatric electives. The postgraduate education coordinator is
Robert Madan. The Division trains every single resident
in the program in geriatric psychiatry, as mandated by
the Royal College requirements.
The Division also trains residents interested in career
paths in geriatric psychiatry, which is recognized as a
subspecialty by the Royal College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Canada. Alastair Flint is the fellowship
coordinator. The Division offers institutionally funded
fellowships at Baycrest, CAMH, Sunnybrook and UHN.
The Continuing Education Committee is chaired by
Amer Burhan. The Division endeavours to organize
continuing education activities for primary care physicians, allied health professions as well as geriatric psychiatry subspecialists.
Research FUNCTIONS
Opportunities for clinical and translational research
in geriatric psychiatry are considerable and there are
particular divisional strengths in functional neuroimaging (PET & fMRI), pharmacometrics, pharmacogenetics and clinical trials methodology. Tarek Rajji serves as
Research Coordinator for the Division. Graduate advisors within the Division are available to those enrolled
in the Clinician Scientist Program.
Division members have leadership roles in national
(Canadian Academy of Geriatric Psychiatry (CAGP),
Canadian Coalition for Seniors Mental Health) and
international organizations (American Association for
Geriatric Psychiatry (AAGP), International College
of Geriatric Neuropsychopharmacology, International
Psychogeriatric Association (IPA)). Division members
were also active participants in developing health policy
as consultants to governmental agencies such as the
Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and
the U.S. Food & Drug Administration.
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENTS
2011/2012
Organization
The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry underwent a successful international five-year review conducted by Dr.
Steven Roose, Columbia University and Dr. Martha
Donnelly, University of British Columbia. The outcome
of this review is a testament to the excellence of the
division and all its members and Dr. Bruce G. Pollock
has been re-appointed for a second term as Director of
the Division.
This year’s new faculty included Amer Burhan, Simon
Davies and Tanya Suvendrini Lena. Amer Burhan has
been appointed the CME coordinator for the Division,
Susan Lieff has been appointed as the inaugural Director of the new Division of Psychotherapy, Humanities
and Educational Scholarship, Robert Madan has been
appointed Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Baycrest, Ivan Silver has been appointed Vice President, Education at
CAMH and Lesley Wiesenfeld has been appointed to
the new position of Associate Program Director in the
Department of Psychiatry.
Quarterly meetings were held this year in conjunction
with city-wide Grand Rounds at Mount Sinai Hospital,
Baycrest, University Health Network and the Centre
for Addiction and Mental Health.
DIVISIONS
Clinical
Behavioural Support Strategy /
Behavioural Supports Ontario
Alzheimer Society of Toronto, PRC, Toronto
CCAC and Baycrest - chair Joel Sadavoy) focused
on 3 priorities:
• sustaining the dementia caregiver at high risk in the
Members of the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry have
community (lead - Reitman Centre),
been active in assisting the Toronto Central LHIN (TCLHIN) to develop and begin implementation of the
• primary care knowledge to practice for dementia
Behavioural Supports Strategy. Behavioural Supports
care in the community (lead - PRC),
Ontario (BSO) is a province-wide initiative that aims to
develop an improved system of care through education • training of personal support workers (PSWs) and
and training in each LHIN for older individuals who
development of broader innovative training models
have responsive behaviours in the context of dementia,
for newly hired BSO workers and others.
mental illness and other neurological conditions.
• Reitman Centre for Alzheimer’s Support and Training
The initial primary focus is in the long-term care
(LTC) sector and the community sector is currently
• The MSH Reitman Centre for Alzheimer’s Support
under development. The BSO Education and Trainand Training has opened a training centre for coming Committee (co-chairs P. Boucher and J. Sadavoy)
munity agency workers (other than PSWs). In 2012
have released its phase one product called BETSI
this training centre will train greater than 100 senior
(Behavioural Education and Training Supports Invenenhanced care coordinators of the Toronto CCAC
tory) to guide institutions in determining their training
using hands on experiential methods in partnership
needs and providing them with an inventory of trainwith the Standardized patient program of University
ing resources from which to choose. Phase 2 begins in
of Toronto emphasizing problem solving techniques.
the fall of 2012 and will focus on community capacity
building including focus on sustaining family caregivers, Education
integrated care at the primary care level, cultural factors Division members are active in all aspects of the unaffecting access to care. dergraduate curriculum. In Postgraduate education,
A TC-LHIN BSO implementation committee (chair
L. Jackson) was created in order to implement the BSO
framework plan recommended to the LHIN by the
framework committee (chair Joel Sadavoy). Carole Cohen is the lead of both the long-term care and community sector components of the TC-LHIN initiative with
the goal to improve coordination and access to new and
existing specialized services that address behavioural
problems in this population. Some key components of
the Behavioural Support Strategy include:
the Division trained residents in mandatory training
positions, career-path residents, and fellows. For each
6-month block, there was a monthly centralized seminar series led by various faculty members in the Division.
Geriatric psychiatry was successfully accredited as a
subspecialty at the University of Toronto and Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in February 2012. The first two geriatric subspecialty residents,
Colman Nefsky and Diana Nicolici, began their train• Creation of a behavioural support unit for dementia ing in July 2012. Members of the Division that particiat Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care including new pated in the Geriatric Psychiatry Residency Program
Committee were Corinne Fischer, Ilan Fischler, Peter
outreach teams to LTC;
Giaccobe, Robert Madan (chair/Program Director),
• Creation of a funded education and training conTarek Rajji, Mark Rapoport, Leslie Wiesenfeld and Vinsortium in the TC-LHIN (Reitman Centre MSH, cent Woo. Philip Gerretsen received this year’s Division
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
59
DIVISIONS
of Geriatric Psychiatry Resident Award.
Research
Substantial progress continues to be made in many areas
of research with another considerable increase in external funding to Division investigators.
The thematic highlights of the ongoing projects include: cognitive impairment in late life bipolar disorder, depression, and schizophrenia; depression and
coronary artery disease, genetic and therapeutic studies in traumatic brain damage; neuroreceptor imaging
of dopamine, serotonin and muscarinic receptors in a
variety of late-life conditions and amyloid deposition
in Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia;
pharmacotherapy of dementia and related psychiatric
symptoms; and neuroplasticity studies across the lifespan
using brain stimulation techniques.
Bruce Pollock, MD, FRCPC
Director, Division of Geriatric Psychiatry
The Division of Geriatric
Psychiatry underwent a
successful international fiveyear review conducted by
Dr. Steven Roose, Columbia
University and Dr. Martha
Donnelly, University of British
Columbia. The outcome of this
review is a testament to the
excellence of the division and
all its members
The Division of Psychotherapies, Humanities and
Education Scholarship (PHES)
DIVISION DESCRIPTION
The Division of Psychotherapies, Humanities and
Education Scholarship (PHES) is one of the newly
created 8 Divisions of the Department of Psychiatry
that is comprised of the following three areas of focus:
Psychotherapy, Health, Arts and Humanities and
Research, Innovation and Scholarship in Education
(RISE).This past year the Divisional executive engaged in a collaborative and creative process to identify shared areas of interest and synergies as well as to
enhance the membership, productivity and academic
identity of the three programs.
DIVISION ORGANIZATION
Dr. Susan Lieff is the Director of PHES and Dr. Paula
Ravitz is the Associate Director. Dr. Paula Ravitz
is the Morgan Firestone Psychotherapy Chair and
Director, Mount Sinai Psychotherapy Institute Joseph
& Wolf Lebovic Health Complex. Dr. Allan Peterkin
heads the Health, Arts and Humanities Program. This
past year we were delighted to recruit Dr. Sophie
Soklaridis to head the RISE area. Dr Soklaridis is
a medical sociologist who obtained her PhD at the
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Social Science &
Health, with collaboration in Women’s Studies from
the University of Toronto. She was recently appointed
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
61
Divisions
Education Researcher at the Centre for Addiction and
Mental Health. The PHES leads meet on a regular
basis to share information and advice about program
development and activities, as well focus on creative
collaborations across the Division.
DIVISION DEVELOPMENTS AND
ACHIEVEMENTS
It became apparent early in our collaborations that
there was great interest in the Division focusing on the
exploration of the hidden curriculum in our Department. The Future of Medical Education of Canada
project identified the hidden curriculum as a critical
issue that needs to be addressed in medical education.
A Hidden Curriculum in Psychiatry Interest Group
has begun meeting and is exploring a variety of potential areas for study within our department throughout
the continuum of education (undergraduate  faculty
development).
The interest group has a diversity of representation
from faculty who are clinicians and education scientists and we look forward to developing our leadership
and scholarship in this highly relevant area. The goal
of this interest group is to develop the interests and
our expertise in developing education scholarship in
the hidden curriculum and to establish a forum for
participants to bring ideas and projects for discussion.
The Hidden Curriculum in Psychiatry interest group
is open to those who wish to participate.
Our goal for the coming year is for the Division to
identity further areas of synergy in which to direct our
energies and foster growth and development within
the Division. The leaders within PHES have begun
collaborating with a consultant to guide the Division’s
strategic planning process. Identifying a core team of
faculty members to participate in the development of
these directions is in progress. We anticipate having
completed this process by January of 2013 in order to
guide our work for the next several years.
PSYCHOTHERAPY
An overarching principle that guides the Psychotherapy Section of the PHES Division is that the
psychotherapies are an integral part of comprehensive
and integrated psychiatric care and a central part of
the bio-psycho-social model of treatment. The Psychotherapy Committee is the administrative body of
the psychotherapy section of the PHES Division and
consists of: the Psychotherapy Modality Subcommittee Heads; the Psychotherapy Site Coordinators, and
resident representatives.
Dr. Paula Ravitz is the Committee and Section Head
and the Associate Head is Dr. Mark Fefergrad. The
Psychotherapy Modality Subcommittee Heads include:
Long-term dynamic psychotherapy – Dr. Rex Kay;
Brief Dynamic Psychotherapy - Dr. Christine Dunbar;
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy - Dr. Mark Fefergrad;
Interpersonal Therapy - Dr. Paula Ravitz; Family/
Couple Therapy - Dr. Leo Chagoya; Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy - Dr. Priya Watson; Integrative
Therapy - Drs. Daniel Greben and Lesley Wiesenfeld;
Group Therapy - Dr. Molyn Leszcz; and Dialectical
Behaviour Therapy – Dr. Shelley McMain and Dr.
Carmen Wiebe.
The Site Psychotherapy Coordinators include: Baycrest Centre - Dr. Rob Madan; Centre for Addiction
and Mental Health - Dr. Jan Malat; George Hull – Dr.
Chetana Kulkarni; Hincks-Dellcrest Centre - Dr. Diane Philipp; Hospital For Sick Children - Dr. Nicola
Keyhan; Mount Sinai Hospital - Dr. Paula Ravitz;
North York General – Dr.Victor Feder; Ontario
Shores – Dr. Robyn Waxman; St. Joseph’s Health Centre – Dr. Nagi Ghabbour; St. Michael’s Hospital - Dr.
Harold Spivak; Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre –
Dr. Susan Hershkop; Toronto East General Hospital –
Dr. Sabeena Chopra; The University Health Network
- Dr. Adrienne Tan; Women’s College Hospital - Dr.
Nadiya Sunderji; and Youthdale – Dr. Sylvia Kemenoff.
The remaining committee membership includes Dr.
Allen Peterkin, Narrative and Healthcare Humanities; Dr. Ron Ruskin, Psychiatry and Humanities; Dr.
Sian Rawkins, Cognitive Behaviour Analysis System
Psychotherapy; Dr. Steve Selchen, Mindfulness Based
Stress Reduction; and Drs. Maxym Choptiany and
Renata Villella, PRAT representatives. Dr. Solomon
Divisions
Shapiro is stepping down as the coordinator of the
Therapeutic Communication Program for undergraduate medical students.
The Psychotherapy Program is committed to addressing important issues that relate to applicability
and accountability of the psychotherapies and to train
psychiatrists to be expert practitioners of evidence
supported treatments, capable of providing direct
service, as well as effective consultation, supervision
and collaboration with inter professional mental health
professionals in the provision of indirect service. An
extensive syllabus and training implementation protocol have been developed for psychiatry residents in
the utilization of evidence supported contemporary
psychotherapeutic approaches within psychiatry. We
also have made resident and mental health provider
wellness a priority with the provision of both psychotherapist finding services for residents, and mindfulness
based stress reduction groups led by Dr. Steve Selchen.
Educational foci also reflect initiatives at the undergraduate, fellowship, faculty development and continuing health education levels. Continuing education
and continuing professional development activities
are offered in a range of accredited formats including
courses, workshops, certificate programs and conferences. In addition to a growing number of accredited
CE courses offered through CAMH, the Mt. Sinai
Psychotherapy Institute, University Health Network,
the Hincks Dellcrest, and the Child Division, educational outreach and knowledge translation and exchange initiatives were conducted with group psychotherapy teaching in China (Dr. Molyn Leszcz) and an
adaptation of IPT for Ethiopia developed by Drs. Paula
Ravitz, Clare Pain, and Dawit Wondimagegn from
Addis Ababa University. Senior residents who trained
to become new faculty supervisors included Dr. Lori
Wasserman (Psychodynamic, IPT), Dr. Tara Burra
(IPT), Dr. Chloe Leon (IPSRT and CBT), and Dr.
Shawn Vasdev (CBT).
The topic of this year’s Annual Psychotherapy Supervisors Retreat was “Psychotherapy Supervision across
the Academic Developmental Lifespan,” and focused
on differing faculty development needs with a presentation by Dr. Susan Lieff and break-out groups for
junior, mid-career and senior faculty. Additional faculty
development is offered through the CBT Supervisors
Group (Dr. Mark Fefergrad) and hospital based peerled psychotherapy supervisors groups supported by a
data base of peer-reviewed literature on psychotherapy
supervision. This year’s Psychotherapy Day featured
invited Dr. Anthony Bateman who also gave an accredited one-day faculty development workshop in
Mentalization Based Treatment and The Day in Applied Psychoanalysis featured James Herzog and Jack
Tromly.
Our goal for the coming
year is for the Division
to identity further areas
of synergy in which
to direct our energies
and foster growth and
development within the
Division. The leaders
within PHES have
begun collaborating
with a consultant to
guide the Division’s
strategic planning
process.
hEALTH, ARTS
AND
HUMANITIES
The Health, Arts and
Humanities Program,
HAH, is an exciting
new initiative within
the Division of the
Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship of the
Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, (www.
health-humanities.
com).
A compelling international literature demonstrates
that physicians, nurses and other healthcare professionals who seek exposure to humanities and arts-based
learning improve their capacity to think critically and
bring enhanced sensitivity, curiosity and creativity
to their work with patients. They learn to challenge
personal assumptions and biases, to expand their world
view and to become more reflective practitioners. This
in turn can lead to better self-care, personal balance
and greater career satisfaction. The Health, Arts and
Humanities focus in our department will advance an
enriched understanding of health, illness, suffering,
and healthcare provision by creating a community of
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
63
Divisions
scholars in arts, humanities, education and clinical care.
One of our goals is to expose trainees at undergrad
and residency levels to the role of arts and humanitiesbased learning and research, reflective capacity and
narrative competence.
Under the direction of Dr. Allan Peterkin, the HAH
program has been instrumental in the undergraduate
portfolio program, companion humanities curriculum
and other undergraduate initiatives to enhance reflective capacity and narrative competence. This past year
the program saw the creation and establishment of
an undergraduate visual arts elective at the Art Gallery of Ontario led by Dr Allison Crawford as well as
the DUETS series; a conversation around the issues
of mindfulness in the arts and medicine facilitated by
Dr. Peterkin between a faculty member and a chosen
artist.
The reflective practice curriculum continues in the
core residency curriculum and invites resident to reflect on their practice utilizing a diversity of arts-based
methods. The HAH program continues to publish
ARS MEDICA, an award-winning biannual literary
journal started in 2004, that explores the interface between the arts and healing, and examines what makes
medicine an art. We are proud to note that Dr. Peterkin chaired the Health, Arts and Humanities meeting
in Banff at this year’s Canadian Conference on Medical Education.
This past year, Drs Peterkin and Ron Ruskin have
identified faculty within our department who are interested in participating or leading in this area and they
are being surveyed regarding their interests and needs.
For the coming year we look forward to the first
PHES lecture which will be given by James Fitzgerald,
journalist and author of What Disturbs Our Blood; a
riveting story of the history of public health and psychiatry in Toronto and beyond as told through the lens
of his family’s story.
RESEARCH, INNOVATION AND
SCHOLARSHIP IN EDUCATION
RISE is focused on making educational activity in
psychiatry more visible and creating opportunities for
networking and collaboration. Our goals are to support educational research, teaching, scholarship, and
innovation and to encourage a more integrated approach that will embrace both theoretical and applied
approaches to education research. Uof T has the largest
psychiatry department in Canada and the only department that has formally incorporating education scholarship into their academic program. RISE continues
to the academic home for scholars and researchers in
education in the Department of Psychiatry.
Dr. Susan Lieff was the Acting-Head of the program
until the recent appointment of Dr. Sophie Soklaridis
as the new Lead for the RISE program, effective July
2012. A needs assessment of the RISE program members and the Department’s Education committees was
completed this past year to inform future planning
for the program. Additionally, Dr. Susan Lieff has been
meeting with residents who have developed a needs
assessment to explore resident interest in teaching and
education development which will be implemented in
the fall. Dr. Soklaridis is enthusiastic about future planning and initiatives for RISE as well as resuming the
RISE fellowship which will begin in July 2013.
Susan J. Lieff MD MEd MMan FRCPC
Director, Division of the Psychotherapties, Humanities
and Education Scholarship
Paula Ravitz MD, FRCPC
Associate Director, Division of the Psychotherapties,
Humanities and Education Scholarship
Baycrest
OBJECTIVES
Overview
The Mission of the Department of Psychiatry is “to
enrich the quality of life of the elderly and their families through the provision of exemplary multi-disciplinary mental health care, education and research”.
The strategic goals are:
• to provide high quality effective clinical care to
our patients
• to strengthen and promote opportunities for research activities
• to strengthen and promote opportunities for cre-
ative professional activities and leadership
• to provide excellent education in the realm of
care for the elderly
• to strengthen and build the Department of Psychiatry within Baycrest and the community
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENTS
The Ontario Behavioural Support Strategy (BSO) is
an initiative that involves the creation of Behavioural
Support Units for clients with responsive behaviours
(behavioural disturbance) as a result of dementia, and
the coordination of resources to help support and educate care providers and caregivers in the community.
The TC-LHIN is providing 3 million dollars annually
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
65
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
in sustained funding to Baycrest. The role of Baycrest
is to create a Behavioural Support Unit in the Baycrest Apotex nursing home (opening date imminent)
and to coordinate the education and care initiatives
in the community. This involves liaison with CCAC
and other community partners and direct interaction
with nursing homes through outreach and transitional
teams. Baycrest Psychiatry is heavily involved in this
exciting and important initiative.
STAFF CHANGES
The search for a Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Baycrest is
complete. Dr. Rob Madan has been selected as the
Psychiatrist-in-Chief and the Executive Medical Director for the Baycrest Central for Mental Health.
RESEARCH
Dr. Grief is the primary investigator on an AHSC
AFP funded Innovation Project, “Building an Educational Network in Geriatric Mental Health”. She is
a co-investigator on an AHSC AFP Innovation Fund
project, “Enhancing Communication amongst Health
Care Professionals in End-of-Life Care: An Evaluation
of the Correlation between the Palliative Performance
Scale (PPS) and the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS)”.
Dr. Grief is completing the Education Scholars Program at the Centre for Faculty Development, which
lead her to undertake a project entitled, “Creating an
Interprofessional Learning Environment on a Geriatric
Palliative Care Unit”, which incorporates case-based
learning around topics pertaining to geriatric mental
health and end-of-life care. The Psychiatry Program is evaluating how clients and
caregivers are provided with education about mental
illness through a substantial monetary donation. This is
a qualitative research study involving surveys and focus
groups. Dr. David Conn, Dr. Rob Madan, Nancy Lin
and Shoshana Campbell are leading this study.
The Mood Clinic in partnership with the Rotman
Research Institute is currently completing the third
cohort/wave of a mixed-methods approach to studying the acceptability, efficacy, and mechanisms of a
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program for Baycrest clients with mood disorders. Combining qualitative and quantitative research approaches,
they hope to establish the potential value of MBSR
for a variety of clinical and subclinical populations at
Baycrest.
Dr. Linda Mah is continuing her research in the
functional neuroimaging of emotional processing
in amnestic mild cognitive impairment and late-life
depression. She is also collaborating on a project to
determine mood and cognitive predictors of successful participation in high-intensity geriatric rehabilitation, and research regarding patient dignity in geriatric
palliative care and attitudes towards complementary
medicine in geriatric palliative care.
Dr. Khatri’s research includes studying the cognitive
mechanisms underlying depression in older adults,
innovating CBT treatment for mood disorders in an
aging population, caregivers and knowledge translation. Her research and collaborations have been
funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research,
the Alzheimer’s Society of Canada, the Social Sciences
and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and the
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research.
EDUCATION
Dr. Rob Madan has stepped down as Postgraduate
Education Coordinator for Psychiatry at Baycrest.
Dr. Cindy Grief has taken on this role as of July 2012
and is coordinating our Departmental Grand Rounds
which are now videoconferenced through OTN.
Dr. Madan is continuing in the roles of Director of
Postgraduate Education for the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, University of Toronto, and chair of the
Baycrest Medical Education Committee. Dr. Madan
has also been appointed as the Program Director for
the Geriatric Psychiatry Subspecialty Program which
was approved and accredited by the Royal College of
Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. Dr. Conn contin-
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
ues as the Vice-President of Education at Baycrest and
has launched the Centre for Education and Knowledge Exchange and created a student centre at Baycrest. Dr. Conn has taken a lead in the LHIN funded
Centre of Learning, Research, and Innovation in Long
Term Care which has aligned with the BSO initiative.
Dr. Susan Lieff continues as Vice Chair for the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto. She is also
the Director of Academic Leadership Development at
the Centre for Faculty Development.
Dr. Matt Robillard coordinates undergraduate education. We continue to train psychiatry residents for both
mandatory and career path training, including the new
subspecialty residents. We continue to provide education for undergraduate medical, social work, nursing,
and occupational therapy students and psychology
interns. Family practice residents and geriatric medicine residents also receive training in the Department.
Members of the Baycrest staff continue to contribute
to a variety of Continuing Education activities including regular teaching via telehealth to Northern Ontario.
The Psychiatry Program is
evaluating how clients and
caregivers are provided with
education about mental
illness through a substantial
monetary donation. This is
a qualitative research study
involving surveys and focus
groups.
Robert Madan, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief and Executive Medical Director
Baycrest Centre for Mental Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
67
CAMH
Overview
CAMH had another outstanding year, continuing to
deliver a large amount of clinical care, while achieving
a balanced budget, and meeting its targets in the areas
of research, education, and commitments to its provincial role. CAMH also completed its new strategic
plan (Vision 2020), that includes a realignment from
nine to four clinical programs (Access & Transitions,
Complex Mental Illness, Ambulatory and Structured
Treatments, and Underserved Populations) with seven
areas of academic focus more closely aligned with the
Departmental Divisions (Addictions, Forensic Psychi-
atry, General and Health Systems Psychiatry, Geriatric
Psychiatry, Mood and Anxiety, and Schizophrenia).
This realignment will be implemented in the fall
2012. In the spring 2012, CAMH also completed the
phase 1B of its redevelopment plan and took possession of three large new buildings on its Queen Street
site: the Bell Gateway Building which will house several clinical services (see below), the clinical laboratories, and most administrative services; the Intergenerational Wellness Building which will house the child
and adolescent psychiatry and geriatric psychiatry services; and the Utilities and Parking Building, which
will also house meeting and education rooms.
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
OVERALL CLINICAL SERVICES
EDUCATION
CAMH continues to work on building an integrated
system of services and supports for people with addiction and mental disorders. CAMH served over 27,300
unique clients, accounting for over 6,600 Emergency
Department visits, over 4,000 inpatient admissions, and
over 507,000 outpatient visits. With more than 300
physicians on staff, a highly committed staff of more
than 2,800, and over 1,000 volunteers, CAMH met its
aim to improve access to clinical services and decrease
inpatient length of stay.
VP Education: Dr. Ivan Silver; Director, Medical Education: Dr. Ari Zaretsky
RESEARCH
VP Research: Dr. Bruce G. Pollock
Ongoing expansion of CAMH’s research program
continued over the past year. The Campbell Family
Mental Health Research Institute was established with
an initial focus on neural circuitry and brain plasticity. The institute encompasses the Temerty Centre for
Therapeutic Brain Intervention, which investigates
the use of non-invasive brain stimulation, and the
Tanenbaum Centre for Pharmacogenetics, which aims
to identify and apply the use of genetic markers to
predict response to psychiatric medications.
In fall 2011, CAMH’s new Research Imaging Centre
opened, adding a new MRI to existing PET facilities. Among the many CAMH discoveries was a PET
imaging study published in the Archives of General
Psychiatry showing that early withdrawal from heavy
smoking led to an increase in monoamine oxidase A,
which may explain the high risk of clinical depression
in this group.
Another CAMH study in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute showed that smokers with two specific genetic variants had a high risk of smoking more
cigarettes, of higher dependence on nicotine, and of
developing lung cancer. Also, CAMH discoveries led
to four patents for: genetic mutation screening in Joubert syndrome, an epigenetic profiling technology, the
BDNF gene and susceptibility to bipolar disorder, and
a therapeutic for stroke-related brain injury.
CAMH continued to participate in a full range of
educational activities involving 37 fellows, 71 core psychiatry residents, 20 family practice residents, 69 core
undergraduate medical students, 57 elective medical
students, and 530 nursing, pharmacy, psychology, social
work, occupational therapy, addiction therapy, law,
dietician, and other students.
CAMH remained active in professional development
courses involving health professionals throughout Ontario. CAMH teaching effectiveness scores remained
very high over the past year. In July 2012 CAMH will
become the first psychiatric institution in Canada to
offer all three of the new Royal College psychiatry
subspecialty residency training programs (Forensic Psychiatry, Child Psychiatry and Geriatric Psychiatry).
In December 2011, Dr. Ivan Silver started as the first
VP of Education for CAMH and embarked on an
ambitious strategic planning project charting a way
forward for education at CAMH that will transform
the way education is delivered, improve the student
experience, provide teaching support and professional
development, provide a home for the RISE program,
promote IPE and IPC, integrate patient and family
education and related scholarship, and support CAMH
as a best practices organization. In January 2012, Nancy Gribben became the new
CAMH Medical Education Coordinator. Over the
past year Dr. M. Pearce has performed admirably as
Acting Undergraduate Coordinator while Dr. S. Chatterjee was away on maternity leave. In June 2012,
Dr. J. Joannou took over as Acting Postgraduate Coordinator when Dr. H. Flett left on maternity leave.
In May 2012, Dr. A. Burhan was appointed the new
Coordinator of Continuing Mental Health Education. Dr. A. Crawford became the Director of the
Northern Psychiatric Outreach Program at CAMH
when Dr. R. Cooke assumed the role of Director
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
69
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
of the Ontario Psychiatric Outreach Program. The
2012 recipients of the CAMH Excellence in Medical
Education Awards were Dr. D. Kim (Best CAMH Staff
Supervisor/Teacher Postgraduate Education) and Dr.
J. Joannou (Best CAMH Staff Teacher in Undergraduate Education). Dr. M. Choptiany won the CAMH
Award for Best Resident Medical Student Teacher and
Dr. M. Beder won the Award for Best Resident Grand
Rounds. CAMH faculty members also won several
prestigious teaching awards.
CLINICAL PROGRAMS
Addictions Program
Clinical Director: Dr. Peter Selby; Administrative Director: Chris Bartha, MSW, RSW
At the end of the academic year, the program moved
to its new site on Queen St.: the Addiction Medicine
Service, administrative and research departments will
be in the new Bell Gateway Building, close to the
Medical Withdrawal Unit and Addictions staff.
The Problem Gambling services remains at the Russell site and the Nicotine Dependence Clinic at 175
College street with the TEACH and STOP programs.
Dr. Le Foll now leads the Alcohol Research and Treatment Clinic (ARTC). This clinic, part of the Addiction
Medicine Service, deploys an inter-professional team
of physicians, nurses and specialized therapists to improve access to pharmacotherapy for the treatment of
alcohol dependence. It will provide research and evaluation components to find new evidence-based treatment strategies to inform delivery of care nation-wide.
Personal achievements in Addictions included Dr.
Hendershot receiving a CIHR award for his research
in alcohol use and Dr Le Foll an NIH grant to study
novel treatment for marijuana dependence. Dr. Menzies was honoured with Excellence in Indigenous Programming by the Kaiser Foundation in Regina. Drs.
Kaduri and Lev-Ran received a Social Aetiology of
Mental Illness Fellowship scholarship. In addition, Dr.
Lev-Ran was granted a NIDA-ISAM travel award) to
attend and present at ISAM 2012, Geneva, Switzerland.
Dr. Farid Araki earned the CAMH Medical Staff Association Physician of the Year Award in May, and Marilyn Herie, Best Facilitated Poster Award for “CME
Survivor Contest” at the CME Congress in Toronto.
Child, Youth and Family Program (CYFP)
Clinical Director: Dr. Joseph Beitchman; Administrative Director: Chris Bartha, MSW, RSW
The entire program has successfully moved to the Intergenerational Wellness Building at the Queen Street
site. A new youth concurrent disorders 12-bed inpatient unit and an accompanying day hospital will open
in July of 2012. Dr. Corine Carlisle joined CAMH in
January 2012 and was appointed Clinical Head of the
Youth Concurrent Disorders program and its inpatient
unit.
The second wave of school based recruitment of the
CIHR-funded Emerging Team research project has
begun. In addition recruitment for the first follow-up
of this CIHR project is underway. With funding from
Health Canada’s Drug Treatment Funding Program,
Gloria Chaim and Joanna Henderson have continued their work to implement a common screening
tool across multiple youth serving agencies to extend
understanding of the needs of youth and their diverse
pathways to care.
Supported by a Career Development Award, Brendan
Andrade continues his innovative treatment research
for children with disruptive behaviour disorders: the
program continued its studies of genetic factors in
early onset mood disorders and childhood onset aggression. Finally, the Family Health Team Collaborative Care project has been funded for a second year to
continue its collaboration with the Mt. Sinai Academic
Family Practice Unit.
Dual Diagnosis Program
Clinical Director: Susan Morris, MSW; Senior Responsible Physician: Dr. Shi-Kai Liu;
Administrative Director: Neill Carson, MA, MSW.
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
The program received funding from the LHIN and
MCSS to expand community services in partnership
with the Toronto Community Network of Specialized
care. This expansion will address Alternative Level of
Care (ALC) clients in hospital and community treatment beds.
Continuing its commitment to inter-professional education and care, the program had 16 students, including 2 elective psychiatry residents. With the addition of
a second psychiatrist, Dr. Pushpal Desarkar, the program will be able to offer training to a larger number
of medical students and psychiatry residents.
The research program is midway through 2 multi-site
studies examining healthcare of those with developmental disabilities across Ontario. Further efforts are
now focused on developing a specialized assessment
clinic for individuals with high-function autism, which
will address the needs of this under-served population.
International collaboration with the Taiwan National
Health Research Institute is underway to examine
service delivery and needs. Centralized Assessment, Triage and
Support (CATS) Program
Clinical Director: Dr. Peter Voore; Administrative Director: Linda Mohri, MSW, RSW
The program continued to expand its intake and assessment services and saw a significant increase in
Emergency Department visits, inpatient admissions,
and ambulatory assessments.
Drs. Wayne Baici, Jason Joannou, Alpna Munshi and
Ajmal Razmy were recruited. Given the increased
volumes, CATS initiated a significant renovation and
expansion of the College Street Emergency Department; the construction will begin in late 2012. Research activities were expanded through links to ICES
and the CAMH Social and Epidemiologic Research
program. Dr. Juveria Zaheer was recruited as a Fellow.
The Borderline Personality Disorders Clinic received
significant philanthropic funding and published impor-
tant findings on DBT and for patients with borderline
personality disorder. The program continues its work
with the TC-LHIN Mental Health and Addictions
Acute Care Alliance to improve emergency patient
care and access to acute care.
Geriatric Mental Health Program (GMHP)
Clinical Director: Dr. Benoit Mulsant; Administrative
Director: Gaby Golea, RN, MN
All clinical services successfully moved to the Intergenerational Wellness Building, while the research
services remained in Unit 4.
Ongoing expansion
of CAMH’s research
program continued
over the past year.
The Campbell Family
Mental Health
Research Institute was
established with an
initial focus on neural
circuitry and brain
plasticity.
The program continued to provide clinical services to a large
number of inpatients,
outpatients, and longterm care residents with
mood disorders, schizophrenia, dementia, or
substance misuse.
Dr. Suvendrini Lena
joined the program
in the summer 2012,
providing specialized
services to patients with neuropsychiatric disorders; Dr.
Simon Davies joined the program in the spring 2012,
providing specialized services to older patients with
anxiety disorders and developing new initiatives in
geriatric psychopharmacology and population pharmacokinetics.
Four major projects funded by CIHR and the US
NIH met their enrolment targets. The number and
quality of peer-reviewed scientific publications by program members have continued to grow.
Law and Mental Health Program (LAMHP)
Clinical Director: Dr. Sandy Simpson; Administrative
Director: Jim McNamee, MSW
In response to continued rising demand, the program
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
71
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
improved engagement at the mental health court
and assisted in developing alternate care pathways for
forensic patients. Findings in the Superior Court and
Ontario Court of Appeal have supported these steps.
Further, the program received new funding for rehabilitation beds that will open in the fall 2012. With
CAMH strategic realignment of clinical programs,
patient flows will improve through better collaboration
in the new Complex Mental Illness Program. Also,
the Program’s model of care is under development to
better understand and incorporate recovery principles
into forensic practice, and to improve care pathway
management.
A new ‘Office of the Person in Charge’ has been established to oversee the legal functions of the Program
with CAMH General Counsel. Research activity has
significantly increased, with 9 research projects into
aspects of epidemiology of mental illness, violence and
offending, and into recovery themes in therapeutic
services.
Research Days continue to be held with the University of Toronto Division of Forensic Psychiatry and
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care. An education highlight has been the planning for and commencement of the sub-specialty training program
in Forensic Psychiatry, commencing with 4 PGY 6
residents in July 2012.
Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program
(MAP)
Clinical Director: Dr. Arun Ravindran; Administrative
Director: Neill Carson, MA, MSW
Most of the program’s outpatient services relocated to
the new Bell Gateway Building where the majority of
staff now work (the Work Stress and Health Program
continues to operate at its Spadina avenue location).
The program continued to focus on improving access to care and increasing the range of its services.
The Early Intervention Anxiety service opened as
part of the Anxiety Disorders Clinic, with a focus on
the diagnosis and treatment of youth. It is led by Drs.
Nadia Aleem and Lakshmi Ravindran and will investigate new treatments and improve our understanding of
anxiety disorders in this underserved population.
MAP staff have continued to win notable honours
and awards: Dr. Robert Cooke was appointed Director of the Ontario Psychiatric Outreach Program
(OPOP). Dr. Arun Ravindran was appointed Director
of Fellowship Training for the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto; he also won the Donald
A. Wasylenki Award from the Department. Dr. Ari
Zaretsky received the prestigious 2012 Sarita Verma
Award for Advocacy and Mentorship in Postgraduate
Medicine from the University of Toronto. Dr. Sagar
Parikh won 2nd place in the R. O. Jones Research
Paper Award competition at the Canadian Psychiatry Association conference. The program’s research
productivity was recognized by the three new CIHR
operating grants won by MAP researchers (Drs. Jeff
Daskalakis, Jeff Meyer, and Trevor Young). The program also welcomed 14 national and international
fellows and observers.
Schizophrenia Program
Clinical Director: Dr. Tony George; Administrative
Director: April Collins, MSW, RSW
The program continued to change based on a recovery
model of care: it opened a partial hospital program at
the Queen Street site in September, 2011, and expanded its high support housing services through several
partnerships in the GTA. The program also continued
to develop its interprofessional plan. It is an important site for training psychiatry residents and for other
students in medicine, nursing, social work, and other
allied mental health professions.
A highly successful Schizophrenia Research Day was
held in October, 2011, showcasing the work of 20
clinician scientists, 12 post-doctoral fellows, and 14
graduate students. Program scientists published more
than 120 peer-reviewed articles and Drs. Bassett, Daskalakis, DeLuca, George, Kennedy, Kidd, Remington,
Menon,Voineskos and Wong received several grants
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
from CIHR, OMHF, and the Schizophrenia Society of
Ontario.
Drs. Ofer Agid and Romina Mizrahi were promoted
to the rank of Associate Professor, and Dr. Jeff Daskalakis won the Paul E. Garfinkel Award for Best Fellowship Supervisor.
Finally, several major national and international awards
and recognition were obtained by Program scientists,
including the J.M. Cleghorn Award from the Canadian
Psychiatric Association to Dr. Anne Bassett, the 2012
Innovations in Neuropsychopharmacology Award
to Dr. Gary Remington, and the Young Investigator
Award to Dr. Jeff Daskalakis from the Canadian College of Neuropsychopharmacology, and promotion to
Fellow Status in the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology by Dr. Tony George.
In the spring 2012, CAMH
also completed the phase 1B
of its redevelopment plan and
took possession of three large
new buildings on its Queen
Street site, which will house
several clinical services, the
clinical laboratories, and most
administrative services.
Women’s Mental Health Program
Clinical Director: Dr. Peter Voore; Administrative Director: Linda Mohri, MSW, RSW
The program continued to provide specialized inpatient and transitional care to women who experience
mental health and addictions issues in the context of a
trauma history. With an increased emphasis on Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) skills and other groups,
the inpatient unit was able to serve more women and
continued to decrease its length of stay.
The program launched a new Day Treatment Program
as an alternative to inpatient admission through collaboration between the Women’s Program and the
Borderline Personality Disorder Clinic. The program
also collaborates with, and co-leads the new Women’s
Mental Health and Addictions Network to create
treatment pathways for women across various programs.
Benoit Mulsant, MD, FRCPC
Physician-in-Chief
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
73
hospital for sick
children
Overview
The Department of Psychiatry at The Hospital for
Sick Children is an academic program dedicated to
clinical innovation, advancement and dissemination of
knowledge pertaining to mental disorders in children
and adolescents, through the provision of ethical,
evidence-based clinical care, teaching, and research.
The department is recognized internationally for
outstanding academic work in a number of areas.
Clinical services are delivered through ambulatory,
day hospital, inpatient programs, and consultation
to medical and surgical units. On a yearly basis,
approximately 11,000 ambulatory visits and 100
inpatient admissions are provided
CLINICAL PROGRAMS
SickKids-Psychiatry offers high clinical specialization,
focused research on the most common mental
health conditions resulting in severe impairment,
an aggressive program to increase system capacity
through the provision of tele-mental health services
to remote areas, as well as a concentrated effort in
knowledge exchange with primary care practitioners.
The clinical programs include Anxiety Disorders,
Consultation-Liaison/Medical Psychiatry, Crisis
and Psychosis, Eating Disorders, Infant Psychiatry,
fully affiliated sites
Neuropsychiatry, and Tele-link Mental Health.
The Anxiety Disorders team has played a major role
in the development and evaluation of Cognitive
Behavioural Therapy (CBT) interventions for children
and youth with anxiety disorders. Through an
externally funded initiative, community practitioners
are now being trained in these established CBT
techniques. Scientists on this team are playing a leading
role in an international effort to identify genetic risk
factors for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
The Neuropsychiatry program provides highly
specialized services in the assessment and treatment
of children and adolescents with ADHD, Tourette’s
Disorder, and other neuropsychiatric conditions
affecting behaviour, language, and learning. Scientists
on this team have made important contributions in the
areas of diagnosis, diagnostic imaging and molecular
genetics of ADHD, as well as long term outcomes of
patients affected by this condition.
The Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry program
comprises an interdisciplinary team which provides
out-patient and in-patient care to children and
adolescents with complex co-morbid medical and
psychiatric conditions. Major focus of this program
are consultations to Haematology-Oncology,
Rheumatology, Multi-organ transplant, Obesity,
Chronic Pain, HIV, Trauma, Orthopedics, Genetics
and Metabolics, and Neurology. Collaborative care is
emphasized including education and support of the
medical/surgical teams.
The Crisis and Psychosis Program provides care in
the Hospital’s Emergency Department, and through
its Urgent Care Clinic, Inpatient, and Day Hospital
services. The Inpatient and Day Hospital components
focus on assessment and stabilization of children
and youth affected by early-onset psychosis/bipolar
disorder episode and/or higher suicidal risk.
There has been a change in leadership in the Eating
Disorders program that now functions under a
single physician lead and reports to the Division of
Adolescent Medicine in the Department of Pediatrics.
As a consequence, the role of the Department of
Psychiatry in this program has shifted to a consultative
role in the inpatient unit, while maintaining primary
care roles in outpatient and day hospital treatment
programs.
Infant Psychiatry provides consultations, assessments
and short-term treatments for infants and toddlers
with a major focus on concurrent serious medical
illnesses, child protection and family courts
involvement, and teen mothers; ongoing professional
and public education is provided through the Infant
Mental Health Promotion program a coalition of
community agencies.
The Tele-link Mental Health program provides
bilingual consultations and education to children,
youth, families, and their clinicians in rural, remote,
and aboriginal communities across Ontario. Special
protocols allow for consultations to acute mental
health inpatient beds to hospitals in Northern Ontario,
arson prevention and treatment, and support for
children and youth of parents in the armed forces.
A pilot project with community health centers in
Nunavut is near completion and a new initiative with
the Toronto District School Board has been launched.
RESEARCH
Research into the causes of and treatments for
children’s mental illness is a clear commitment of
the Department. SickKids Psychiatry is a major
contributor to the University of Toronto academic
enterprise.
There are active programs in the genetics of mental
illness with a particular focus on attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and obsessive
compulsive disorder (OCD). Researchers in this area
play a major role in local, national and international
collaborative efforts to elucidate the genetics of these
conditions. Cognitive neurosciences at SickKids is
another highly developed research field in which
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
75
fully affiliated sites
cognitive psychology, phenomics and neuroimaging
interact to discover the neural basis for normal and
abnormal cognitive development.
This new knowledge is being integrated into
diagnostic, therapeutic and etiologic research. SickKids
is committed to the evaluation of the efficacy of
existing treatments for the common child psychiatric
conditions and to the development and subsequent
evaluation of novel interventions for conditions that
otherwise have no effective interventions. Members
of the Department are leaders in the development
and evaluation of behavioural and pharmacological
interventions for anxiety disorder, eating disorders,
OCD and ADHD.
Almost all psychiatric disorders have their origins
in childhood. Consequently, the Department is
committed to research of mental health and illness
in infancy. Child psychiatry, like other aspects of
medicine, do not exist in a vacuum but is influenced in
its theory and practice by the social, fiscal and political
environment in which we operate. Consequently, the
Department is actively involved in the public policy
debate through evaluation of the care that Ontarians
receive in the general community.
This research sheds light on the important role
of timely after care in maintaining patients in the
community following hospitalization and on the
importance of systematic evaluation and data gathering
at the numerous points of entry into the mental health
care system that are available in the community.
EDUCATION
SickKids Psychiatry is an important site for
advanced clinical and research training within the
University of Toronto. These trainees, who are
active in neuroimaging, genetics, developmental
psychopathology and treatment outcome research,
represent the future leaders in academic child
psychiatry in Canada.
SickKids Psychiatry is also very active in teaching
at the Postgraduate level. Core psychiatry residents
as well as the career residents (residents planning
to develop a career in child psychiatry) rotate
through our department for training in child and
adolescent psychiatry. Along with the teaching of
psychiatry residents, we are involved in the training
of developmental fellows and paediatric residents.
Our psycho-pharmacology course developed for
residents is a unique course in the University of
Toronto educational system; the model for this
psychopharmacology course was presented at a
national meeting and has elicited interest nationally
and internationally.
Our group is also actively involved in teaching at the
Undergraduate level in the Faculty of Medicine; in
2011 we provided 27 clinical teaching sessions a year,
each attended by 6 to 8 students. In addition, we had
a total of 23 elective students from across Canadian
Medical schools as well as international students
who spent between 2 and 4 week electives in our
department. These electives are always rated very
highly.
We have a number of medical observers spend time in
our department. Our seminars and clinical teaching
endeavours are highly rated by medical students and
residents and observers in training.
Abel Ickowicz, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
mount sinai hospital
INTRODUCTION
The Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH) Department of
Psychiatry is an integral component of the University
of Toronto Department of Psychiatry, active in the
Divisions of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems;
Geriatric Psychiatry; and, Equity, Gender and Population. MSH Faculty members provide leadership
in a number of University Divisions. Jon Hunter is
the Director of the Division of Consultation Liaison
Psychiatry; Paula Ravitz is the Associate Director of
the Division of The Psychotherapies, Humanities and
Education Scholarship, leading the Psychotherapies
academic area and Allan Peterkin leads the Health
Arts and Humanities academic area. Clare Pain is the
Coordinator of the Toronto Addis Ababa Psychiatry
Program (TAAPP). Lesley Wiesenfeld is the Associate Director of Postgraduate Education and Molyn
Leszcz serves as the University Vice-Chair, Clinical.
The MSH psychiatry department has grown to 29
full-time psychiatrists; 18 part-time psychiatrists; and
an outstanding complement of allied mental health
professionals including nursing, social work, and
occupational therapy, along with 18 mental health
clinicians working in community programs. There
is a strong commitment to interprofessional practice
and the provision of patient and family centered care.
Molyn Leszcz is the Psychiatrist-in-Chief and Lesley Wiesenfeld is the Deputy Psychiatrist-in-Chief.
Marci Rose served as Administrative Director.
ORGANIZATION
The department is composed of a number of integrated clinical and research programs. The Adult
General Psychiatry Program includes a range of
services covering inpatient care; day treatment; transitional care; ambulatory; crisis; trauma; community,
along with shared care and collaborative mental
health services. The Inpatient Unit is a 15-bed
unit and the ambulatory department, lead by Sian
Rawkins sees 800 new psychiatry consultations, 220
crisis cases and 35,000 ambulatory visits annually.
Emergency services are provided in conjunction with
CAMH in a joint emergency program. We are part
as well of the growing Mental Health and Addictions
Acute Care Alliance.
The Psychotherapies academic area has broad involvement in practice, teaching and research in the
contemporary psychotherapies and is lead by Paula
Ravitz, the Morgan Firestone Chair in Psychotherapy. The Health Arts and Humanities Program is an
interdisciplinary program with broad university wide
collaboration addressing the reciprocal impact of the
humanities and patient care.
In collaboration with community partners such as
Hong Fook Mental Health Association,Yee Hong
Centre for Geriatric Care, and Vasantham, the department’s ACT Team and Wellness Program have developed comprehensive community-based culturally and
language specific mental health programming addressing the needs of the seriously and persistently mentally ill; forensic patients; and the elderly. Under the
leadership of Joel Sadavoy, The Sam and Judy Pencer
Chair in Applied General psychiatry, the community
mental health programs continue to expand.
Joel Sadavoy also leads the Geriatric Psychiatry Program which has used the generous support of the
Reitman Family to establish the Cyril & Dorothy,
Joel & Jill Reitman Centre for Alzheimer’s Support
and Training. Partnering with support from the TCLHIN; the MOHLTC and Human Resources and Skill
Development Canada, the Reitman Centre provides
intensive training and support in the management of
patients with dementia to both family and profession-
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
77
fully affiliated sites
al caregivers. Lesley Wiesenfeld leads a comprehensive
psychogeriatric collaboration program with geriatric
medicine in the hospital, a key hospital wide program
priority.
Consultation Liaison Psychiatry is a large program
focused broadly on coping and adaptation to serious
medical illness collaborating with key hospital clinical
programmatic areas. This program receives over 800
patient consultation requests annually and is involved
in the care of 10% of all patients receiving care in the
hospital at any moment in time. HIV psychiatry, lead
by Peter Deroche is broadly engaged with community
partners to deliver comprehensive psychosocial care.
The Womens Mental Health Program lead by Ariel
Dalfen provides ambulatory and impatient consultation to 700 new referrals annually and has expanded
its reach into the care of women along the reproductive life span. Active research collaboration is underway
in each of these areas. Bill Lancee and Bob Maunder
direct the department’s research activities.
The educational activities of the Department of
Psychiatry cover the breadth of undergraduate, postgraduate, fellowship and continuing professional and
community educational events including the highly
successful Mount Sinai Psychotherapy Institute. Our
faculty members are active in the entirety of the core
curriculum teaching, in the psychotherapies; pharmacotherapy and the humanities. We train 16 PGY
2-5 and 6 PGY 1 residents annually. Residents can
train in General Adult Psychiatry; Geriatric Psychiatry; Consultation Liaison Psychiatry; Women’s Mental
Health and in senior selectives emphasizing the psychotherapies, at times blended with Adult Psychiatry
or with Consultation Liaison Psychiatry.
We provide training to medical students through year
I and year II of the Art and Science of Clinical Medicine, Determinants of Community Health, Foundation of Medical Practice, and the elective Therapeutic
Communication course. We train 36 clinical clerks
each year along with a large number of elective students from the University of Toronto and across
Canada.
DEVELOPMENTS
The department has been engaged in two processes of
realignment through the past year within the University and within the Hospital. The new university
divisional alignment has created leadership opportunities as noted earlier, and the new Strategic Plan has had
similar impact with Lisa Andermann co-leading the
Pillar 4 component of the Strategic Plan, focusing on
improving Dialogue within the mandate of Social Responsibility and Advocacy. Molyn Leszcz is serving
as the Chair of the MSH Medical Advisory Committee and also sits on the hospital’s Senior Management
team. This affords opportunity to expand the reach of
mental health within the hospital as we improve value
and quality of patient care.
MSH’s internal review and clinical realignment has
highlighted the central role psychiatry plays as we
implement our hospital mental health strategy. This
strategy includes integration of mental health care in
every aspect of care the hospital provides; hospital staff
training along with wellness and resilience interventions for staff; and early recognition and prevention of
patient behavioral difficulties. Carla Loftus has been recruited as a Clinical Nurse Specialist and works closely
with Lesley Wiesenfeld in developing the early recognition/prevention program across the hospital setting.
Under the leadership of Sian Rawkins, Head of the
Ambulatory Program we have expanded our assessment and treatment capacity emphasizing focal biopsychosocial treatments, medication management
and the brief psychotherapies. Jared Peck has assumed
responsibilities as the Associate Head of the Ambulatory Program. Steven Selchen has been recruited
to the Ambulatory Program expanding capacity in
mindfulness based interventions as he completes a
Masters in Mindfulness Based Interventions at Oxford
University. In addition to providing a range of mindfulness based interventions across a range of clinical
populations, Steve has also developed a new and very
popular program, MBRITE – providing residents in
fully affiliated sites
psychiatry with experiential training in mindfulness,
reflection and resilience. The Mount Sinai Psychotherapy Institute lead by Paula Ravitz provided a series of
intensive training opportunities addressing mindfulness;
trauma; and narrative interventions. We also hosted the
annual postgraduate Psychotherapy Day; Group Day
and Family Therapy Day. Kalam Sutandar has joined
the department in a part-time capacity working in the
couple and family therapy training program.
We have realigned our inpatient services with great
attention paid to improving patient flow and reducing
length of stay. The unit engaged in a very productive
value stream mapping exercise and has quickly begun
to demonstrate clinical efficiencies in these areas. After
more than twenty years of excellent leadership Edred
Flak has stepped down as Head of Inpatient Psychiatry
to focus on transitions in care and Madhu Vallabheneni is also leaving the inpatient unit. Marina Golts has
assumed responsibility for one of the inpatient teams
bringing her expertise in perinatal mental health to
the unit and we have recruited Greg Chandler to
Head the Inpatient Unit. Greg’s expertise includes
CBT and bipolar disorders and after completing his
residency at the University of Toronto he completed a
fellowship in psychiatry at Mass General. We have recruited a new Clinical Nurse specialist as well, Natasha
Persaud as part of this important development.
The Reitman Centre has expanded its clinical and
educational programs in collaboration with CCAC,
the Ontario Behavioral Support Network and the
Alzheimer’s Society. They have provided intensive
training workshops across Canada in culturally competent seniors Mental Health Care. Caregiver trainings
have also been provided in community settings and at
the Hospital for Sick Children. The Reitman CARERS program was identified as a Leading Practice in
the recent hospital accreditation. New funding has
been secured from the TCLHIN and the HRSDC to
expand the program.
Clare Pain continues her leadership of the Toronto
Addis Ababa Psychiatry Program (TAAPP) and has
assumed leadership of a broad allied health training
interest group linking University of Toronto Faculty
with Ethiopia – the Toronto Addis Ababa Academic
Collaboration (TAAAC). This expanded program is
currently addressing essential issues around its governance as it prepares for expansion.
The Health, Arts and Humanities academic area
continues to develop well with innovative programs
fostering reflective capacity in psychiatry residents and
medical students and university wide interdisciplinary integration, linked to both patient and health care
worker wellbeing. Partnerships with Massey College,
the Jackman Institute and the AGO are all underway.
This group also organized the 17th Annual
MSH’s internal
Day in Applied Psyreview and clinical
choanalysis featuring
realignment has
James Herzog addresshighlighted the central
ing Father Hunger.
role psychiatry plays
as we implement our
hospital mental health
strategy.
Allan Peterkin received
funding through the
Education Development Fund to develop
an empirical approach to evaluate medical student
narratives. Allan has been invited to join the Advisory
Board of the International Health Humanities Network. Allan Peterkin, Rex Kay and Allison Crawford
published Body and Soul: Narratives of Healing from
Ars Medica, the journal published by the MSH psychiatry and humanities group.
The Health Arts and Humanities activity has also
served as a platform for the expansion of our hospital
Mental Health Strategy focusing on staff wellness and
resilience. Partnering with occupational health, nursing
and organizational development, we have developed
a number of programs to foster coping and reflection;
reduce stigma around mental health thru innovative
multimedia and contact education. Rona Bloom has
been appointed as Poet in Residence and was awarded
an Ontario Arts Council Grant to support her writing
and narrative workshops with staff. Bob Maunder and
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
79
fully affiliated sites
Bill Lancee are developing a health care worker online
stress and resilience training program, The Stress Vaccine modeled after the successful Pandemic Influenza
Stress Vaccine.
The Womens Mental Health group under the leadership of Ariel Dalfen has expanded its activities with
the establishment of an urgent care clinic along with
active interprofessional collaboration and community
and public education. Sharon Szmuilowicz and her
colleagues were awarded an AFP Innovation Grant to
develop community based reproductive mental health
collaborations. Partnering with Public Health and
community agencies, this project will improve access to mental health care for marginalized pregnant
women. A range of new group interventions are now
being provided to address postpartum depression; psychosocial impact of high risk pregnancies and late loss
in pregnancy.
The Consultation Liaison Psychiatry group has expanded its clinical care and research collaborations
with ongoing CIHR funded projects evaluating the
psychosocial effects of an ICU admission and the
relational factors associated with clinical outcomes in
CHF. Stacey Hart, Associate Professor of Psychology
at Ryerson University and Associate Scientific Staff at
MSH continues to develop our research collaboration
in the area of cancer genetics and IBD.
In addition to the training noted earlier, two Fellows
trained in the department. Mark Lachmann completed
a fellowship in Geriatric Psychiatry. Teketel Tegegn arrived from Ethiopia to train in HIV psychiatry. Teketel
is the Director of the Treatment and Research Directorate at Amanuel Specialty Mental Health Hospital in
Ethiopia.
Ron Ruskin was promoted to Associate Professor for
excellence in Creative Professional Activity and Educational Scholarship. Graeme Taylor was honored by
the department for his 40 years of academic scholarship in the areas of alexithymia and psychoanalysis.
Sian Rawkins was appointed PGY5 residency coordinator and Allison Crawford was appointed Head of the
Northern Psychiatry Outreach Program.
Department faculty members were active presenters
in academic meetings over the last year, including a
number of keynote lectures and visiting professorships
internationally. Members of the department had their
work published in a broad range of journals and the
department has also been very active in the area of
the scholarship of discovery as noted elsewhere. Other
textbooks published included Allan Peterkin’s 5th ed.
of Staying Human during Residency Training. This
book was purchased by the Canadian Medical Association and distributed to all Canadian residents beginning their training. Joel Sadavoy’s textbook, Psychotropic Drugs and the Elderly: Fast Facts was translated
into Chinese.
This past year was a remarkable year with regard to
prominent hospital, university and international awards
received by MSH faculty and programs noted elsewhere in this report. These awards include awards
for contributions to geriatric psychiatry; international
mental health, educational scholarship and teaching, as
well as interprofessional education and collaboration.
Molyn Leszcz, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
Mount Sinai Hospital
St. Michael’s Hospital
overview
The goals of St. Michael’s Mental Health Service are
to provide a range of high quality, integrated mental
health programs and to contribute to the academic
mission of the Department of Psychiatry. The program model is urban mental health focusing on community mental health and hospital and community
integration.
The Mental Health Service is an integral part of the
Inner City Health Program at St. Michael’s, and our
clinician scientists participate actively in the Centre
for Research on Inner City Health, the Keenan Re-
search Centre of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute. Increasingly, the Mental Health Service has also
developed international outreach activities.
Organization
The Mental Health Service has three main components: Acute Mental Health Care, Community Mental
Health and Medical Psychiatry / Consultation Liaison. Within Acute Care, the Psychiatric Emergency
Service includes an interdisciplinary Crisis Service
and provides triage, psychiatric assessment, and brief
treatment. It is a highly rated departmental training
site.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
81
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
Approximately 3% of emergency patients at St. Michael’s are referred to the Psychiatric Emergency
Service and approximately 20% of those are admitted
to hospital. The Psychiatric Emergency Service also
includes a three-bed Crisis Stabilization Unit and a
Mobile Crisis Intervention Team.
The 33 bed Inpatient Psychiatric Service, the second
component of Acute Mental Health Care, continues to
be efficient and effective. This service deals with individuals with complex care needs. More patients with
psychotic disorders are admitted and discharged from
St. Michael’s Inpatient Unit than any other Inpatient
Unit in Toronto.
Roughly, there were 550 discharges this year with an
average length of stay of 21 days. The Inpatient Service
emphasizes general psychiatry and provides expertise
in addiction psychiatry, homelessness, HIV-related
disorders and severe and persistent mental illness. Four
beds are available for clients of the assertive community treatment unit.
The Community Mental Health Service carries a
considerable volume of outpatient and outreach work.
There is a strong emphasis on developing collaborative care models with family physicians and front-line
social service agencies in Toronto’s inner-city.
This service includes several components: the WREP
program for people with chronic psychotic and severe
mood disorders; an assertive community treatment
team (CONTACT); the Community Connections Intensive Case Management Program; the Collaborative
Assessment Consultation and Treatment Program; the
STEPS for Youth Early Intervention Program; and an
outreach program which provides services at front-line
community agencies, hostels and shelters throughout
Toronto.
CONTACT, our assertive community treatment team,
was the first team established in a general hospital psychiatric unit in Canada. Substance abuse, homelessness
and physical illnesses are often combined with issues
related to severe and persistent mental illness among
CONTACT clients. CONTACT has provided leadership as the assertive community treatment model has
developed across Canada by hosting numerous visitors
seeking to learn how to implement the CONTACT
approach. In addition, staff of CONTACT has participated in several initiatives with regard to assertive
community treatment in Ontario. Similarly our model
of front-line community outreach has been recognized
by the Canadian Health Services Research Foundation
as a model for dissemination to the rest of Canada.
The Medical Psychiatry / Consultation Liaison Service provide healthcare services throughout the medical and surgical units at St. Michael’s. Areas of particular focus include neuro-trauma, respirology, cardiology,
diabetes, women’s health and HIV. An advanced nurse
practitioner enhances the functioning of this service.
A distinct Geriatric Psychiatry Program has developed
including inpatient consultation and outreach in local
nursing homes.
The Mental Health Service trains students of all
professional disciplines. The majority of psychiatric
residency training focuses in general adult psychiatry.
Training in community psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry
and consultation liaison is also well developed. Residents participate in structured psychotherapy supervision involving individual and group modalities. Career
rotations are available in a number of areas, as are research rotations. The service also trains undergraduate
medical students as part of the Fitzgerald Academy.
Scholarly activities are concentrated in a numbers of
areas. St. Michael’s is home to the Arthur Sommer
Rotenberg Chair in Suicide Studies held until this
past December by Dr. Paul Links. The unit includes a
research associate and a research consultant and provides training and support to research fellows as well
as others developing research and clinical program
development related to suicide and suicide prevention. Dr. Sean Rourke continues to lead research in
HIV psychiatry and neuropsychology. Areas of interest include mood and cognitive disorders, treatment
adherence and rehabilitation and international capacity
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
building. Sean’s neurobehavioural research unit focuses
on the interface between brain and behavior in several
key areas.
As well, Sean directs an extensive array of research activities in his role as Executive and Scientific director
of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. An additional area of focus is interdisciplinary Mental Health
Services Research focusing on Inner City vulnerable
populations. Based at the Center for Research in Inner City Health, several intervention studies led by Dr.
Stergiopoulos are underway as are a number of studies addressing the health, mental health and addiction
treatment needs of individuals who are homeless or
are frequent users of mental health services.
Significant Developments:
Dr.Vicky Stergiopoulos assumed the role of Psychiatrist-in-Chief at St. Michael’s beginning July, 2011.
During the past year, a number of initiatives set the
stage for renewal and innovation At St. Michael’s
Mental Health Service.
On the clinical front, the program continues to work
on several fronts to improve access and flow. These
include development of a collaborative urgent care
clinic including psychiatric care, nursing, case management support as well as short-term counseling for
individuals being discharged from the Inpatient Unit
or our Psychiatric Emergency Services and requiring
additional support.
Furthermore, following review of wait times in the
Emergency Department and inpatient utilization data
suggesting an occupancy rate of 99% in our Acute
Care Unit, a proposal for extension of our acute care
capacity by four beds was developed and approved by
senior management at St. Michael’s.
The Community Mental Health Service provides an
array of direct and indirect services in community
settings. A new partnership is being developed with
Ryerson’s Department of Psychology for training
of psychology and psychiatry residents in cognitive
behavioral therapy, individual and group modalities.
Furthermore, mindfulness based cognitive behavioral
therapy for depression was piloted with plans to expand our group psychotherapy program this academic
year to include CBT groups for anxiety, psychosis and
trauma.
The Medical Psychiatry Consultation Liaison Service
underwent reorganization under the leadership of Dr.
Adriana Carvalhal, who joined St. Michael’s in February, 2012. A new centralized access model for both
inpatient consultation
and outpatient care
Areas of particular
of individuals who
focus include neurohave serious medical
trauma, respirology,
conditions has been
cardiology, diabetes,
developed.
women’s health and
HIV. An advanced
nurse practitioner
enhances the
functioning of this
service.
We have expanded
the number of dedicated outpatient
medical psychiatry
clinics to include the
Positive Care Clinic,
the Women’s Health
program, the Diabetes
program, the Dialysis unit, the Head Injury clinic, the
Cystic Fibrosis program, while a new partnership has
been forged with Bridgepoint to extend the support
of psycho-geriatric services offered through St. Michael’s.
Finally, in efforts to support the development of a
comprehensive addictions strategy, an Addictions Pilot
model was developed, to address the treatment needs
of individuals presenting with addictions throughout
the Inner City Health program at St. Michael’s. The
model, including a community based transitional case
manager and a St. Michael’s based addictions RN, is
being evaluated by the research fellows at the Centre
for Research in Inner City Health.
Administratively, this past year saw the departure of
Dr. Frank Cashman and Dr. Paul Links. After holding
the Arthur Sommer Rotenberg Chair for 15 years, Dr.
Links left St. Michael’s to assume the role of Chair and
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
83
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
Chief at the University of Western Ontario. This past
academic year also marked the recruitment of three
new full time staff: Dr. Tim Guimond, who is building
capacity in program development and research related
to addictions; Dr. Adriana Carvalhal, to support our
HIV focus and clinical innovation in Medical Psychiatry; and Dr. Katharine Charlton, to increase the number of inpatient teams to five.
Furthermore, the Service undertook a strategic planning process. The process included the formation of a
core team, the engagement of over 80 additional internal and external stakeholders and an inter-professional
retreat. As a result of this engagement, our vision and
goal is to ‘Lead the Way in Inner City Mental Health’
nationally and internationally.
To realize this vision, five strategic directions were
identified. These include:
1. Clinical innovation to improve access to quality
integrated services, treatments and supports with
an emphasis on the care of vulnerable and underserviced populations;
2. Advocacy for equitable funding for inner city
mental health;
3. A focus on the patient experience to support recovery and well-being;
4. Scholarship in inner city mental health through
policy relevant research, knowledge translation and
sustained excellence in teaching and education and
5. An inclusive, growth promoting culture, where
people feel valued and engaged in the pursuit of
excellence in clinical care, innovation and scholarship.
With regards to education St. Michael’s has remained
the first choice for training of psychiatry residents at
the University of Toronto. In the 2011/2012 academic
year we offered training to 9 PGY1 residents and 20
residents pursuing core rotation as well as senior selective rotations research rotations.
Furthermore, we offered elective rotation both
through the Psychiatric Emergency Service and Community Mental Health, involving 11 residents. On the
undergraduate front we offered core rotations to 42
clinical clerks training at the Fitzgerald Academy, and
an additional 18 elective rotations for medical students.
In the area of education one of the most remarkable
features of St. Michael’s Mental Health Service has
been the strong commitment to education and scholarship among nursing and health disciplines personnel.
Initiatives include nursing excellence grant support, a
nursing fellowship program and the hosting of annual
conferences for the RNAO Mental Health Nursing
Interest Group.
Finally, this year’s Mental Health Service Education
Award winners were as follows:
Excellence in Continuing Medical Education – Dr.
Paul Links
Excellence in Undergraduate Education – Dr. Shree
Bhalerao and Dr. Kien Dang
Excellence in Postgraduate Education – Dr. Katharine
Charlton
With regards to research, in keeping with the academic mandate of both the Department of Psychiatry
and St. Michael’s, the Mental Health Service has been
engaged in a variety of research endeavors for the past
year, with a continued focus in suicide studies, neuropsychology of HIV/AIDS related disorders and mental
health services research.
St. Michael’s physicians and scientists held 26 ongoing research grants (24 of them peer reviewed) as
principal or co-principal investigator for a total value
of $35,003,093 and secured an additional 8 research
grants (6 of them peer reviewed) for a total value of
$2,407,182. Furthermore, we secured significant funds
for 6 program innovations totaling $3,017,600. Our
scientists and medical staff published 12 peer reviewed
articles as principal authors and co-authored 14 additional peer-reviewed manuscripts and one book
chapter.
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
Finally in terms of academic excellence, St. Michael’s
physicians earned a number of awards and distinctions, including the Robin Hunter award for teaching
excellence to psychiatry residents, awarded to Dr. Mara
Goldstein; the Henry Durost award for excellence in
creative professional activity in the Department of
Psychiatry awarded to Dr.Vicky Stergiopoulos; and the
Casey award in memory of June Callwood, founder of
Casey House, awarded to Dr. Mark Halman.
Vicky Stergiopoulos
MD, MHSc, FRCPC
Scientist, Centre for Research on Inner City Health, Li
Ka Shing Knowledge Institute
Psychiatrist-In-Chief, St. Michael’s
Director, Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health
Systems
In the area of education one of
the most remarkable features
of St. Michael’s Mental Health
Service has been the strong
commitment to education
and scholarship among
nursing and health disciplines
personnel. Initiatives include
nursing excellence grant
support, a nursing fellowship
program and the hosting of
annual conferences for the
RNAO Mental Health Nursing
Interest Group.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
85
sunnybrook health sciences centre
overview
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Department of
Psychiatry has three Divisions:Youth, General and
Geriatrics. The Department has a 35 bed inpatient
unit with a 5 bed Psychiatric ICU. The Youth Division has a Day Treatment program and an active
Outpatient program.
The General Program includes the Mood and
Anxiety Disorders Program, the Women’s Mood and
Anxiety Clinic, the Neuropsychiatry Program, an
ACT team, a Crisis team in the ER and also provides
Consultation/Liaison services to the inpatient services
in the hospital.
We have developed an active Shared Care service to
the Family Practice. The Geriatric Program has a 4
bed inpatient service, a community outreach program,
a consultation/liaison program and an active outpatient program. In addition, the Thompson Centre for
Anxiety Disorders was created in this past year, as a
centre of expertise in OCD and related disorders. The
Department currently has 39 Psychiatrists, and two
Research Scientists.
DIVISONS & PROGRAM
Youth Division
The youth division sees youth ages 14 – 19 with
complex mood disorders and anxiety disorders. This
year we have continued to develop the Youth Bipolar
Centre under the leadership of Ben Goldstein.
Dr Amy Cheung has achieved international recognition for her work in health services utilization and
epidemiology in adolescent mood disorders and suicide studies. Dr David Kreindler continues collaborations and expansion of our mood telemetry research
stream. Dr. Alder-Nevo has a specialty program in
psychotherapy for youth with anxiety disorders with
a focus on sequelae of bullying and trauma.
General Division:
General Program
The General Division at Sunnybrook Health Sciences
Centre continues to be strong as it works alongside
interdisciplinary expertise in mood disorders, neuropsychiatry, CBT, and Psychooncology. New in 201112, the Division began to train a Core PGY4 Resident in Chronic Care. This rotation is supervised by
Dr. Cliff Posel and focuses mainly on the experience
with SunPACT, an Assertive Community Treatment
Team.,
The division continues to partner with Women’s College Hospital to accommodate a PGY2 resident who
is part of a Sunnybrook/Women’s College rotation,
spending 6 months at Sunnybrook for inpatients, and
6 months at Women’s College for outpatients. Experiences in General Consultation, Mood Disorders, and
CBT Assessment Clinic are essential elements of the
PGY-2 year.
Residents also have an opportunity to work with an
Assertive Community Treatment team; all PGY2s do
so as part of the requirement for a longitudinal experience with a patient who has a severe and persistent
mental disorder. The General Division also provides
training in Emergency Psychiatry, for PGY-1s, Family
Practice residents, and Clinical Clerks. There are opportunities of working with a full Crisis Team, a Crisis Follow-up Clinic, as well as a Mobile Crisis Team.
In 2011-12, the Division welcomed three new staff.
Dr. Nik Grujich works in CL, ER, and Anxiety Disorders. Dr. Janet Ellis works in CL and has a focus in
Psychooncology and Palliative Care. Dr. Justin Weisglass works on Inpatients and also provides IPT.
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Mood and Anxiety:
The Mood & Anxiety Disorders Program at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre has grown tremendously in the 2011/12 academic year. Building on strengths
in the mood disorder, OCD, and youth outpatient
clinics, is a newly developed Women’s Mood and
Anxiety Clinic.
Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis was recruited to head the
“Women’s Mood and Anxiety Clinic: Reproductive
Transitions” along with Dr. Joanna Mansfield. In addition to research in Women’s mental health, the clinic
provides assessment and treatment services for women
with mood and anxiety disorders across the lifespan –
to both inpatients and outpatients. Dr. Mark Sinyor is a new recruit to the adult mood
disorders service and research program. He will take
the lead in developing new foci on suicide research
and novel clinical trial methodologies, and has already
received national and international acknowledgement
for his expertise in these areas.
The OCD program received a transformational gift to
develop the Frederick W. Thomson Anxiety Disorders
Centre, which will allow Dr. Peggy Richter and colleagues to create an internationally renowned centre
for clinical and research expertise in OCD. Expansion
in research capacity and clinical programs will be evident in the years ahead.
Drs. Amy Cheung, Benjamin Goldstein, David Kreindler, Anthony Levitt, Neil Rector and Ayal Schaffer
continue highly productive scholarly programs that
merge clinical care, research productivity and education opportunities in mood and anxiety disorders. Dr.
Gregory Chandler has left the Program, and his many
contributions to the Program will be missed.
Neuropsychiatry:
Over the course of the past year, neuropsychiatry
research has focused on multiple sclerosis. Two grants
have been obtained, the first from the MS Society of
Canada looking at exercise as a moderator of cognitive and mood disturbance in MS patients. In addition,
a grant has been obtained from industry to explore
functional MRI correlates of inattentional blindness in
patients with multiple sclerosis.
Dr. Feinstein currently Chairs the Medical Advisory
Committee for the MS Society of Canada and over
the past year efforts have focused on containing the
CCSVI controversy while defining research priorities
for the society. He remains part of an international collaborative project looking at how best to understand
and manage patients with progressive multiple sclerosis.
A documentary produced by Dr. Feinstein, “Under
Fire”, was short-listed for an Academy Award. The
film has been purchased by over 20 countries and has
shown at a number of international film festivals. Finally, the Traumatic Brain Injury Clinic at Sunnybrook
continues to grow with a database of over 2,200 patients. Clinical work within the Department of Neuropsychiatry focuses on multiple sclerosis, traumatic
brain injury and Conversion Disorder.
Neuropsychopharmacology
The Clinical Neuropharmacology laboratory is codirected by Dr. Krista Lanctot and Dr. Nathan Herrmann. The research foci of the lab include optimizing the management of neuropsychiatric symptoms
associated with Dementia, Coronary Artery Disease
and Stroke. The lab currently trains 1 post-doc fellow,
1 PhD, and 5 MSc. students from the University of
Toronto’s Department of Pharmacology, as well as 1-4
undergraduate students at any point in time.
Educational activities include the organization of the
hospital’s Department of Psychiatry’s annual Psychopharmacology Crash Course, weekly Neurosciences
rounds, and an upcoming undergraduate course in
Neurosciences at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough College entitled “Diseases of the Brain and
Mind: A clinical perspective”. The lab has recently
been the beneficiary of several donations, which will
help provide the infrastructure for future studies and
activities.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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Geriatric Division:
The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry consists of 5
full-time Geriatric Psychiatrists and provides clinical
services including dedicated inpatient beds, outpatient clinics, consultation – liaison, and the Community Psychogeriatric Services for the Elderly (CPSE).
There are also specialty clinics for Affective Disorders,
Head Injury, Stroke Psychiatry, and a Multidisciplinary
Memory Clinic.
Research foci include psychopharmacology, driving, and medico-legal issues. Besides training medical students, residents, fellows and graduate students,
Division members are actively involved in organizing
and teaching in the Canadian Academy of Geriatric
Psychiatry’s Review Course for the Royal College’s
certification examination for Geriatric Psychiatry.
Anthony Levitt, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
Educational activities
include the organization of
the hospital’s Department
of Psychiatry’s annual
Psychopharmacology Crash
Course, weekly Neurosciences
rounds, and an upcoming
undergraduate course
in Neurosciences at the
University of Toronto’s
Scarborough College entitled
“Diseases of the Brain and
Mind: A clinical perspective”.
University health
network (UHN)
CLINICAL AND TEACHING UNITS:
The Department of Psychiatry at UHN provides
exemplary patient care, education and research across
4 hospitals: Toronto General Hospital (TGH), Toronto
Western Hospital (TWH), Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) and Toronto Rehab Institute (TR). There
are three Psychiatry Divisions– Neurosciences and
Psychiatry; General and Community Psychiatry and
Special Programs; Medical Psychiatry and Psychosocial Oncology.
Neurosciences and Psychiatry
(Division Head, Alastair Flint, MB):
This Division incorporates Neuropsychiatry, Mood
Disorders and Geriatric Psychiatry. The unifying
themes are Cognition, Mood, and Performance,
recognising the fact that these three dimensions are
affected across a broad range of neurological and
neuropsychiatric disorders. Psychiatrists work with
neurologists and other disciplines to provide care for
patients with Movement Disorders, Epilepsy, Stroke
and Neurodegenerative Disorders. The Acquired
Brain Injury (ABI) Clinic at TWH has focused on
outpatient consultation and management until this
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year when it has expanded its focus to include ABI rehabilitation through linkage with the ABI program at
TR. The Sleep and Alertness Clinic provides training
in sleep medicine and has collaborative research links
with the Departments of Anaesthesia and Ophthalmology. The Tourette’s Clinic is a joint initiative between
TWH and Youthdale, with strong academic and service
commitments.
The Mood Disorders Psychopharmacology Unit
provides clinical care, research and education in mood
disorders with research emphasis on neuroinflammatory mechanisms and metabolic consequences of Bipolar Disorder. The Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Clinic formally opened in November 2012, and has
received generous funding to explore novel placements
and indications for rTMS.
There is also a strong collaboration between Psychiatry and the Division of Neurosurgery to evaluate
Deep Brain Stimulation to the subcallosal cingulate
gyrus for Treatment Resistant Depression. One of the
first double blind controlled trials is underway. Other
patient groups including Bipolar Disorder, Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder and Anorexia Nervosa are being
investigated.
Geriatric Psychiatry also provides leadership in research, education and patient care with emphasis on
Alzheimer’s/Neurodegenerative Disorders and Mood
Disorders. Research funded by NIMH on Psychotic
Depression is ongoing. Clinical services are provided at
TWH, TGH and TRI.
General and community
psychiatry and Special
Programs
(Division Head, Robert Buckingham, MD):
This Division is home to a wide range of community
partnerships, outpatient clinics, emergency and inpatient services. These include community and hospital
based services in Addictions, Asian Initiatives in Mental
Health and the Mood Disorders Association of On-
tario were expanded in 2011.
Portuguese Mental Health, Psychiatric Emergency
Service Unit and Urgent Care Clinics based at TWH. Inpatient psychiatric care is provided at TGH. The
Inpatient Unit provides individualized care to patients
with acute psychiatric illness as well as specialized
treatment programs for Geriatric Psychiatry and Eating Disorders. The unit is a rich educational environment, providing training for more than 100 health
professional students each academic year. The Women’s Mental Health Clinic at TGH offers
assessment and treatment focusing on mood disorders
in relation to reproductive life cycle and support for
women who have experienced sexual assault, stalking
and domestic violence. The Program for Eating Disorders at TGH offers a spectrum of services ranging from
education and awareness through the National Eating
Disorder Information Centre to Outpatient and Day
Hospital units. There is also an intensive inpatient unit
and case management through the Med ACT team.
Medical Psychiatry and
Psychosocial Oncology
(Division Head, Susan Abbey, MD):
UHN has continued to advance the psychiatric care
of individuals with medical and surgical illnesses. In
addition to busy general consultation-liaison services
at TWH and TGH, there are specific links to a number
of medical/surgical units. Individual psychiatrists focus their clinical, teaching
and research activities in Nephrology, Hepatology,
Pulmonary Hypertension, Cardiovascular Surgery
and Multi-Organ Transplant at TGH while at TWH, the Medical Psychiatry team continues to provide similar opportunities for teaching and research, particularly in patients with neurological disorders, arthritis and
general medical disorders. The Psychosocial Clinic in
Bariatric Surgery at TWH provides pre surgical assessment and follow up care for bariatric surgery patients.
Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care (POPC)
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
at Princess Margaret Hospital continues to expand
its Distress Assessment and Response Tool (DART)
throughout outpatient oncology clinics. This tool is
used to screen for distress and facilitate psychosocial
care for cancer patients. Oncology and Palliative Care Travel Award
The Kensington Hospice, a ten bed residential hospice
for end of life care operated jointly by Kensington
Health Centre and PMH Psychosocial Oncology and
Palliative Care, opened its doors in July 2011 and is
now a site for clinical care, research and educational
opportunities. Sonu Gaind, MD was promoted to Associate Professor
effective July 1, 2012. He was awarded the Jane Chamberlain Award for outstanding contributions to General Hospital Psychiatry and the Toronto French School
Le Prix de Distinction des Anciens Elévès Award for
making an impact in both his professional field and the
community. He developed a “Clinical Care Modifier”
model for psychiatric care, implemented across Ontario in Sept 2011 and was reappointed Chair of the
Canadian Psychiatric Association Standing Committee
on Economics for a second term
A new brief psychotherapeutic intervention developed
at POPC for patients with advanced cancer called
Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully (CALM)
has received international interest from psychosocial
oncology clinicians based in the United States, Austria,
Germany, Italy, Israel and Taiwan, who visited PMH in
2010 to train in this new modality. The CALM developers received Canadian Institutes of Health Research
(CIHR) funding and have begun a randomized controlled trial of this novel intervention. As part of the UHN/PMH-Kuwait Cancer Control
Centre (KCCC) Cancer Care Partnership, members of
the POPC team have visited Kuwait and are providing
consultation regarding development of psychosocial
oncology and palliative care at the KCCC.
EVENTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
(Recipients are listed alphabetically):
Virginia Boquiren (doctoral candidate) received a
UHN Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care Travel
Award
Gina Dimitropoulos, PhD has taken on the role of
Clinical Specialist in the Eating Disorders Program
and is now the Family Therapy Lead within Eating
Disorders
Peter Fitzgerald, MD received the University of Toronto Fred Lowy Award for greatest contribution of a
resident or fellow to psychosomatic medicine
Kenneth Fung, MD was promoted to Associate Professor effective July 1, 2012
Lynn Gauthier received a PhD Fellowship Award from
the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation and the Ontario Graduate Scholarship Award from York University
Peter Giacobbe, MD was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1, 2011
Breffni Hannon, MD received a UHN Psychosocial
Oncology & Palliative Care Travel Award
Doris Howell, RN, PhD received the CAPO Award of
Educational Excellence & was cross appointed as Associate Professor to Dalla Lana School of Public Health
& Health Policy Management & Evaluation, University of Toronto
Raed Hawa, MD was appointed Director, Undergraduate Medical Education, Department of Psychiatry,
University of Toronto in 2011
James Downar, MD was promoted to Assistant Professor effective July 1, 2011
Ron Keren, MD was appointed Medical Director,
Geriatric Rehabilitation, Toronto Rehab for a 5 year
term in 2011
Kim Edelstein, PhD received the UHN Psychosocial
Diaana Kljenak, MD received the Best Poster 3rd place
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
award from the Canadian Psychiatric Association at its
Annual Meeting in Vancouver, October 2011
Yvonne Leung, PhD received UHN Psychosocial
Oncology & Palliative Care Travel Award, a CIHR
postdoctoral Fellowship Award and was nominated for
a Royal Society of Canada Alice Wilson Award.
Roger McIntyre, MD was promoted to Full Professor
effective July 1, 2012
Kim Miller, MD was promoted to Assistant Professor
effective July 1, 2011
Rinat Nissim, PhD was the recipient of the Psychosocial Oncology Research Training (PORT) Award,
and Dr. Max Alexandroff Award in Psychiatry, Health
& Disease for Excellence in Research
Gail Robinson, MD became a distinguished fellow of
the Canadian Psychiatric Assoc.
Gary Rodin, MD received the Life Time Achievement
Award for making exceptional and enduring contributions to psychosocial oncology & was appointed to the
Editorial Board of Psycho-Oncology
Sanjeev Sockalingam, MD received the CMA Award
for Young Leaders in the early career category in 2012
Alyson Stone (doctoral candidate) received the Max
Alexandroff Award for excellence in research in Psychiatry Health and Disease
Camilla Zimmermann, MD was awarded the Rose
Family Chair in Supportive Care at U of T/UHN and
her abstract was selected as the Best by the American
Society of Clinical Oncology.
Sidney Kennedy, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
This Division incorporates
Neuropsychiatry, Mood
Disorders and Geriatric
Psychiatry. The unifying
themes are Cognition, Mood,
and Performance, recognising
the fact that these three
dimensions are affected across
a broad range of neurological
and neuropsychiatric
disorders.
women’s college
hospital
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
Women’s College Hospital (WCH) Department of
Psychiatry has three strategic programs: The Reproductive Life Stages (RLS) program dealing withmental health issues in females across the life span, with
an expertise in psychiatric aspects of pregnancy and
the postpartum, infertility, menstrual-related conditions and menopause; Trauma Therapy (TT) program,
focusing on the adult psychiatric sequellae of early
life exposure to trauma; and Mental Health in Medicine (MHM) program, which addresses psychiatric
sequellae of chronic medical and surgical conditions.
In addition there is a general psychiatry program that
deals with patients presenting with mood disorders,
anxiety and psychosis.
EVENTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
Reproductive Life Stages Program
The RLS program had another successful year of
education, research and program development.Dr.
Simone Vigod was awarded the Shirley Brown Chair
in Women’s Mental Health Clinician Scientist Award,
a CIHR grant and a grant from the Schizophrenia
Society, as well as a NCDEU new investigator fellowDepartment of Psychiatry Annual Report
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ship.Dr de Camps Meschino was awarded the University of Toronto Award of Excellence for Psychotherapy Supervision. She has been accepted into the
third cohort of the OMA-CMA Physician Leadership
Programme.
The research team also published several papers with
more under review or submitted for publication consideration.
Mother Matters is new successful online intervention for new mothers providing education on and a
forum for discussion designed and written by the RLS
program and facilitated by Maura O’Keefe MSW and
Greer Slyfield Cook MSW. It address various challenges of becoming a new mother in a non clinical group
with the aim of decreasing adjustment difficulties and
creating an interface for the clinical population to find
resources.
RLS has also developed and researched (PI Dr Diane Meschino) a group intervention for mentally ill
mothers and their babies (6-12 months) in collaboration with The Hincks Delcrest Centre and the WCH
Department of psychiatry is dedicated to this program
of prevention and intervention which is in its third
year of development.
The intervention combines maternal and child psychiatry expertise targeting both mental health recovery and the maternal-child relationship for patients
in the WCH department of psychiatry who struggle
with parenting due to mood/anxiety disorders or the
sequelae of interpersonal trauma.With this intervention we reach a population of infants at high risk for
developing mental and medical illness with the intention of treatment and prevention.
The RLS program is developing new services for transitional age and young adults with Disorders of Sexual
Development who have mental health needs. As this
was identified as a large service gap in the system. This
population is in great need of service as they are often
still transitioning to a new understanding of themselves, their identity and pursuing intimate relation-
ships at the time they leave the robust program at the
Hospital for Sick Children.
The RLS program is a highly sought after interdisciplinary elective and selective experience for residents
in psychiatry and family medicine, social work students
and for medical students. The educators are a highly
dedicated, skilled group, many of whom have received
awards for their outstanding teaching. Group therapy,
IPT, CBT and psychodynamic therapy are all taught
at this site. Understanding infant development and
observing early developmentof intervention of attachment disorders is a unique opportunity via the maternal infant group.
New Initiatives
The department of psychiatry will play host to a new
initiative: “The Young Carers Program”. This program host youth ages 5-18 who care for other family
members with serious or chronic medical and mental illnesses. It provides a place for young carers to be
recognized, be supported, attend workshops, connect
with others and to have fun and de-stress. This invaluable resource is facilitated by Hospice Ontario and was
situated within WCH due to the efforts of Dr Aliza
Israel.
Trauma Therapy Program
The Trauma Therapy Program provides group and
individual psychotherapy to adult women and men
with histories of childhood maltreatment, abuse and
neglect using a stage based best practices approach.The
program inaugurated the first Trauma Talks conference focusing on Trauma Informed Care with leading
experts as speakers from across Canada and the United
States, funded by a CIHR meeting grant awarded to
Dr. Catherine Classen.
This conference was designed to heighten awareness of the impact of trauma on mental health and
users and providers in the mental health system and
develop awareness and strategies to integrate trauma
informed care into all aspects of the heath care system.
The Trauma Therapy program has developed robust
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
partnerships with community agencies including Jean
Tweed (women’s addiction service) and Barbra Schlifer
Commemorative Clinic (women’s legal and counseling
service focused on violence against women) and the
YWCA which provides housing and counseling services to marginalized women. As well, the program has
partnered with Toronto Western Hospital to provide
trauma groups for men.
Clinical and educational initiatives included expanding our somatic based trauma treatment by piloting a
somatic resourcing group for women trauma survivors
in a small randomized control trial; providing clinical
supervision to residents in Trauma Informed Emotion Focused Couples therapy; expanding our online
mental health educational and clinical interventions,
expanding our Art not Violence website and offering
weekly trauma educational seminars to interprofessional learners and staff. A new partnership with the
Art Gallery of Ontario enhanced our creative arts
treatment and provides educational opportunities for
learners in this treatment modality.
Mental Health in Medicine
The Mental Health in Medicine/General Psychiatry
(MHM/GP)program has had a very successful year.
Both arms of our program, Mental Health in Medicine and General Psychiatry are focused primarily on
collaborative or shared care relationships with specialty,
primary and community, coordinated by care partners.
Our Shared Care relationship with the Taddle Creek
Family Practice Program, continues to be rated highly
by residents and we have been fortunate to welcome a
string of talented residents to provide service and obtain an invaluable training experience at the interface
of women’s mental health and cultural psychiatry.
We have expanded our MHM program to become
part of the unique Centre for Ambulatory Care and
Education Complex Care Clinic. Under the new
clinic, a patient with heart failure, depression, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease and diabetes, for example, who is seeing a cardiologist, psychiatrist, endocri-
nologist and respirologist could have her care managed
at the clinic. We are excited to be able to offer this
integrated care approach to both patients and learners.
Dr. Joanna Barlas, a fellowship trained geriatric psychiatrist has also joined the General Psychiatry team
and offers expertise in this area to WCH patients. The
team has also been joined by Dr. Erin Carter, a new
graduate from McMaster University who has taken on
the role of postgraduate coordinator.
Mental Health in Medicine has built a new relationship with Oncology, particularly with the aftercare
program in Breast cancer. A new hire, Dr. Andreia
Scalco, who has a fellowship in C/L and previous experience in psycho oncology is leading this endeavor.
We have are now fully engaged in training core residents, both in General Psychiatry (in partnership with
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre) and at the PGY1
level in CL psychiatry (in partnership with Toronto
Rehabilitation Institute).We continue to host senior
residents in both CL and Shared Care. The program continues to host several research projects including a novel web-based support group for
women with gynecological cancers (Dr Catherine
Classen) that has now expanded into a 4 year RCT
funded by CIHR.
Building on its significant presence in the diabetes
community, Mental Health in Medicine has been
awarded two separate awards from the Public Health
Agency of Canada to develop psychotherapeutically informed diabetes education groups for women
with type 2 diabetes and depression or anxiety (Coprincipal Investigator Dr. Classen).The program is also
expanding is ambulatory care mandate and is developing a transitional care program in partnership with the
other Department of Psychiatry teaching hospitals.
Education
The WMHP continues to be a popular program for
residents interested in learning about women’s mental health. During the 2011-2012 academic year the
WMHP had several senior residents doing electives in
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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reproductive mental health, trauma therapy and relational psychotherapy, and collaborative care including
with Women’s Health and Women’s Hands, a community health centre. In addition to offering many electives and senior selectives the WMHP at WCH is a core site for general
psychiatry (PGY-2), consultation-liaison psychiatry
(PGY-1 and -4), and collaborative care (PGY-4 and -5)
training.
Over the course of the 2011-2012 academic year the
WMHP looks forward to hosting more than a dozen
residents across programs for core and selective rotations. The WMHP continues to expand its senior selective offerings, including in cross-cultural psychiatry,
child psychiatry and parenting, and collaborative care
with our community partners
Valerie H.Taylor MD, PhD,FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
“The Young Carers Program”.
This program host youth
ages 5-18 who care for other
family members with serious
or chronic medical and
mental illnesses. It provides
a place for young carers to
be recognized, be supported,
attend workshops, connect
with others and to have fun
and de-stress.
George Hull Centre
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
The Centre is an accredited children’s mental health
centre serving children and youth, from birth to age
18, and their families. The Centre provides assessment, diagnosis, consultation, comprehensive child
and family-centered treatment and health promotion
services to over 5,000 families annually. The George Hull Centre integrates a range of child
psychiatry teaching to medical students and psychiatry residents with a wide experience of treatment modalities, such as individual, family and group
psychotherapy as well as psychiatric assessment and
medication management. Outpatient services are offered to the full age spectrum from early intervention
and prevention (birth to 6 years old), school-aged
children and adolescents.
In addition, The Centre offers residential and day
treatment programs for teenagers with complex
mental health needs. The Centre endorses a strong
multi-disciplinary approach through attending and
presenting at provincial, national, and international
conferences and ongoing student and staff interdisciplinary seminar learning experiences.
The Education Committee is focused on bringing
education via the Learning Circle Forum where current topics are brought to the forefront and presented
by subject experts. An emphasis is placed on partnerships with the University of Toronto, school boards,
child welfare and other community organizations.
The development of high quality, universal, targeted
and clinical programs for primary, secondary and
tertiary intervention coupled with the work of the
Department of Research characterize the Centre.
EVENTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
New Program Initiatives: Three new programs were
added to our services this year. A brief descriptor of
these services can be found below:
SAL Program
The SAL Collaborative Initiative is a partnership
between 4 Children’s Mental Health Agencies and
the two school boards (TDSB, TCDSB) designed to
support students 14 -17 who have identified mental
health concerns and who are enrolled in the SAL
program. The role of the SAL community worker
is to provide clinical services to address the mental
health needs of the youth and their families. It is
a brief, flexible, outreach program to be completed
within 6 months.
School Priority Access Program
In partnership with the TDSB and TCDSB, the
School Priority Access Program is a collaborative,
flexible, evidence informed, accessible and brief family focused intervention for youth ages 13-18 and
their families identified as inquiring some additional
support. Participating youth may present with a
range of mental health difficulties including those
posed by social, emotional, behavioural and psychiatric challenges.
Trauma Assessment and Treatment
Program
A trauma assessment can be provided if there is validated exposure to a traumatic event and if the child
is experiencing symptoms which may be indicative
of trauma. Trauma affects multiple domains and assessments are comprehensive and explore the early
and long term effects on many aspects of functioning including cognitive, emotional, social, behavioral,
physical health, psychological development and mental health as well as assessing for formal and informal
available supports and strengths
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
97
Community affiliated sites
The Family Therapy Training Program is devoted to
the promotion of family therapy as a central and integral component of the treatment of Children and Adolescents. This program is an interdisciplinary seminar
that introduces an integrative framework of thinking
about families and the practice of evidence informed
therapies. The program combines theoretical didactics,
live supervision of families and group discussion.
The training integrates basic beginnings, highlighting the need for a comprehensive family [assessment]
formulation to identify a clear treatment plan with the
personal and professional self of the therapist. This is
explored through the use and understanding of counter-transference, values, culture and a social location of
the therapist within the therapeutic system.
Research
The George Hull Centre participated in the following
research studies: Family Group Conferencing with Youth Transitioning into Adulthood This study funded by the Child
Welfare Secretariat, Ministry of Children & Youth
Services for youth who have been in care for extended
periods of time looked at the impact of family group
conferencing on youth and further explored its use in
assisting youth transitioning to adults. It also explored
how best to train coordinators to deal with the unique
needs of this population. Personalized Services for the Mental Health of Young
People in Ontario: This study conducted through
Ryerson University, funded by the Ministry of Children & Youth Services is a change-oriented project designed to help organizations understand and
implement the Ministry of Children & Youth Services’
strategic goal that ‘every child and youth receives
personalized services’ which heightened staff awareness
of the need to encourage clients to have a voice in
program decisions. Enhancing Education Performance for Children and
Youth Living in Residential Group Care in Ontario: This study conducted through Ryerson University,
funded by the Ministry of Children & Youth Services
was developed in response to the Ministry of Children
& Youth Services’ strategic priority that ‘every child
and youth graduates from secondary school’. This
study aimed to develop a tool box to measure short
term outcomes in the educational performance of
youth and to understand how best to support children
and youth in residential group care to achieve their
educational goals. Effectiveness of Motor Speech Intervention for Children with Speech Disorders: This study conducted
through the University of Toronto and The Speech &
Stuttering Institute, funded by the Ministry of Children & Youth Services is aimed at (a) estimating the
magnitude of treatment effects, (b) treatment efficacy
and (c) identifying the key factors that contribute to
treatment effectiveness of motor speech intervention. 52 clinicians from across Ontario, including 2
from The George Hull Centre, are participating in this
project. Comings and Goings
Dr. Taylor Armstrong coordinates undergraduate medical student teaching in the centre and runs a multidisciplinary teaching seminar during the academic year. Dr Chetana Kulkarni is the psychotherapy site coordinator for the psychiatry residents and coordinates
the assessments for the birth to 6 population. Dr Greg
Lodenquai is the current Psychiatrist in Chief and
Clinical Director of the Centre.
Gregory Lodenquai, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
The George Hull Centre for Children and Families
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
SITE DESCRIPTION
The Hincks-Dellcrest Centre is a community-based
multi-disciplinary children’s mental health treatment, research, and teaching centre. Its mission is to
be a leader in the provision of mental health care for
children by combining prevention, treatment, research
and education. It helps more than 8,000 children and
families each year, and is funded by the Ministry of
Children and Youth, the United Way, businesses, and
individuals.
A comprehensive range of services is offered at various locations in Toronto and a residential component
is located near Collingwood, Ont.
Inter-professional education is offered at undergraduate, postgraduate, and advanced (Fellowship) levels to
students in psychiatry, psychology, social work, nursing, child/youth work, expressive arts and other allied
health disciplines.
EVENTS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
The Centre renewed its affiliation agreement with the
Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, for another 5 years. As a result of this process, the Centre will
explore offering placements for students in speech
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
99
community affiliated sites
and language therapy, occupational therapy, physical
therapy, and expanding the nursing placements.
RESEARCH TRAINING AT HINCKSDELLCREST
Community outreach and public education was enhanced by appearances on TVO by Drs. D. Philipp, M.
Korenblum, and R. Alter, speaking on various aspects
of children’s mental health. In addition, Dr. Korenblum co-produced 2 videos--1 on adolescent depression and another on seeking help in primary school
children--with the assistance of students from two
schools. The former has been posted on YouTube.
As well as her appointment to the Department of
Psychiatry, Dr. Cohen also has an adjunct appointment
to the graduate faculty of OISE/UT, Department of
Human Development and Applied Psychology.
The Governor-General of Canada visited the Centre
in May, to acquaint himself further with the services
provided by the residential program.
The Centre received Interim Accreditation by the
Council on Accreditation in March.
Outstanding achievement by 2 child/youth workers was recognized by the winning of the Krista Sepp
Award.
The Annual Fund-Raiser of the Centre, “Raise A
Child’s Smile”, held in May, was a sold-out success.
The Centre formulated a new Strategic Plan with five
Objectives:
1. Service excellence by incorporating cutting edge
methodologies into care provision models.
2. Focus in areas where we are/can be leaders.
3. Strengthen the financial platform.
4. Recruit and retain exceptional people.
5. Build system capacity by partnering with other
providers.
To this end, staff were engaged in implementation subcommittees, and all 5 objectives are now in the process
of being realized.
The Fellowship program continued to attract national
and international candidates, offering positions to
graduates from Quebec, Brazil, as well as McMaster
University.
Dr. Fataneh Farnia, previously a Research Fellow at
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre and the Department of Psychiatry has taken a position at this centre as Research
and Evaluation Associate Director of the Handle with
Care in at Risk Communities Project. She also was
recently appointed as Assistant Professor with the Department of Psychiatry.
CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS
Dr. Nancy Cohen, with Bonnie Pape and Dr. Fataneh
Farnia, continue to implement, evaluate and test a
mental health promotion training program for parents and caregivers of young children called Handle
with Care. Based out of the Hincks-Dellcrest Centre,
the project involves 430 participants in more than 16
communities across Canada in Prince Edward Island,
Ontario, Manitoba and the Yukon.
Dr. Cohen and her collaborators Drs. Fataneh Farnia,
Nancie Im-Bolter and Marshall Korenblum continue
to analyze data from a CIHR and CHEO funded
study on higher order language in adolescents presenting for psychiatric service. Dr. Cohen is also involved
in the piloting of an international study of the infantparent program Learning Through Play with Alfredo
Tinajero of the Hincks-Dellcrest Centre and Dr.
Nusrat Husain.
Dr. Marshall Korenblum, MD., F.R.C.P.(C)
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
North York General
Hospital
Overview
North York General Hospital is a community academic hospital partially affiliated with the University of Toronto. One of Canada’s most sought after
training sites for family medicine resident for over
40 years; it also provides rotations for residents in
psychiatry, emergency medicine, paediatrics, surgery,
radiology, obstetrics and gynaecology. Newly renovated resident lounge, on call rooms, academic centre,
weekly grand rounds, library services in the University of Toronto network, and subway access have
benefited trainees.
Caring for children of all ages, adolescents, adults and
seniors the department is recognized for offering a
wide range of mental health services. The multidisciplinary team includes nurses, social workers, psychologists, occupational and recreation therapists, nutritionists, administrative professionals and psychiatrists.
The program includes; emergency services, inpatient,
partial hospitalization, psychosomatic consultation liaison general hospital service, subspecialty psycho-oncology service, ambulatory care and outreach, ACTT
(Assertive Community Treatment Team), adult and
adolescent eating disorders outpatient and day pro-
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
101
community affiliated sites
grams, addictions outpatient, day hospital, transitional
age youth and concurrent disorders, mental health and
justice treatment and support program, intensive case
management program, housing support intensive case
management, CBT and MBSR groups.
including a six bed Schedule 1 inpatient service, day
hospital, multidisciplinary outpatient child and adolescent mental health clinic, and consultation service
to inpatient paediatrics, NICU, and adolescent eating
disorder program.
Adult outpatient program includes the full breadth of
conditions for assessment and care, often as people’s
first contact with mental health. Strong linkages exist
with community partners, and the over 400 hospital
affiliated family physicians, and shared collaborative
mental health program and FHT. The Mental Health
Program provided over 67,000 outpatient visits in
2011/2012.
Geriatric Psychiatry includes a 10 bed inpatient
unit, inpatient consultation service, outpatient clinics, memory clinic, community outreach, and nursing
home initiative. A multidisciplinary team and highly
collaborative relationship and partnership with Geriatric Medicine provide care to patients.
In 2012, the department opened an urgent care clinic
available to see patients within a 48 hour period.
Also in 2011, the department collaborated with one
of NYGH’s family physicians to run a reverse shared
care medical care clinic. One of our family physicians
operates from this clinic, offering care to mental health
patients who would not otherwise have access to family doctors.
The inpatient unit’s focus on acute stabilization, crisis
management and short-term treatment through individual, family and group modalities. Each unit works
according to an interdisciplinary team approach, with
links to aftercare. With 46 beds; 6 child/adolescent
beds, 30 adult beds, 10 geriatric beds, and a 6 bed Psychiatric Intensive Care area.
The Adult Day Hospital Partial Hospitalization Program serves individuals experiencing acute emotional
distress who have enough support to continue living at
home, with the focus being on re-integrating into the
community in collaboration with partnered community agencies.
The Child and Adolescent Mental Health Team provide care to all ages of children through family therapy,
individual counselling, group therapy and psychiatric/psychological assessments with Ontario’s second
busiest obstetrics centre and a paediatrics program.
The hospital serves children from infancy onwards
The hospital has a long and proven history as an innovative, highly regarded training and education facility.
The department of psychiatry continues to develop in
its scholarly and research activity. The successful academic micro-grants project is enabling projects and
research in areas such as psycho-genetics, cultural psychiatry, sports psychiatry, collaborative shared mental
health care, and anti-stigma knowledge translation.
Thomas Ungar MD, Med, CCFP, FCFP, FRCPC,
DABPN
Chief of Psychiatry and Medical Director for
Mental Health Program & Chair of Medical Advisory
Committee
North York General Hospital
st. joseph’s health centre
INTRODUCTION
St. Joseph’s Health Centre (Toronto) is a community
teaching hospital with the vision of being “Canada’s
Best Community Teaching Hospital”. The St. Joseph’s
Health Centre Department of Psychiatry is a comprehensive program providing services spanning the life
cycle.
In addition, addiction services at SJHC are grouped
with mental health to create a Mental Health and
Addictions Program. The grouping of the Department of Psychiatry with Addictions Services under a
single medical director ensures integration of mental
health and addictions services and facilitates capacity
in managing concurrent disorders across the life cycle.
Inter-professional care is a cornerstone of the department. Highly skilled providers work collaboratively
internally and with the community to provide community based case management, recovery support,
shared care and crisis intervention.
ORGANIZATION
The department is composed of 3 key components:
Emergency mental health and addiction services; Psychiatry Inpatient and Residential Withdrawal Management services; and Ambulatory services.
The SJHC emergency department is one of the busiest in Canada and as such the volume of patients presenting with psychiatric and addiction emergencies
is one of the highest in Canada. The latter volumes
influence patient flow throughout the continuum
of mental health and addiction services and as such
providers develop a wealth of experience in working
with an extensive range of mental health and addiction disorders.
The Emergency Psychiatry Team (EPT) is an interprofessional team including both adult and child crisis
workers that service the emergency room 24 hours/
day. SJHC is an active part of the Emergency Department Mental Health Alliance. The department
has a 35 adult inpatient unit including a 6 bed psychiatric intensive care unit; a 6 bed adult short stay
unit; a 6 bed Child and Adolescent inpatient unit (47
beds) and an adult day hospital. Ambulatory services
include a comprehensive shared care program, urgent
care, a recovery support program, a community case
management program, a concurrent disorder program,
and a geriatric psychiatry program. The geriatric
psychiatry program provides consultation-liaison services to the entire hospital as well as 3 long-term care
facilities in the community. We also have a general
consultation-liaison service for the entire hospital.
Addiction services span both the departments of
Family Medicine and Psychiatry but are integrated
with multiple programs throughout the hospital. Addiction services include emergency addiction crisis
workers, addiction medicine consultation-liaison service, addiction medicine physicians and an extensive
harm reduction program. In addition, SJHC is the
only hospital in Ontario with a residential withdrawal
management service on its campus.
Community input is formally organized through a
perpetual Mental Health and Addictions Population
Panel that is co-chaired by a person with lived experience and community organization representative.
Representation on the population panel is provided
by an extensive array of community agencies and
persons with lived experience.
Developments and
Achievements
The commitment to post-graduate education continues to grow. The St. Joseph’s Department of Psychiatry is actively pursuing excellence as a Community
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
103
community affiliated sites
Teaching Department of Psychiatry. As a community
affiliate with the University of Toronto Department
of Psychiatry, our department provides opportunities
for clinical teaching in comprehensive mental health
and addiction programs spanning the life cycle from
children to elderly. We are delighted to have been able
to recruit five new faculty with particular interest in
teaching and education. Drs. Andrew Howlett, Rebecca McEvilly, Lori Weisberg, Tara Burra and Nadiya
Sunderji are new additions to our roster and will assist
in expanding our educational capacity.
Furthermore, Dr. Nagi Ghabbour, will be shifting his
educational role into a senior mentoring role and passing on his portfolio as Postgradutate Site Coordinator.
We are indebted to Dr. Ghabbour for his dedication
and hard work over the years as Postgraduate Coordinator. Dr. Ghabbour will act as mentor to Dr. Andrew
Howlett who has accepted the role of Postgraduate
Coordinator, effective September 2012.
Community Mental Health has moved towards a new
“team” model of care and will refocus its priorities to
inpatient and ER population, followed by current outpatients and external referrals. Clients will be followed
over their episode of care by one of four teams consisting of three clinicians along with two psychiatrists.
The reorganization of our ambulatory services into a
comprehensive Collaborative Care Clinic will provide
more opportunities for resident education and knowledge translation. With the recruitment of Dr. Sunderji, the department is one step closer to providing
comprehensive post-graduate training opportunities in
both collaborative care and health systems.
Jose Silveira, MD, FRCPC
Psychiatrist-in-Chief
Medical Director Mental Health and Addiction Programs
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
The grouping of the
Department of Psychiatry with
Addictions Services under
a single medical director
ensures integration of mental
health and addictions services
and facilitates capacity in
managing concurrent disorders
across the life cycle
surrey place centre
Overview
Surrey Place Centre (SPC) is a community affiliated
teaching site within the University of Toronto. As
an interdisciplinary community-based agency, SPC
delivers a broad range of specialized clinical services
and programs to enhance the health and well-being
of people of all ages living with intellectual (developmental) disabilities (ID), with and without autism
(ASD), in keeping with the standards of Accreditation
Canada.
PROGRAMS AND SERVICES
SPC offers interdisciplinary assessment, diagnostic and
treatment services through a variety of developmental and autism programs for persons with ID, their
families and caregivers living in the Toronto area as
well as extensive education and consultation services
to community agencies (www.surreyplace.on.ca). The
Centre also provides specialized clinical and mental
health consultation to adults in remote northern Ontario communities via video conferencing and is the
co-lead in the Tri-Region Alliance (Central Ontario
Network of Specialized Care), one of four provincial
Networks of Specialized Care (www.communitynetworks.ca), serving adults with co-existing mental
health and/or behavioural issues
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
105
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
Other specialized services at SPC include the Augmentative Communication and Writing Aids Program
(ACWA), an interdisciplinary clinic designed to promote clients’ communication, and two interdisciplinary Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder clinics, one for
children and one for adults.
SPC is the research and clinical hub for the Autism
Treatment Network – ATN Toronto site (SPC lead
Dr Alvin Loh, developmental pediatrician – http://
www.autismspeaks.org/science/resources-programs/
autism-treatment-network ). The ATN (funded by
Autism Speaks) consists of 17 sites in North America,
2 of which are in Canada, that follow a clinical protocol for assessment and follow-up of children with ASD.
It includes lead autism specialists (often developmental
pediatricians), medical subspecialists (GI, Sleep, Metabolics, Genetics, Neurology, Psychiatry etc), and other
clinicians (Psychology, Behaviour Therapy, Speech
Language Pathology, Occupational Therapy), and family advisors, who meet and discuss strategies for the
improvement of various aspects of care. The ATN also
functions as the Autism Intervention Research Network on Physical Disorders, funded by the U.S Health
Resources and Services Administration.
The BMACKE (Behavioural Medical Assessment of
Complex Kids and their Environment) service is now
into its second year. This multidisciplinary team offers
home and school-based assessments and interventions
to children up to 18 yrs presenting with complex
mental health and behavioural concerns.
The Developmental Disability Primary Care Initiative
(DDPCI), jointly funded by the Ministries of Health
& Long Term Care and Community & Social Services
and SPC (Director Dr William Sullivan, SPC family
physician) is aimed at enhancing the health, social inclusion, and quality of life of persons with DD/ID by
improving their primary care. Canadian Primary Care
Guidelines and tools were updated in 2011and both
can be accessed at http://www.surreyplace.on.ca/
Pages/Home.aspx (> Clinical Programs > Medical
Services > Primary Care).
Psychiatry at SPC provides consultation to the ATN,
BMACKE, DDPCI and Child and Adult SPC Programs. Physicians at SPC (representing psychiatry,
family medicine, developmental pediatrics, neurology,
and audiology) work collaboratively, together with
SPC teams and programs, in providing consultation in
response to referrals around physical and mental health
concerns.
EDUCATION
We continue to provide core training, electives and selectives in ID to medical clerks, residents and fellows in
psychiatry, developmental pediatrics and family medicine and other health trainees. Medical subspecialties
represented at SPC, working within multidisciplinary
teams, permit a broad range of specialist clinical exposure for such trainees; SPC is unique in the community of Toronto in being able to provide collaborative,
subspecialty medical training and exposure to health
and ill-health, life span and transition issues as these
impact on people with ID; as well as working within a
model of shared health care with the medical community e.g., family doctors and specialists.
Together with Faculty working in the Dual Diagnosis
Program, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
core curriculum teaching in ID psychiatry is available
for psychiatry residents during their first, second and
third residency years. In the first year the focus is on
ID in the Emergency Department; in the second there
is multidisciplinary clinical teaching at SPC supported
by general seminars on ID and ASD; in the third year
the focus is on children with ID, and understanding
the complex etiologies of psychotic-type presentations
in children and adults with ID, with and without ASD.
NEW SERVICES AND CLINICAL
TEACHING
A key element of the government’s transformation of
developmental services has been the establishment of
Developmental Services Ontario, a new centralized
access point for individuals and families to all government funded developmental services for adults in
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
Ontario. After a rigorous process, SPC was delighted
to have been selected as the Developmental Services
Ontario access point for the Toronto Region.
In July, 2011, SPC was selected as the lead agency
for the delivery of new government funded Applied
Behavioural Analysis (ABA) supports and services for
children and youth with autism living in the Toronto
Region. This important new service will provide
ABA-based programming for children and youth
with autism, enabling over 1,500 children and youth
to receive new services through SPC and its partner
agencies.
SPC staff launched an ID elective for University of
Toronto Year 1 and Year 2 medical students. Around
40 students attended the 6 week seminar series that
focused on interaction with individuals with ID and
increasing awareness of the main issues in the field, in
a seminar format to encourage interactive learning.
Evaluations were very favourable and there was strong
support to continue the elective in 2013.
UPDATE ON EXISTING SERVICES AND
CLINICAL TEACHING
The ATN has enrolled over 5000 participants over 14
sites in the last 4 years. It continues to build on multisite collaboration to develop tools for families and clinicians focused on improving standards of care http://
www.autismspeaks.org/family-services/tool-kits. With
these tools, the network has highlighted quality improvement initiatives targeted at implementing a care
model that will strengthen the use of decision support
tools, co-ordination of care processes, and self-management strategies during the childhood years.
The BMACKE Clinic is continuing to explore effective methods of interprofessional collaboration focused
on timely assessment and treatment of complex mental
health and behavioural concerns. The clinical team
now includes a behavioural therapist, nurse, developmental pediatrician, and psychiatrist with consultation
to speech therapy, occupational therapy and service
co-ordination as needed.
Primary Care Initiative
In 2011-12, 38 primary care providers in Ontario
participated in the DDPCI’s Training Course, and
14 in Workshops, bringing the total number of those
trained since 2006 to 179. This exceeds the target set
in the 5 Year Plan. This training includes how to assess
and treat mental ill-health (emotional and behavioural
concerns) in people with ID. At a curriculum enhancement meeting in March, 2012 residents attended
from across the province including psychiatry residents
from Toronto.
Psychiatry
As part of a larger reorginisation of clinical services
within SPC, Children and Adult Mental Health Teams
were integrated into SPC geographic quadrant teams.
This provided opportunity to reorganize the biweekly
half day clinical teaching for all PGY2 residents; this
new approach better integrates residents’ ongoing
understanding of and exposure to ID in their generic
rotations and has been very positively evaluated by the
residents.
Following the Department’s external review in 2004
and recommendation that Psychiatry take the lead in
ID teaching, SPC has been offering “A Day in DD”
for all third year medical clerks. This year saw each of
the departments of Family Medicine, Pediatrics, and
Psychiatry providing time for the day in two clerkship
rotations per academic year. This shared responsibility further enhances the interdisciplinary aspects of
the curriculum. The day has been renamed “Ability in
Disability” in keeping with a strength-based approach
to caring for individuals with disabilities. More opportunities to meet and interact with persons with ID
have been arranged in response to student feedback.
EVENTS AND EDUCATIONAL
ACHIEVEMENTS
Staff departures: Marika Korossy, Librarian retired after
over 30 years at SPC; Marika has contributed immeasurably to physician and other ID health professional
training in ID in Canada. As well as being the steward
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
107
FULLY AFFILIATED SITES
of a unique collection at SPC of library resources in
ID she has been involved in psychiatry residency curriculum development and teaching. Her generosity
and friendly scholarly approach has been much appreciated by generations of trainees. Margaret Bissell was
Director of Education and the lead in creating interprofessional educational training online modules (e.g.,
“Casey” and “Mateo”) and classroom workshops that
focus on ID as a model of interprofessional practice.
This Interprofessional Education Program “Perspectives”, is now offered to health science students from
the University of Toronto (Centre for Interprofessional
Education),York and Ryerson Universities. A pilot endeavour integrating “Casey” into the PGY2 residency
clinical half day at SPC is being undertaken.
Events
Dr Bradley was invited to visit the Institute of Mental
Health, Singapore under the Singapore Ministry of
Health’s HMDP Visiting Experts Scheme. She delivered on a packed schedule of activities that included
workshops on psychological therapies and ID (including Books Beyond Words and Intensive Interaction
training), presentations on mental ill-health, problem
behaviours in ID and ASD as well as consulting at
clinical and hospital rounds.
Elspeth Bradley, MB BS, PhD, FRCPC, FRCPsych
Psychiatrist-in-Chief on behalf of the team at SPC
August 2012
We continue to provide
core training, electives and
selectives in ID to medical
clerks, residents and fellows
in psychiatry, developmental
pediatrics and family medicine
and other health trainees.
Medical subspecialties
represented at SPC, working
within multidisciplinary
teams, permit a broad range of
specialist clinical exposure for
such trainees.
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Abadi, Babak
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Abbey, Susan E.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Abraham, Gebrehiwot (Gaby)
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Abramowitz, Carolyn
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Abrams, Karen M.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Addae, Gina A.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Addington, Jean
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Adlaf, Edward
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Adler Nevo, Gili W.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Agarwal, Parul
Lecturer
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Agid, Ofer
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Akman, Donna E.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Albert, Mathieu
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Aleem, Nadia
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Alem, Atalay
Lecturer
Amanuel Hospital
Ali, Faizal
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ali, Sherese
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Allain, Suzanne
Assistant Professor
Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital
Almagor, Doron
Lecturer
Private Practice
Andermann, Lisa
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Anderson, Nicole Dianne
Associate Professor
Baycrest
Andrade, Brendan
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Andreazza, Ana
Assistant Professor
University of Toronto
Andrew, Melissa
Assistant Professor
Queen’s University
Antony, Martin M.
Full Professor
Ryerson University
Araki, Keyghobad
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Araya, Wolde Tensai
Lecturer
St. Paul’s Hospital, Addis Ababa University
Armstrong, Taylor C.
Lecturer
George Hull Centre
Armstrong, Harvey
Associate Professor
Private Practice
Arnold, Paul D.
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Atkinson, Leslie R.
Associate Professor
Ryerson University
Awad, A. George
Professor Emeritus
Humber River Regional Hospital
Bacchiochi, Jason
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Bagby, R. Michael
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Baici, Wayne C.V.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Baker, Brian
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Bakshi, Neely
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Balaban, Kayli S.
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Balchand, Kamlesh K.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Balderson, Ken
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
109
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Ballon, Bruce
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Baluyut, Crystal A.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Banoub, Tahany D.
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Barakat, Sammy
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Barankin, Tatyana
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Barbaree, Howard E.
Full Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Barbera, Joseph
Lecturer
Youthdale Child & Adolescent Sleep Centre
Barlas, Joanna
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Barr, Cathy
Full Professor
University Health Network
Barrenechea, Ana M.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Barsky, Stephen A.
Lecturer
The Scarborough Hospital
Barsoum, Amir
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Bart, Catherine
Lecturer
Workplace Safety & Insurance Board
Bartha, Christina
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Baruch, Ruth
Lecturer
Private Practice
Barwick, Melanie A.
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Barwick, Carmelina S.L.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Bassarath, Lindley E.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Bassett, Anne S.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Battigelli, Marino
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Beach, Craig A.
Assistant Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Beard, Jonathan D.
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Beiser, Morton
Full Professor
Ryerson University
Beitchman, Joseph H.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Bender, Ashley
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Benoit, Diane
Full Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Berber, Mark
Lecturer
Markham Stouffville Hospital
Berg, Joseph M.
Professor Emeritus
Surrey Place Centre
Bergmans, Yvonne
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Bernstein, Lori J.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Berntson, Andrea
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Bettridge, Shannon
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Bhalerao, Shree
Associate Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Bhide, Devayanee
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Blackburn, Janice
Lecturer
Bersenas Jacobsen Chouest Thomson Blackburn LLP
Blackman, Adam
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Bloom, Hy
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Bluestein, Marilyn
Lecturer
University Health Service
Blumberger, Daniel M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Boachie, Ahmed
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Bodnar, Ana
Lecturer
Private Practice
Boileau, Isabelle
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Book, Howard E.
Associate Professor
Private Practice
Boulos, Carolyn
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Bourdeau, Danielle
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Boydell, Katherine Mary
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Bradbury, Cheryl C.L.B.
Assistant Professor
Toronto Rehab - Lyndhurst Centre
Bradley, Elspeth A.
Associate Professor
Surrey Place Centre
Brandes, Jack S.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Brandys, Clare
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Brar, Simuran K.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Brook, Shelley C.
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Brown, Nicola
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Brownlie, Elizabeth
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Bruno, Deanna M.E.
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Bryden, Pier
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Buckingham, Robert A.
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Buckley, Leslie L.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Burgoyne, Robert W.
Lecturer
University Health Network
Burhan, Amer
Assistant Professor
RMHC - London
Burnham, W. McIntyre
Full Professor
Department of Pharmacology
Busto, Usoa
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Butterill, Dale
Lecturer
Dale Butterill Health Care Consulting
Byers, Jean E. F.
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Byrne, Miriam R.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cairney, John
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Campbell, Wayne
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Cantor, James M.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cardish, Robert J.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Carlier, Michelle
Lecturer
FACT Peel Clinic
Carlisle, Corine
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Carr, Melanie L.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Carter, Erin
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Carter, Jacqueline
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Carvalhal, Adriana S.
Assistant Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Cashman, Frank E.
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Casola, Paul G.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Caspary, Arthur
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
111
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Cassidy, Keri-Leigh
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cassin, Stephanie E.
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Castel, Saulo
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Cavanagh, Patricia
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Chad, Lawrence L.
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Chagoya, Charlotte A.
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Chagoya, Leopoldo
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Chaim, Gloria
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Chakravarty, Mallar
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Chamberlain, Clive G.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Chandler, Gregory
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Charach, Ron
Lecturer
Private Practice
Charach, Alice
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Charlton, Katharine
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Chatterjee, Sumeeta
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cheung, Amy
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Chisvin, Martin
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Chopra, Sabeena
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Chopra, Kevin
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Chow, Wendy
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Chow, Tiffany
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Chow, Eva W.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Christensen, Bruce
Associate Professor
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
Clark, Carrie C.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Classen, Catherine
Associate Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Clinton, Jean
Lecturer
Hamilton Healthcare Science
Cochrane-Brink, Katherine A.
Lecturer
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Cohen, Sherry Tziporah
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Cohen, Nancy J.
Full Professor
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Cohen, Carole
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Cohen, Steven N.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cohn, Tony
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Colleton, Michael
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Collins, Peter I.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Collins, Evan J.
Assistant Professor
Hassle Free Clinic
Colton, Patricia
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Conn, David Keith
Full Professor
Baycrest
Cooke, Robert G.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Coolbear, Jennifer L.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Cooper, James Peter
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Corcoran, Kathleen M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Costigan, Shannon
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Cote, Isabelle
Lecturer
Private Practice
Courbasson, Christine
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Court, John P.M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Craigen, Gerard P.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Crawford, Allison
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Crawford, Barbara
Lecturer
Northeast Mental Health Centre
Crocker, Thomas C
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Crosbie, Jennifer
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Cunning, Sandra
Lecturer
Kinark Child and Family Services
Cunningham, Alastair J.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Czukar, Gail
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
D’Agostino, Norma
Lecturer
University Health Network
Dalfen, Ariel
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Dang, Kien T.
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Darani, Shaheen A.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Darby, Padraig L.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Daskalakis, Zafiris Jeffrey
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Davies, Simon
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Davis, Caroline A.
Associate Professor
York University
Dawe, Ian
Associate Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Dayal, Naveen R.
Assistant Professor
Credit Valley Hospital
De Freitas, Karen D.
Lecturer
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
De Luca, Vincenzo
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
De Roche, Peter L.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
De Souza, Minella F.
Lecturer
University Health Network
De Souza, Claire M.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Denisoff, Eilenna
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Dennis, Cindy-Lee E.
Associate Professor
Faculty of Nursing
Desai, Devanshu D.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Desarkar, Pushpal
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Deutsch, James W.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Devins, Gerald M.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Dewa, Carolyn S.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Diaz, Pablo
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Dickey, Robert
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
DiGiacomo, Dan
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
113
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Dimanno, Domenic
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Dionne, Marie France
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Dixon, David J.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Doan, Richard
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Doidge, Norman R.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Dorenbaum, David
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Dorian, Barbara J.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Downar, Jonathan
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Driver, Kelly
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Dubo, Elyse D.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Dubord, Greg
Lecturer
Toronto Center for Cognitive Therapy
Duchen, Suzanne
Lecturer
Private Practice
Dudek, Malgorzata
Lecturer
Humber River Regional Hospital
Duff, Virginia A.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Dunbar, Christine
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Dundas, Susan
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Dunlap, Hester E.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Durbin, Janet
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Eayrs, Gertrude E. (Beth)
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Edelstein, Kim
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Edye, Frances F. W.
Lecturer
Psychiatric Outreach Program
Eisen, Joel N.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Elliott, M. Esther
Lecturer
University Health Network
Elliott, Mary E.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Ellis, Janet
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Emelianova, Svetlana
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Ennis, Jon D.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Epstein, Irvin
Assistant Professor
START CLINIC
Epstein, Trina
Lecturer
University Health Network
Erlich, Murray
Lecturer
Private Practice
Eryavec, Goran
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Esplen, Mary Jane
Full Professor
University Health Network
Evans, Kenneth R.
Lecturer
Ontario Cancer Biomarker Network
Everett, Barbara
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Farcnik, Karl D.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Farewell, John C.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Farnia, Fataneh
Assistant Professor
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Farvolden, Peter
Assistant Professor
CBT Associates of Toronto
Feder, Victor
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Fefergrad, Mark
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Feinstein, Anthony
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Fenta, Haile
Lecturer
The Ontario HIV Treatment Network
Ferguson, Ian D.
Lecturer
Providence Healthcare
Ferguson, Bruce
Full Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Ferguson, Anne
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Filipczuk, Mark J.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Fischer, Corinne E.
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Fischer, Benedikt
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Fischler, Ilan
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Fish, Arthur
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Fishell, Alicja
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Fitzpatrick-Hanly, Margaret
Lecturer
Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis
Flak, Edred
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Fleming, Jan
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Fleming, Russell L.
Lecturer
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Fletcher, Paul J.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Flett, Heather L.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Flint, Alastair J.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Fong, Harvey
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Fornazzari, Ximena
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Franche, Renee-Louise
Assistant Professor
Occupational Health & Safety Agency for
Healthcare in BC
Frantseva, Marina M.F.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Frayn, Douglas H.
Associate Professor
Private Practice
Freire, Marlinda
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Friedman, Jerry A.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Fung, Wai Lun Alan
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Fung, Kenneth
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Futerman, David H.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gage (McCabe), Laura
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Gagliese, Lucia
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Gaind, Karandeep Sonu
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Gallop, Ruth
Professor Emeritus
Faculty of Nursing
Gangbar, Randy
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Ganguli, Rohan
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Garfinkel, Paul E.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Geagea, Justin
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Geist, Rose G.
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Geist, Rose G.
Associate Professor
Trillium Health Centre
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
115
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Gelber, Stephen G.
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
George, Tony P.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gerber, Lionel
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Ghabbour, Nagi
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Ghaffar, Omar
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Giacobbe, Peter
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Gilbert, Barry
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gill, Jasbir
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gillies, Laurie A.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Ginsberg, Leonard S.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Glancy, Graham D.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Gnam, William
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gofine, Timothy
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Goldbloom, David S.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Goldhamer, Paul M.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Goldstein, Mara S.
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Goldstein, Benjamin I.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Golombek, Harvey
Full Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Golts, Marianna
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gorman, Daniel
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Gorman, Howard E.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Gotlib, David A.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Gotowiec, Andrew P.
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Gourlay, Douglas
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Grace, Sherry
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Grady, Cheryl
Full Professor
Baycrest
Graff-Guerrero, Ariel A.G.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gratzer, David G.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Greaves, Lorraine
Full Professor
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Greben, Daniel H.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Green, Robin
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Grek, Adrian J.
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Grewal, Seena
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Grief, Cindy
Lecturer
Baycrest
Grigoriadis, Sophie
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Grujich, Nikola
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Guimond, Marie-Claude
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Guimond, Tim
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Gupta, Mona
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Gupta, Malati
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Gupta, Renu
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hackett, Andrew
Associate Professor
Northeast Mental Health Centre
Haggarty, John (Jack)
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Health Centre (THUNDER BAY)
Hales, Sarah A.
Lecturer
University Health Network
Halman, Mark H.
Associate Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Halpern, Janice
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Hamidi, Jinous
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hamilton, Hayley
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hanson, Mark D.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Harris, Grant
Associate Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Harrison, Ken J.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Haskell, Lori
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Hastings, Tom J.
Lecturer
Halton Healthcare Services Corp
Hawa, Raed Jad
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Hawley, Lance
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Head, Don B.
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Hendershot, Christian
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Henderson, Joanna
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Herrmann, Nathan
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Hershkop, Susan
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Hershler, Abby
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Higgins, Darren S.
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Hildebrand, Anne M. E.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Hilton, Zoe
Assistant Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Hlousek, Daniela
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hodges, Brian D.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Hoffman, Brian F.
Associate Professor
North York General Hospital
Homatidis, Soula
Assistant Professor
York Catholic District School Board
Hood, Eric
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Horodezky, L. Sandy
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Horowitz, Glenda A.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hou, Feng
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Houle, Sylvain
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Hucker, Stephen J.
Full Professor
Private Practice
Hunter, Jonathan J.
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Husted, Janice
Lecturer
University of Waterloo
Hutchinson, Lois
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Care Group
Ickowicz, Abel
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Iosif, Alina R.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
117
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Irvine, Marilyn Jane
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Ismail, Zahinoor
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Israel, Aliza T.
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Izenberg, Samuel O.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Jain, Umesh R.K.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Jamal, Laila T.
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Jasper, Karin R.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Jaunkalns, Robert
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Jeavons, Michael
Lecturer
Private Practice
Jeeva, Imraan
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Jeffries, Joel
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Joannou, Jason
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Johnson, Sunny V.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Johnston, Paul
Lecturer
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences
Centre
Johnston, Anita G.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Johnston, William
Lecturer
Private Practice
Jones, Jennifer
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Jones, Brian
Assistant Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Joseph, Llewellyn W.
Associate Professor
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Kamkar Parsi, Katayoun (Katy)
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kanagaratnam, Pushpa
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kaplan, Allan S.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kaplansky-Gold, Cathy S.
Lecturer
University Health Service
Kapur, Shitij
Full Professor
King’s College, University of London
Kaspar, Violet
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Katz, Mark R.
Assistant Professor
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Katzman, Martin A.
Assistant Professor
START CLINIC
Kay, Rex L.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Keefe, Peter H.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Kemenoff, Sylvia
Lecturer
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Kennedy, James L.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kennedy, Sidney H.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Keren, Ron
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Kerr, Ann G.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Keyhan, Nicola
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Khan, Yasir
Lecturer
University Health Network
Khanlou, Nazilla
Associate Professor
York University
Khorasani, Kasra
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Kidd, Sean A.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Kim, Donna M.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kindler, Alan R.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
King, Eric J.
Lecturer
Pine River Institute
Kiraly, Leslie T.
Lecturer
East Toronto Health Centre
Kirsh, Shari G.
Assistant Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Kirsh, Bonnie
Assistant Professor
Dept. of Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy
Kish, Stephen J.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kiss, Ivan
Assistant Professor
Lakeridge Health Network - Oshawa
Klassen, Philip E.
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Kljenak, Diana
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Klukach, John
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Knight, Joanna
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kodsi, Maged
Lecturer
Private Practice
Kohl, Jack H.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Korczak, Daphne J.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Korenblum, Marshall S.
Associate Professor
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Korostil, Michele C.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kovacs, Adrienne H.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Kral, Michael
Assistant Professor
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Kreindler, David
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Krisman, Avery A.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Kroft, Frederick
Lecturer
Private Practice
Kuch, Helga E.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Kulesha, Denis
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Kurdyak, Paul A.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Kussin, Dennis J.
Associate Professor
University Health Network
La Croix, Eileen
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lackstrom, Jan J.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Lambe, Evelyn
Assistant Professor
Department of Physiology
Lanctot, Krista
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Langevin, Ronald A.
Associate Professor
Private Practice
Langley, John
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Laposa, Judith
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Law, Samuel
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Le, Dzung Anh
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Le Foll, Bernard
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lee, Victoria
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Pine River Institute
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
119
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Lefebvre, Arlette M.
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Lefebvre, Lisa G.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Leibow, Deborah F.
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lemke, Krista K.
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Lemmens, Trudo
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Law
Lena, Tanya Suvendrini
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lester, Michael
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Leszcz, Molyn
Full Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Leung, Debbie
Lecturer
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Levene, Judith E.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Levine, Deborah
Lecturer
University Health Service
Levinson, Andrea J.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Levitan, Robert D.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Levitsky, Neil
Lecturer
Private Practice
Levitt, Anthony J.
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Levy, Matthew
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lewis, Ralph
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lezon-Giacomelli, Dianne A.
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Li, Madeline
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Li, Peter Pun
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lieff, Susan J.
Full Professor
Baycrest
Likwornik, Victor
Assistant Professor
UofT Counselling and Psychological Services
Lin, Elizabeth
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Links, Paul S.
Full Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Liu, Shi-Kai
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Liu, Fang
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Llewellyn-Thomas, Hilary
Full Professor
Dartmouth Medical School
Lo, Hung-Tat (Ted)
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Lo, Christopher
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Lobo, Daniela S.S.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lodenquai, Gregory M.
Lecturer
George Hull Centre
Lofchy, Jodi S.
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Lojkasek, Miroslav
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lorberg, Gunter W.
Lecturer
Central North Correctional Centre
Lowe, Alan
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Lunsky, Yona
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lustig, Andrew J.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Macfarlane, James G.
Assistant Professor
The Toronto Sleep Institute
MacFarlane, Dianne
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
MacKay, Sherri
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
MacKenzie, Susan E.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
MacLachlan, Donna
Lecturer
Youthdale Treatment Centres
MacPhee, David
Lecturer
Sault Area Hospitals
MacPherson, Colin J.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
MacQueen, Glenda
Associate Professor
University of Calgary
Madan, Robert
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Madonik, Bonnie
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Maerov, Phillip
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Magder, David M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Maggi, Julie
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Mah, Linda
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Mah, Bill
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Maharaj, Sherry
Lecturer
University Health Network
Malat, Jan
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Mamelak, Mortimer
Associate Professor
Baycrest
Mamo, David
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Manassis, Katharina
Full Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Mandelman, Krystyna
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Mansfield, Joanna K.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Margittai, Katalin
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Margolese, Ellen
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Margulies, Alfred I.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Marks, Saul
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Marshall, Lisa
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Marshall, Michelle T.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Martin, Barry A.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Martin, Nyranne S.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Martin, Karen E.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Mason, Robin
Assistant Professor
University of Toronto
Maunder, Robert G.
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Mayberg, Helen
Full Professor
Emory University School of Medicine
McBride (Cristi), Carolina
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McCallum, Nancy
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
McCay, Elizabeth A.
Assistant Professor
Ryerson University
McCullagh, Scott
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
McCurley, Robert
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McDonald, Angus
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McFarlane, Traci
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
121
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
McIntosh, Christopher A.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McIntyre, Roger S.
Full Professor
University Health Network
McKenzie, Kwame
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McKercher, Grant
Lecturer
Northeast Mental Health Centre
McMain, Shelley
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McMaster, Jeff
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
McNeely, Heather
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
McPherson, Alexandra
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Meen, Richard
Assistant Professor
Kinark Child and Family Services
Meier, Helen M.R. (Rosemary)
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Melnyk, Tatiana
Lecturer
University Health Network
Mendlowitz, Sandra
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Menon, Mahesh
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Menzies, Peter
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Meschino, Diane
Assistant Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Meyer, Jeffrey
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Mian, Irfan
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Miller, Kimberley
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Minden, Deborah J.
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Minsky, Samuel
Lecturer
University Health Service
Mishna, Faye
Associate Professor
Factor-Inewentash Faculty of Social Work
Mizrahi, Romina R.M.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Molleken, Lynda L.
Lecturer
Mt. Pleasant Therapy Centre
Moller, Henry
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Monga, Suneeta
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Moran, Peter I.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Morris, Susan S.J.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Moss, Jay H.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Mueller, Daniel J.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Muhammad, Amin
Full Professor
Trillium Health Centre
Mulsant, Benoit H.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Munshi, Alpna
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Muntaner, Carles
Full Professor
University of Toronto
Murphy, Leo
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Myran, David
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Nacson, Deborah
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Nandlal, Joan
Assistant Professor
John Howard Society of Waterloo Wellington
Naranjo, Claudio A.
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Nathanson, Jay A.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Nobrega, Jose N.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Noh, Samuel
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Nolan, Robert
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Novak, Marta
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Novick, Jon
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Offman, Hilary
Lecturer
Private Practice
Oguntoyinbo, Funmi
Lecturer
Private Practice
O’Halpin, Helen
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Okyere, Ebenezer
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Olive, Christopher
Lecturer
Private Practice
Olmsted, Marion P.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Owens, Mary C.
Lecturer
Hospital For Sick Children
Ozersky, Sam
Lecturer
University Health Network
Packer, Samuel
Associate Professor
Archway/CAMH
Pain, Clare
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Pallandi, Derek
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Palucka, Anna M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Panjwani, Dikhush
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Papatheodorou, George
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Parikh, Sagar V.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Pasricha, Suvercha
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Paterson, Andrew
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Paupst, Millie
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Paus, Tomas
Full Professor
Baycrest
Pearce, Michelle
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Pearce, Mark A.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Peck, Jared R.
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Peltz, Louis
Assistant Professor
Credit Valley Hospital
Peltz, Louis
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Penney, Stephanie R.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Peterkin, Allan
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Petronis, Arturas
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Petruccelli, Karen
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Petter, Tanya
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Pham, Hoa C.
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Philipp, Diane A.
Assistant Professor
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Philips, Nabil A.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Pignatiello, Antonio
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Pillai Riddell, Rebecca R.
Associate Professor
York University
Pinhas, Leora
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Polivy, Janet
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology, UTM
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
123
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Pollock, Bruce
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Pollock, Nathan
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Portigal, Terryl
Lecturer
George Hull Centre
Posel, Clifford H.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Prendergast, Peter J.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Propst, Lara G.
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Qian Lee, Ivy H.P.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Quastel, Adam
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Quesnel, Susan
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rahi, Kahn S.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Rajji, Tarek
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rakoff, Vivian M.
Professor Emeritus
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ralph, Martin R.
Full Professor
Department of Psychology
Rampes, Hagen
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ramsay, Douglas John
Lecturer
Private Practice
Ramshaw, Lisa
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rapoport, Mark
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Raskin, Joel
Lecturer
Eli Lilly Canada
Ravindran, Arun V.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ravindran, Lakshmi N.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ravitz, Paula
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Rawkins, Sian
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Read, Nancy
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Rector, Neil
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Reeves, Scott
Full Professor
University Health Network
Regehr, Glenn
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Rehm, Jurgen
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rehman, Mujeeb ur
Lecturer
Private Practice
Reichman, William E.
Full Professor
Baycrest
Reichmann, Jaak T.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Reid, Sandra D.
Lecturer
University of the West Indies
Reiter, Sharon R.
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Remington, Gary J.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Reznek, Lawrie R.
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Rhodes, Anne E.
Associate Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Rice, Marnie Elizabeth
Full Professor
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Richter, Peggy Margaret
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Ridgely, Elizabeth
Lecturer
George Hull Centre
Ritvo, Paul
Assistant Professor
University of Toronto
Roberge, Johanne
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Robertson, David
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Robillard, Matthew T.
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Robinson, Gail E.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Rockman, Patricia
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Rodin, Gary M.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Roher, Luna
Lecturer
Private Practice
Rolin-Gilman, Cheryl
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Romach, Myroslava K.
Associate Professor
Private Practice
Romans, Sarah
Full Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Rootenberg, Jonathan H.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rosenbluth, Michael B.
Assistant Professor
Toronto East General Hospital
Rosenbluth, Allan
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Ross, Lori E.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rotzinger, Susan
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Rourke, Sean B.
Full Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Rueda, Sergio
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Rumm, Ellen
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Rummens, Joanna Anneke
Assistant Professor
Hospital for Sick Children
Rush, Brian
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Ruskin, Ronald
Associate Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Sadavoy, Joel
Full Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Sagman, Doron
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Sakinofsky, Isaac
Professor Emeritus
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Saltzman-Benaiah, Jennifer
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Salvendy, John T.
Full Professor
Private Practice
Samokhvalov, Andriy V.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Sandor, Paul
Full Professor
University Health Network
Sapag Munoz de la Pena, Jaime Camilo
JS
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Scalco, Andreia
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Scalco, Monica Z.
Assistant Professor
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Scapillato, Donna
Assistant Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Schabas, Patti-Anne
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Schachar, Russell J.
Full Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Schachter, Debbie C.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Schaffer, Ayal
Associate Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Scharf, Nathan
Lecturer
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Schmidt, Nancy L.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Schneider, Richard
Assistant Professor
Ontario Court of Justice
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
125
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Schofield, Sally
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Schuller, Deborah R.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Schwartz, Ken M.
Assistant Professor
Baycrest
Seeman, Philip
Professor Emeritus
Pharmacology & Psychiatry Depts., University of Toronto
Seeman, Mary V.
Professor Emeritus
University of Toronto
Segal, Zindel V.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Selby, Peter
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Selchen, Steven
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Seli-Uzelac, Antonia
Lecturer
Halton Healthcare Services Corp
Senthelal, Sashikala
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Serin, Ralph
Assistant Professor
Frontenac Institution
Seto, Michael
Associate Professor
Royal Ottawa Health Care Group
Seyone, Chanth
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Shafro, Ariel AS
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Shahid, Azmeh
Assistant Professor
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Shapiro, Solomon M.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Shapiro, Colin M.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Shaw, Brian F.
Full Professor
Private Practice
Sheinin, Lisa
Lecturer
George Hull Centre
Shen, Jianhua
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Shera, Wesley John
Full Professor
Faculty of Social Work
Shin, Karen
Lecturer
St. Michael’s Hospital
Shoichet, Roy P.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Shomair, Garry
Lecturer
Private Practice
Shorter, Edward
Full Professor
History of Medicine
Showraki, Mostafa
Lecturer
Private Practice
Shuchman, Miriam
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Shuchman, Miriam
Associate Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Shugar, Gerald
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Shulman, Kenneth I.
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Shulman, Richard
Assistant Professor
Trillium Health Centre, West Toronto Site
Silberfeld, Michel
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Silveira, Jose
Assistant Professor
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Silver, Ivan L.
Full Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Silverstein, Paul V.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Simich, Laura
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Simon, Barry
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Simpson, Alexander (Sandy)
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Sinha, Smit S.
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Siu, Maurice
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Sivasubramanian, Velan
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Skilling, Tracey
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Skinner, Wayne
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Skorzewska, Anna
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Sloan, Eileen P.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Sloane, John A.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Sloman, Leon
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Slonim, Rodney O.N.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Small, Fern E.
Lecturer
Private Practice
Smith, Gwenn
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Snaiderman, Abraham
Lecturer
University Health Network
Sockalingam, Sanjeev
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Sokolov, Stephen T.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Solomon, Leigh
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Soni, Jorge
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Spivak, Harold
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Spring, Paul
Assistant Professor
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Sproule, Beth A.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Srinivasan, Janaki
Lecturer
Private Practice
Srivastava, Rani
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Staab, Randy
Lecturer
Credit Valley Hospital
Stall, Richard J.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Staniloiu, Angelica
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Stefaniu, Rodica
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Stein, Debra G.
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Stein, Bernard A.
Associate Professor
North York General Hospital
Steiner, Meir
Full Professor
St. Joseph’s Hospital (HAMILTON)
Steingart, Allan B.
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Stejar, Dana
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Stephens, Robyn
Assistant Professor
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Stergiopoulos, Vicky
Associate Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Stewart, Pamela
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Stewart, Donna E.
University Professor
University Health Network
Stirtzinger, Ruth
Assistant Professor
George Hull Centre
Stokl, Stephen B.
Lecturer
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Stone, Karina
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Strauss, John
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Streiner, David
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Strike, Carol
Assistant Professor
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
127
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Stuckless, Noreen
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Styra, Rima
Associate Professor
University Health Network
Styrsky, Eva M.
Assistant Professor
Humber River Regional Hospital
Sunderji, Nadiya A.
Lecturer
Women’s College Hospital
Sussman, Jillian
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Sutandar, Kalam
Lecturer
University Health Network
Sutton, Peter
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Svihra, Martin W.
Lecturer
University Health Network
Swayze, Ian G.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Sy, William
Lecturer
Private Practice
Szmuilowicz, Sharon
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Taerk, Gary
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Tait, Glendon R.
Assistant Professor
Dalhousie University
Tallerico, Teresa
Assistant Professor
Department of Psychiatry
Tam, Christopher H.H.
Lecturer
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Tan, Adrienne O.
Lecturer
University Health Network
Tang, Taryn N.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Tannock, Rosemary
Full Professor
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at
the UofT
Tarnopolsky, Alex
Full Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Taube-Schiff, Marlene
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Taylor, Valerie
Associate Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Taylor, Graeme J.
Full Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Tennen, Gayla B.
Lecturer
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Teplitsky, Mark
Lecturer
Private Practice
Teshima, John
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Tolomiczenko, George
Assistant Professor
University of Southern California
Toneatto, Anthony
Associate Professor
University of Toronto
Tong, Junchao
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Trainor, John N.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Trepanier, Lisa
Assistant Professor
Lakeridge Health Network - Oshawa
Trottier, Kathryn
Lecturer
University Health Network
Tugg, Lorne
Assistant Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Turner, Tyrone S.
Lecturer
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Tuters, Kaspars
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Tyndale, Rachel F.
Full Professor
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Ulic, Christian
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Ungar, Thomas
Associate Professor
North York General Hospital
Urowitz, Sara
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Vaccarino, Franco J.
Full Professor
University of Toronto Scarborough
Vachon, Mary L.S.
Full Professor
Private Practice
Vallabhaneni, Madhusudana Rao
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Vallance, Denise
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Van Reekum, Robert
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Vasdev, Neil
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Verhoeff, Nicolaas Paul
Associate Professor
Baycrest
Vigod, Simone
Assistant Professor
Women’s College Hospital
Vincent, John
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Virey, Maselle
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Voineskos, Aristotle N.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Voineskos, George
Professor Emeritus
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Voon, Valerie
Lecturer
University Health Network
Voore, Peter M.
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Waddell, Andrea E.
Lecturer
University Health Network
Wadhwa, Uttam Jit
Lecturer
Trillium Health Centre
Waese, Adam
Lecturer
Canadian Mental Health Association
Waisman, Zohar
Assistant Professor
North York General Hospital
Walsh, Mary
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wang, Jun-Feng
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Warme, Gordon
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Warsh, Jerry J.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wasylenki, Donald A.
Full Professor
St. Michael’s Hospital
Watson, Priya N.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Waxman, Robyn
Lecturer
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Weinroth, Ian
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Weinstein, Robert
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Weir, Heather
Lecturer
Private Practice
Wekerle, Christine
Associate Professor
McMaster University
Wesson, Virginia A.
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Westlind, Paul
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Westreich, Neal
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Whitney, Diane K.
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wiebe, Carmen
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wiener, John
Lecturer
Private Practice
Wiesenfeld, Lesley
Assistant Professor
Mount Sinai Hospital
Wiesenthal, Stephanie R.
Lecturer
Toronto East General Hospital
Wilansky-Traynor, Pamela
Assistant Professor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Wilkie, Treena D.
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
129
faculty listing
Name
Rank
Site
Wilson, Alan A.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Winocur, Gordon
Full Professor
Baycrest
Wittenberg, Jean-Victor
Associate Professor
Hospital For Sick Children
Wolf, Michael Uri
Lecturer
Baycrest
Wolfe, David
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wong, Albert
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Wong, Franklin
Lecturer
North York Seniors Health Centre
Wong, Jiahui
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Woo, Vincent
Assistant Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Woodside, Blake D.
Full Professor
University Health Network
Woodside, Scott
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Yeung, Danny
Lecturer
Private Practice
Young, L. Trevor
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Young, Donald
Assistant Professor
Private Practice
Young, Beverly
Lecturer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Yuen, Sandra
Lecturer
UofT Counselling and Psychological Services
Zahlan, Usama
Lecturer
Lake of the Woods District Hospital
Zahn, Catherine
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Zalan, Robert M.
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Zarb, Therese
Lecturer
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Zare-Parsi, Mojgan
Lecturer
North York General Hospital
Zaretsky, Ari
Associate Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Zemans, Marcia
Lecturer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Zener, Shery
Lecturer
Baycrest
Zielinsky, Ariel
Lecturer
Private Practice
Zikman, Sharon
Lecturer
Counselling and Psychological Services
Zimmerman, Camilla
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
Zipursky, Robert B.
Full Professor
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
Zucker, Kenneth J.
Full Professor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Zurowski, Mateusz
Assistant Professor
University Health Network
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Adler
Nevo G
OB-CBT: A modification of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Peer
Victimized Youth
Other
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$2,000.00
01/09/2011 to
01/09/2012
Agid O
Unrestricted Educational Grant
Janssen-Ortho
Operating
Grant
$140,000.00
$46,667.00
31/08/2011 to
30/06/2012
Aizenstein Pollock BG
H
Pharmacological MRI Predictors
of Treatment Response in LateLife Depression
NIH
Operating
Grant
$2,197,918.00
$402,307.00
04/08/2011 to
30/06/2012
Albert M
Kuper A
Knowledge Production Practices
and Legitimization Strategies
Used by Social Scientists and
Humanities Scholars Working in
Faculties of Medicine
Other
Operating
Grant
$51,900.00
$21,000.00
01/04/2011 to
01/04/2012
Alem A
Pain C, Derbew
A, Verma S,
Hodges B, Prince
M, Hanlon C
Strengthening the capacity and
sustainability of mental health
research, training and proactice
in Ethiopia
British Council
Development
Partners in
Higher Education (DElPHE)
Operating
Grant
$121,640.00
$30,410.00
01/07/2011 to
31/08/2011
Ameis S
Arnold PD, Dockstader C, Mabbott D, Schachar
RJ, Mendlowitz S,
Widjaja E
The White Matter Integrity and
Neural Activation within FrontalStriatal Circuitry in Childhood
OCD
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$24,982.00
$12,500.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Anagnostou
Arnold PD, Scher- Province of Ontario Neurodeveler S, Szatmari P, opmental Disorder Network
Schachar RJ
Ontario Brain
Institute
Operating
Grant
$3,500,000.00
$1,200,000.00
01/03/2011 to
01/02/2012
Anderson
AK
Segal Z, Ravindrun A
Neural markers of depressive
relapse vulnerability and their
modification
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$504,620.00
$108,771.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Anderson
ND
Dawson D, Wagner L, Damianakis T, Binns M,
Kroger E
Baycrest Research About
Volunteering among Older adults
(BRAVO)
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$449,195.00
$93,582.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Andrade B
Effectiveness and predictors of
OMHF
outcome of cognitive-behavioural
group therapy for children
aged 8-12 with aggressive and
disruptive behaviour # PostDocBrendan Andrade
Fellowship
$102,832.00
$34,819.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Andrade B
Social cognitive predictors of
outcome of group treatment for
children aged 9-12 with disruptive behaviour
Canadian Child
Health Clinician Scientist
Program
Fellowship
/ Personal
Award
$140,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Andrade D Bassett AS,
Minassian B,
Chow EWC,
Krings T
Genetic causes of temporal lobe
epilepsy
Physicians’
Services
Incorporated
Foundation
Operating
Grant
$168,500.00
$84,250.00
01/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Arnold PD
Schachar RJ,
Crosbie J, Paterson AJ
Genome-wide association study
of childhood obsessive-compulsive traits in a general population sample
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,066,256.00
$233,078.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Arnold PD
Rosenberg DR,
Hanna GL, Kennedy JL
Brain Chemistry and Genetics of
Pediatric OCD
NIH
Operating
Grant
$571,055.00
$99,992.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
131
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Bagby RM
Capturing the DSM-5 personality
dimensional trait domains with
the MMPI-2-RFRevised PSY-5
Scales
University of
Minnesota
Contract
$45,000.00
$33,750.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bagby RM
The cognitive mediational model
of cognitive behavioural therapy
for major depressive disorder #
Fellowship-Lena Quilty
OMHF
Fellowship
$104,885.00
$34,960.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Barr CL
Ickowicz A,
Malone M
Investigation of Genetic Factors
in Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$980,605.00
$253,168.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Barr CL
Lovett M, Kerr E
Genetics of Reading Disabilities
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$985,269.00
$201,778.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
SLITRK Genes and Tourette
Syndrome.
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$23,200.00
$3,867.00
15/05/2012 to
23/06/2012
Barr CL
Barr CL
Misener VL
Differential Gene Expression as
a Contributor to Genetic Risk for
Psychiatric Disorders: Creation
of a RNA and DNA Resource from
Brain Tissue.
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$24,758.00
$8,253.00
01/07/2011 to
31/10/2011
Barr CL
Souza B, Bremner R
Altered Gene Transcription of
KIAA0319 as a Risk for Dyslexia.
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$25,000.00
$12,499.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Barwick
MA
Bennett K,
Ferguson B,
Cunningham C,
Schachter H
Knowledge Translation in mental
health & Addiction
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,500,000.00
$300,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Barwick
MA
Schachter H,
CIHR Emerging Team in KnowlBennett K, Fergu- edge Translation for Child and
son HB, Tannock Youth Mental Health
R, Cunningham
CE, Martinussen
RL, Fergusson
D, Buchanan D,
Chaban P
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,200,000.00
$285,349.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bassett
AS
Chow E, Husted J
Schizophrenia as a genomic
disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$934,995.00
$186,999.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Bassett
AS
Chow EWC,
Husted J
Copy number variation and
expression in schizophrenia
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$556,020.00
$82,176.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bassett
AS
Chow EWC,
Husted J
Testing association to schizophrenia candidate genes in
Canadian families (Discovering
genetic pathways to schizophrenia)
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$829,630.00
$165,926.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Autism spectrum and associated
neurodevelopmental disorders:
Genomes to outcomes
MRI-ORF (GL2)
Subgrant with
SickKids
Grant (subgrant from
Sick Kids)
$242,666.00
$46,183.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bassett
AS
Bassett
AS
Esplen MJ,
Joshi V
Evaluating Genetic Counselling
for Schizophrenia
MindCare New
Brunswick
Operating
Grant
$16,000.00
$8,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Bassett
AS
Silversides C
Delineating causal mutations
in a gene for major cardiac
malformations
McLaughlin
Centre
Operating
Grant
$65,000.00
$65,000.00
01/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Facilitating the transition from
child to adult services
Dempster
Foundation
Grant
$10,000.00
$6,667.00
01/04/2011 to
30/11/2011
Bassett
AS
funding
PI
CO-PI
Bassett
AS
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Canada Research Chair in
Schizophrenia Genetics and
Genomic Disorders
Canada Research Chair
Personal
Award
$1,400,000.00
$200,000.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Bayoumi
AM
Antoniou T,
Burchell AM,
Glazier RH,
Kendall C, Loutfy
MR, Millson ME,
Raboud JM, Remis RS, Rourke
SB, Worthington
CA
Retention in Care for People Liv- CIHR
ing with Human Immunodeficiecy
Virus in Ontario
Operating
Grant
$121,115.00
$24,248.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Beitchman JH
Henderson J,
McMain S, Rush
B, Wolfe D,
McCay E, Chaim
G, Cheung A,
Goldstein A,
Skilling T, Boak
A, Cunning S,
Brownlie E, Ballon B, Fjeld J
CIHR Team in Innovations in
Child and Youth Concurrent
Disorders
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,499,465.00
$174,870.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Beitchman JH
Schachter D,
Mian I, Henderson J, Mackenzie
S, Naimer M
Collaborative Care with Primary
Care Providers: Focus on Youth
with Psychiatric and Concurrent
Disorders: Extending our Reach
to Mt.Sinai Academic Family
Health Team
Ontario Ministry
of Health and
Long Term Care
Operating
Grant
$104,984.00
$52,470.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Beitchman JH
Schachter D,
Mian I, Quesnel
S, Strauss J,
Ballon B
Collaborative Care with Primary
Care Providers: Focus on Youth
with Psychiatric and Concurrent Disorders: Focus on Youth
with Psychiatric and Concurrent
Disorders: Extending our Reach
to Mt.Sinai Academic Family
Health Team
Ontario Ministry
of Health and
Long Term Care
Operating
Grant
$52,514.00
$13,129.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Beitchman JH
Kennedy JK
Genetic Factors in Childhood
Aggression
Other
Operating
Grant
$45,000.00
$20,625.00
01/07/2011 to
15/12/2011
Suicide Prevention in Canadian
Youth: Options and Evidence.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$15,000.00
01/04/2012 to
30/06/2012
Bennett KJ Cheung A,
Braunberger
PI, Dobbins
M, Kutcher S,
Links P, Lipman
E, Manassis
K, Manion
I, McKibbon
K, Mcleannan
J, Mushquash
C, Petermann
L, Rhodes A,
Schuhenmann
H, Szatmari P,
Thabane L
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
133
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Bennett
SAL
Figeys D,
Arnason JT, Baetz
K, Baenziger J,
Bickel D, Black
SE, Couture J-F,
Fai S, Fraser
P, Lanctôt KL,
Messier C, Park
D, Schlossmacher M, Slack R,
Tandon A, Woulfe
J, Yao Z
Neurodegenerative lipidomics:
A targeted systems biology approach to integrative research
training
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,789,998.00
$325,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bernstein
LJ
Nyhof-Young J,
Dissanayake D
Investigating the effectiveness
of a psychosocial intervention
for cancer-related cognitive
dysfunction
Other
Operating
Grant
$1,070.00
$1,070.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Bjornson
C
Paes B, Mitchell
I, Lanctôt KL
RSV Prophylaxis in Infants with
Down Syndrome
Abbott Canada
Contract
$20,000.00
$20,000.00
01/11/2011 to
01/11/2012
Black SE
Caldwell CB, Gao
F, Herrmann N,
Kiss AJ, Lanctot
KL, Lobough NJ,
Masellis M, McIlroy WE, Rogeeva
E, Stefanovic B,
Stuss DT, Swartz
R
In vivo brain mapping in the
dementias: a longitudinal brainbehavior study with a focus on
interactions of Alzheimers and
cerebrovascular disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,411,055.00
$282,211.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Black SE
Grady CL,
Schwindt G,
Stefanovic B
Towards functional imaging biomarkers of Alzheimer’s Disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$203,013.00
$76,983.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
BlumRajji TK, Kaplan
berger DM A, Levinson AJ,
Mulsant BH,
Ravindran A,
Levkowitz H,
Zangen H
A study of H-Coil Repetitive Tran- CIHR
scranial Magnetic Stimulation for
Treatment –Resistant Late-Life
Depression
Operating
Grant
$546,242.00
$13,722.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Blumberger DM
A Prospective Study of Cortical
Inhibition in Treatment Resistant
Late-Life Depression
NARSAD
Operating
Grant
$55,000.00
$22,500.00
15/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Blumberger DM
NCDEU New Investigator Award
American Society of Clinical
Psychopharmacology
Personal
Award
$1,200.00
$1,200.00
28/05/2012 to
28/05/2012
Boileau I
Investigating the role of the D3
Parkinson Socidopamine receptor in dyskinesia ety Canada
PET studies with [11c]-(+)-PHNO
Grant
$90,000.00
$45,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Operating
$413,919.00
$137,973.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Boileau I
Guttman M,
Investigating The D3 dopamine
CIHR
Houle S, Strafella receptor and its relevance to
A
treatment-induced complications
in Parkinson disease: Positron
Emission Tomography studies
with the D3-preferring agonist
[11C]-(+)-PHNO
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Boileau I
Investigating the role of the D3
dopamine receptor in and its
relevance to treatment-induced
complications in Parkinson
disease
Other
Personal
Award
$10,000.00
$10,000.00
01/02/2011 to
01/02/2012
Boileau I
Sensitization to dopamine
replacement therapy: PET/[11C]
(+)-PHNO investigation of D3
dopamine receptors in impulse
control disorders in Parkinson’s
disease # Fellowship-Isabelle
Boileau
OMHF
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$34,992.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Boydell
KM
Stasiulis E,
Greenberg M,
Spiegler B,
Greenberg C,
Pole J, Edelstein
K, Guger S,
Dyce B
Understanding Transition to
Meaningful Activity for Survivors
of Childhood Brain Tumors
Other
Operating
Grant
$16,000.00
$16,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Brown S
Skilling TA
Female pathways to delinquency
and implications for risk assessment
Other
Operating
Grant
$138,624.00
$37,836.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Bruce B
Snowdon A,
Barwick M,
Warda L, Pitroski
C, Cunningham
C, Bussiere G
Childhood Vehicle Safety Booster Seat Interventions
Other
Operating
Grant
$383,000.00
$191,500.00
01/04/2011 to
30/04/2012
Burchell
AN
Rourke SB, Allen
V, Bayoumi A,
Gardner S, Kaul
R, McGee F, Millson M, Remis R
Epidemiology of sexuallytransmitted co-infections among
HIV-infected persons in care in
Ontario
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$107,782.00
$45,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Cafazzo J
Ritvo P, Daskalakis ZJ, Bahari A
Medical Body Area Network
(MBAN) Platform for Ambulatory
Monitoring (AM)
Other
Operating
Grant
$315,200.00
$105,067.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Cairney J
Kurdyak P, Schaf- Prevalence and Correlates of
CIHR
fer A, Streiner D, Unmet Need and Access to Care
Vigod S, Wade T for Mental Health Problems:
Linking population-based data to
administrative records
Operating
Grant
$207,086.00
$156,254.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Cameron
R
Ferrence RG,
Gotay CC, Plotnikoff RC, Raine
K, Riley BL, Le
Foll B
CIHR Training Grant in PopulaCIHR
tion Intervention for Chronic Disease Prevention: A Pan-Canadian
Program
Operating
Grant
$1,950,000.00
$325,000.00
01/04/2011 to
01/04/2012
Cantor J
Barbaree HE,
Blanchard R,
Dickey R, Girard
TA, Klassen PE,
Mikulis DJ
Neuroanatomic features specific
to pedophilia
Operating
Grant
$939,080.00
$209,773.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CIHR
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
135
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Cappelli M Davidson S, Vloet
M, Addington J,
Kates N, Roy P,
Archie S, Kidd S,
Cheung A, Lyons
J, McKenzie K
An international focus on youth
in transition: development and
evaluation of a mental health
transition service
CIHR
Travel Conference
$24,753.00
$-
01/06/2012 to
30/06/2012
Carlisle
CE
Rhodes AE,
Bethell J
Foundation of the Canadian Psychiatric Association ScotiaBank
Award for Children and Mental
Health Grant
Foundation of
the Canadian
Psychiatric Association
Operating
Grant
$3,102.00
$3,102.00
01/05/2011 to
01/03/2012
Carlisle
CE
Rhodes AE,
Bethell J
RBC Seed Fund for Mental Health Other
Research
Operating
Grant
$24,225.00
$12,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Castel S
Moss J, Goldstein
B, Lanctot K,
Schaffer A,
Cheung A, Levitt
A
Guideline Implementation for
AHSC AFP InnoMonitoring Treatment with
vation Funding
Atypical Antipsychotics and Mood
Stabilizers
Operating
Grant
$120,956.00
$60,000.00
01/06/2011 to
30/06/2012
Castel S
Cheung A, Cho
S, Dyett S,
Goldstein B,
Lanctot K, Moss
J, Schaffer A
Implementing Treatment Monitor- Other
ing Guidelines for Atypical Antipsychotics and Mood Stabilizers
Operating
Grant
$87,721.00
$87,721.00
01/07/2011 to
01/10/2011
Chaim G
Henderson JL
Ontario youth services system
review project
Health Canada
Operating
Grant
$264,691.00
$107,429.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Strengthening Families for the
Future
Other
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$-
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chaim G
Chaim G
Bradley N
Substance abuse treatment for
youth and parents
Other
Operating
Grant
$294,000.00
$-
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chaim G
Henderson J,
Guenther S,
Lebert C
Youth and adult concurrent disorder screening in primary care
Other
Operating
Grant
$42,480.00
$14,160.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chan RKT
Hachinski VC,
Mayer C, Majumdar SR, McAlister
FA, Donner A,
Feagan BG, Wong
CJ, Harnadek M,
Nolan RP
Promoting Adherence to Regimen CIHR
of Risk Factor Modification by
Trained Non-Medical Personnel Evaluated Against Regular
Practice Study (PARTNERS)
Operating
Grant
$1,669,323.00
$1,048,244.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Chen R
Daskalakis J,
Mechanisms of cortical inhibiKennedy JL, Wong tion, facilitation and plasticity in
AHC
humans
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$920,200.00
$198,813.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Cheung A
Levitt A, Patey A,
Islam R, Dewa C
Improving Care for Adolescents
with Depression in Primary Care
OMHF
Operating
Grant
$105,000.00
$25,000.00
01/01/2011 to
01/01/2012
Cheung A
Levitt A, Dewa C
Improving quality of care for
youth with depression in primary
care
Other
Personnel
Award
$428,750.00
$85,750.00
01/07/2011 to
01/07/2012
Chiuciarello L
Meyer JH
Monoamine Oxidase-A Binding in OMHF
Treatment Resistant and Atypical
Subtypes of Major Depressive
Disorder
Fellowship/
Studentship
$48,000.00
$16,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Establishing the British Columbia 22q Network
Grant
$20,000.00
$6,667.00
01/12/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chow E
Dempster Family Foundation
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Chow TW
Houle S, Ismail
Z, Graff-Guerrero
A, Mulsant B,
Pollock BG,
Wilson AA
Relation of Beta-amyloid Deposition to Temporal Lobe-focused
Dementias
NIH
Operating
Grant
$96,996.00
$48,498.00
31/08/2011 to
01/09/2012
Chow TW
Rockwood K
When Dementia Is in the House
Canadian DeOperating
mentia KnowlGrant
edge Translation
Network
$10,150.00
$10,150.00
11/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chow TW
Anderson N
International Scientific Conf on
MCI
CIHR
Travel Conference
$10,000.00
$5,000.00
01/01/2012 to
30/06/2012
Classen
CC
Du Mont J, Fourt
A, Mason R, Pain
C, Stalker C
Improving healthcare delivery
by improving health providers’ knowledge of interpersonal
trauma.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$24,940.00
$24,940.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Cohen NJ
Pape B, Farnia F
Handle with Care in At-Risk
Communities: a program for
parents and early childhood
educators to promote young
children’s mental health
Public Health
Agency of
Canada
Contract
$2,428,971.00
$614,875.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Cohn T
Remington G,
Hahn M, Faulkner
G, Grant S,
Chandrasena
R, Barbaree H,
Duncan J
Electronic metabolic monitoring
for patients on atypical antipsychotics: a multi-site knowledge
translation and diabetes prevention project
AFP Innovation
Fund Operating
Grant
Operating
Grant
$99,472.00
$49,736.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
New Investigator Award in Clinical Research
CIHR
Personnel
Award
$300,000.00
$60,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Colton PA
Corkum
PV
Andreou P,
Barwick M,
Chambers C,
Godbout R,
Gruber R, Hall W,
McGrath P, Rusak
B, Stremler R,
Wade T, Weiss S,
Wililams M
Better Nights Better Days:
Improving Psychosocial Health
Outcomes in Children with
Behavioral Insomnia
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,998,967.00
$398,031.00
01/11/2011 to
31/10/2012
Cox J
Hamelin AM,
Anema A, Fielden
SJ, Klein MB,
Moodie EE, Paradis G, Rourke SB
Prospective investigation
CIHR
of the relationship between
food security and health and
behavioural outcomes in HIV-HCV
co-infection: clues for prevention
interventions
Operating
Grant
$159,838.00
$53,014.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
137
funding
PI
CO-PI
Coyte PC
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Andrews G,
Health Care, Technology and
Baecker RM, Bay- Place: A Strategic Training
oumi A, Boydell
Initiative
K, Cameron J,
Carter M, Clifford
T, Colantonio A,
Culyer AJ, Dunn J,
Fernie G, Gignac
M, Hoch J,
Holmes D, Jadad
A, Krahn M,
Laporte A, Levin
L, Maki B, Mihailidis A, Miller F,
Mykhalovskiy E,
O’Brien-Pallas
L, Ro
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,950,000.00
$303,455.00
01/06/2011 to
31/03/2012
Craig W
Pepler D, Absolon A Societal Approach to PreventK, Clinton J,
ing Violence and Achieving
Crooks C, Daniels Healthy Relationships.
T, Freeman
J, Hymel S,
Josephson W,
Leadbeater B,
Marini Z, Mishna
F, Moretti M, Santor D, SchonertReichl K, Smith
D, Stack D, Tutty
L, Vaillancourt T,
Volk T
Networks Centre Operating
of Excellence,
Grant
Knowledge
Mobilization
$1,600,000.00
$533,333.00
01/08/2011 to
01/08/2012
Craig W
Pepler D, Crooks
C, Dane A, Hymel
S, Marini Z,
Mishna F, Volk T
Bullying Literacy Module
Ontario Centre
Contract
of Excellence for
Child and Youth
Mental Health
$14,607.00
$14,607.00
05/03/2012 to
07/05/2012
Creed MC
Nobrega JN
Contribution of the serotonergic
system to motor and psychaitric
effects of deep brain stimulation
in an animal model of tardive
dyskinesia
CIHR
Fellowship/
Studentship
$35,000.00
$35,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Crooks CV
Wolfe D
The Fourth R: Promoting youth
well-being through healthy
relationships
Health Canada
Operating
Grant
$2,486,029.00
$710,000.00
01/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Cunningham JA
Selby P
Randomized controlled trial of
the mass distribution of Nicotine
Replacement Therapy to Canadian smokers
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,082,459.00
$218,449.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Cusimano
MD
Wolfe DA
Traumatic Brain Injury and
Violence: Reducing the risks,
improving the outcomes
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$2,000,000.00
$350,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Grant
$195,000.00
$60,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Daskalakis ZJ
Grant Title
Transcranial Magnetic StimulaCIHR
tion (TMS) to Evaluate the Role of
Clozapine Potentiation of GABA in
the Treatment of Schizophrenia.
funding
PI
CO-PI
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Daskalakis ZJ
Blumberger D,
Deep repetitive transcranial
Mulsant B, Kamagnetic stimulation for older
plan A, Levkowitz adults with depression
H, Zangen A
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$431,028.00
$100,000.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Daskalakis ZJ
Kennedy JL, Wong Transcranial Magnetic StimulaOMHF
AH, Liu F, Snead tion to Evaluate the Role of
CO
Clozapine Potentiation of GABA
in the Treatment of Schizophrenia
Operating
Grant
$141,900.00
$72,200.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Daskalakis ZJ
Lozano A, Foussias G, Remington G, Voineskos
A, Lipsman N,
Daskalakis ZJ
De Luca V
Kennedy J,
Strauss J, Tiwari
A, Wong A, Zai C
De Luca V
Grant Title
Deep Brain Stimulation for
the Management of Treatment
Resistant Negative Symptoms in
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia
Society of
Ontario
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$100,000.00
01/09/2011 to
30/08/2012
Investigating the Neurobiology
and Novel Treatments for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
CAMH Grant
Family Foundation
Operating
Grant
$1,000,000.00
$200,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Genetics and Epigenetics of
Serotonin System in Suicidal
Behaviour: CpG SNP Mapping,
Methylation and Allelic Imbalance Analysis
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$615,705.00
$123,141.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Genomic imprinting and parent
of origin effect in HPA axis genes:
Analysis in suicide and suicide
attempt
American
Foundation for
Suicide Prevention
Grant
$45,000.00
$33,750.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
de Souza
MJ
Williams NI, Olm- Increased caloric intake to
Other
sted MP, Jamal S, reverse energy deficiency in
Hawker G
exercising women with menstrual
disturbances: Impact on bone,
and menstrual cyclicity.
Operating
Grant
$999,298.00
$200,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Dennis
C-L
Fung KP, Gagnon
AJ, Grigoriadis S,
Noh S, Stewart
DE
New mothers in a new country:
Understanding postpartum
depression among recent immigrant and Canadian-born
Chinese women
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$557,208.00
$111,091.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Devins GM Hart S, Irish
J, Ringash J,
Martino R, Lebel
S, Katz M
A New Psychoeducational
Intervention to Minimize Illness
Intrusiveness in Head and Neck
Cancer
Canadian
Cancer Society
Research
Institute
Operating
Grant
$325,873.00
$110,000.00
01/04/2011 to
01/03/2012
Dewa CS
Economic evaluation of workplace anti-stigma programs
Mental Health
Commission of
Canada
Grant
$377,132.00
$123,227.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Dewa CS
An economic evaluation of the
Toronto Community Addiction
Team
St. Stephen’s
Community
House
Contract
$15,000.00
$15,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/08/2011
Dewa CS
Developing Effective Interventions for Mental Illness and
Mental Health in the Working
Population
CIHR
Personal
Award
$925,000.00
$260,000.00
31/03/2011 to
28/02/2012
OperatingGrant
$1,975.00
$1,000.00
Dimitropoulos G
Young K, Hoffman L, Woodside
B, Pinhas L
A qualitative
Other
study of the
experience of
children of parents with eating
disorders
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
139
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Dowlati Y
Meyer JH
Development of Nutritional
Supplements to Prevent Postpartum Depression
OMHF
Fellowship/
Studentship
$48,000.00
$16,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Downar J
Grigoriadis S,
Repetitive Transcranial StimulaMeschino D, Rob- tion for Postpartum Depression
inson G, Vigod
SN, Giaccobe, P
Ministry of
Health and
Long-Term Care
(MOHTLC)
Operating
Grant
$80,000.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Downar J
Flint AJ
An open-label pilot study of neuronavigated repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation of the
dorsomedial prefrontal cortex in
the treatment of major depressive disorder
Other
Operating
Grant
$15,000.00
$7,500.00
01/07/2011 to
01/12/2011
Downer J
Giacobbe P,
Grigoriadis S, Vigod S, Robinson
G, Meschino D,
Silveira J
Investigating repetitive transcra- AFP
nial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)
as a safe, non-pharmacological
treatment for postpartum depression.
Operating
Grant
$198,510.00
$99,255.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Dunn J
Hwang SW, Janus Effects of social housing on adult CIHR
M, Matheson
and child mental health: aprosFI, Moineddein
pective study in the GTA west
R, Muntaner C,
O’Campo PJ
Operating
Grant
$500,000.00
$205,317.00
01/03/2010 to
28/02/2011
Durbin J
Informational continuity between
primary care and specialist
mental health: Development of a
tool for quality measurement
MOHLTC Health Grant
Systems Performance Research
Network HSPRN
$29,561.00
$29,561.00
01/10/2011 to
31/03/2012
Esplen MJ
Wong J, Toner B,
Warner E
Body Image and Psychosocial
Functioning in Women with
Breast Cancer: Can We Fix What
We’ve Broken? A Randomized
Controlled Trial
Canadian
Breast Cancer
Foundation
Operating
Grant
$192,788.00
$108,405.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Feinstein
A
OConnor P,
Levine B
The development of a computer- Multiple Scleized battery of cognitive tests for rosis Society of
use in multiple sclerosis patients Canada
Operating
Grant
$134,929.00
$67,464.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Feinstein
A
OConnor P,
Staines R
Multiple Sclerosis, cannabis and
cognitive function: an fMRI study
Operating
Grant
$132,853.00
$65,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Fergus K
Gardner S,
McLeod D,
Stephen J, Esplen
MJ, Warner E
A multisite randomized controlled Other
trial of couplelinks.ca: the first
online intervention for young
women with breast cancer and
their male partners.
Operating
Grant
$457,084.00
$114,271.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Fischer B
Rehm J
Non-Medical Use of Prescription CIHR
Opioid Anagesics in Canada: Epidemiology, Consequences, and
Interventions
Operating
Grant
$1,049,800.00
$232,583.00
01/02/2011 to
31/01/2012
Multidisciplinary Memory Disorders Clinic
Operating
Grant
$448,000.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Fischer C
Multiple Sclerosis Society of
Canada
St Michaels
Hospital
Foundation
Heather and
Eric Donnelley
Endowment
funding
PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Fleming A
Neural correlates of maternal
responsiveness and maternal
behaviour in mothers with postpartum depression
OMHF
Operating
Grant
$94,000.00
$47,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Fleming A
Attentional and hormonal correlates of maternal behaviour in
teenage mothers
Other
Operating
Grant
$157,083.00
$39,270.00
01/04/2011 to
03/03/2012
Fletcher PJ
Adolescence impulsivity and
drugs of abuse.
NSERC
Operating
Grant
$110,000.00
$22,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Fletcher PJ
Serotonin and reward-related
behaviours: opposing roles of
5-HT2A and 5-HT2C receptors
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$602,795.00
$120,559.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Fletcher PJ
Examining the Relationship
Between Impulsivity and Drug
Addiction in Rats: Focus on Adolescence # Studentship-Christie
Burton
CIHR
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$12,500.00
01/04/2011 to
31/08/2011
Operating
Grant
$1,112,490.00
$222,498.00
01/08/2011 to
30/06/2012
Operating
Grant
$313,806.00
$126,184.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Operating
Grant
$747,490.00
$149,498.00
01/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Enhancing self-management
Health Canada
skills for persons with serious
mental illness and diabetes:
Developing a wellness-promoting
intervention for residents in community housing
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$100,000.00
23/05/2011 to
31/03/2012
Chronic disease management in
serious mental illness
CIHR
Personnel
Award
$1,400,000.00
$200,000.00
01/02/2011 to
31/01/2012
Flint AJ
CO-PI
Mulsant BH, Gia- Sustaining Remission of Psychot- NIH
cobbe P, Iaboni
ic Depression
A, Kennedy JL,
Pollock BG
Gagliese L Chan V, Rodin G,
Stevens B, Zimmermann C
Pain in older cancer patients
CIHR
with delirium: Development of an
observational measurement
Gagliese L Rodin G, Koren G, Age-related patterns in pain folChan V, Li M
lowing breast cancer surgery
Ganguli R
Jenkins T, Selby
P, Trainor J
Ganguli R
Canadian
Breast Cancer
Foundation Ontario Chapter
George TP
Daskalakis ZJ,
Wing VC
Effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on
cigarette smoking and cognitive function in smokers with
schizophrenia
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$399,261.00
$64,888.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
George TP
Tyndale RF
Transforming Care in Mental
Health and Addictions-Theme
2 (Addictions) of CFI Research
Hospital Fund (CFI-RHF)
Canada
Foundation for
Innovation
Operating
Grant
$665,700.00
$221,900.00
08/09/2011 to
07/09/2012
Effect of Varenicilline on cogniOMHF
tive function in cigarette smokers
with schizophrenia
Grant
$149,744.00
$74,849.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Effects of Varenicline on Cognitive Function in Cigarette Smokers with Schizophrenia
Operating
Grant
$149,892.00
$74,895.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
George TP
George TP
Wing V
OMHF
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
141
funding
PI
CO-PI
George TP
George TP
Tyndale R, Selby
P
George TP
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Pharmacogenetics of nicotine
addiction treatment (PNAT)
NIH - subgrant
with University
of Pennsylvania
Grant
$627,598.00
$367,933.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Pharmacogenetics of Nicotine
NIH
Addiction Treatment (PNAT) Subcontract from U of Pennsylvania (U01-DA-020830)
Operating
Grant
$1,200,000.00
$281,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Factors guiding dopamine receptor expression in MSN neurons:
implications for schizophrenia. #
PostDoc-Gabriela Novak
CIHR
Fellowship
$135,000.00
$45,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Ghaffar O
Ip R
Magnetic resonance imaging predictors of outcome in
traumatic brain injury patients
admitted to a neupsychiatry
rehabilitation unit. A pilot study.
Ontario Shores
Pilot Research
Funds
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$10,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/03/2012
Giacobbe
P
Swinson R, Kennedy SH, Lozano
AM
A Pilot Study to Examine the Use
of Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)
in the Inferior Thalamic Peduncle
(ITP) for the Management of
Symptoms in Patients with
Chronic and Severe ObsessiveCompulsive Disorder
Other
Operating
Grant
$250,000.00
$40,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Giacobbe
P
Lozano AM, Kennedy SH
Examining the Intracranial
Responses of Neurons in the Human Subgenual Cingulate Gyrus
to Faces
NARSAD
Personal
Award
$60,000.00
$15,000.00
01/01/2012 to
30/06/2012
Glazier RH Barnsely J, Gutt- Examining the impact of primary
mann A, Hogg
care reform in Ontario on access
WE, Jaakkimain- to and quality of care
en RL, Manuel
DG, Rhodes AE,
Schull M, Steele
LS, Stewart MA,
Stukel T, Thind A,
Tu K, Upshur RE,
Zwarenstein MF
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$716,724.00
$238,307.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Goldner E
Rush BR
Planning conference and scan
of primary mental healthcare
innovations.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$25,000.00
$25,000.00
01/03/2011 to
01/03/2012
Goldstein
BI
Lanctot KL,
Lesperance F,
Frasure-Smith N,
Levitt AJ, Strauss
B, Moody A
Inflammation and brain-derived Heart & Stroke
neurotrophic factor: at the heart
of cardiovascular risk among
adolescents with bipolar disorder
Operating
Grant
$103,000.00
$53,000.00
01/06/2011 to
01/05/2012
Goldstein
BI
Young LT, Kennedy J, Youngstrom E, Levitt A,
Miller G, Schaffer
A, Lanctot K
Inflammatory markers, brain-de- CIHR
rived neurotrophic factor and the
longitudinal course of adolescent
bipolar disorder
Operating
Grant
$569,980.00
$92,000.00
02/04/2012 to
30/06/2012
Grace SL
Melvin K, Arthur
H, Pilote L, Brister S, Stewart DE
An RCT of women’s adherence to
women-only, home-based and
traditional cardiac rehabilitation
Operating
Grant
$369,204.00
$100,000.00
01/07/2011 to
01/07/2012
Heart & Stroke
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Grady CL
Alain C
The effect of aging on processing of spatial and nonspatial
information in the auditory and
visual systems
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$571,688.00
$75,751.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Grady CL
Craik FIM, Graham SJ, Mayberg
HS, McIntosh AR
FMRI studies of age related differences in brain networks and
brain variability
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$521,200.00
$103,181.00
01/03/2011 to
31/03/2012
GraffMamo D, Agid
Guerrero A O, Menon M,
Remington G,
Houle S
Imaging the limbic dopamine D3
receptor in schizophrenia
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$104,575.00
$39,481.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
GraffGuerrero A
Optimal dosing of antipsychotic
drugs in late life
NIH-NIMH
Grant
$796,401.00
$148,293.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
A2ALL Consortium - University of
Toronto
NIH
Operating
Grant
$1,437,600.00
$237,600.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Grant D
Abbey S, Clarke
H, Holtzman S,
Katz J, Levy G
Green E
Sawka C, Lalonde Engaging Survivors to Improve
B, Jadad A, Wiljer Patient Experiences throughout
D, Urowitz S,
the Cancer Journey
O’Grady L, Friedman A, Jones J,
Leonard K
Other
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$60,000.00
01/10/2011 to
31/08/2012
Green REA
Understanding mechanisms of
sub-acute neurodegeneration in
moderate to severe traumatic
brain injury.
Other
Operating
Grant
$120,000.00
$24,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Green REA Bayley M,
Fernie G, Hebert
D, Monette G,
Richards C,
Wodchis W
Quality of life, cognitive and
economic impact of intensification of inpatient neurorehabilitation for TBI
Other
Operating
Grant
$304,472.00
$94,025.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Grief C
Conn DK, Madan
RI
Promoting Interprofessional
Education and Care (IPE/C): Development of an IPE/C Toolkit for
Health Professionals at Baycrest
Academic
Health Sciences
Centres Alternate Funding
Program (AHSC
AFP) Innovation
Fund of Ontario
Operating
Grant
$26,765.00
$26,765.00
04/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Grigoriadis S
Vigod SN, Kurdyak P, Rhodes
A, Cheung A,
Levitt A
Suicide in the perinatal period:
Further steps toward prevention
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$93,193.00
$93,193.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Grigoriadis S
Kennedy SH
Clinical guidelines for the
treatment of Major Depressive
Disorder in perimenopausal and
menopausal women
CR Younger
Foundation
Operating
Grant
$35,000.00
$35,000.00
01/03/2012 to
30/06/2012
Personal
Award
$300,000.00
$60,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Grigoriadis S
New Investigator Award in the
CIHR
Area of Women’s Health Research
in Partnership with Ontario
Women’s Health Council.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
143
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Grimshaw
J
Straus S, Haynes Knowledge Translation Canada: A CIHR
R, Legare F,
National Research Network
O’Connor A, Sales
A, Laupacis A,
Lavis J, Godin
G, Majumdar
S, Johnson D,
Brehaut J, Little
J, Stacey D, Stiell
I, Taljaard M, Tinmouth A, Tugwell
P, Vaillancourt C,
Wells P, Moher D,
Bhattacharyya O,
Zwarenstein M,
Reeves S,
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Operating
Grant
$1,999,450.00
$322,602.00
01/07/2011 to
01/06/2012
Guimond T Escobar M
Developing Bayesian Semi-Parametric Models to Evaluate the
Effectiveness of HIV Prevention
Interventions
Ontario HIV
Treatment
Network
Fellowship/
Studentship
$275,000.00
$55,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Guruge S
Khanlou N
Ontario Multicultural Health Applied Research Network
Ministry of
Health and
Long-Term Care
(Applied Health
Research Network Initiative
Contract
$125,000.00
$125,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/04/2012
Guttmann
A
Barwick M,
Bromnell M,
Cohen E, Hanvey
L, Booth M,
Manion I, Moore
C, Reisman J,
The Medical Home of Children
and Youth in Canada
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$94,402.00
$30,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/10/2011
Hamani C
Fletcher PJ,
Nobrega JN
Antidepressant effects of deep
CIHR
brain stimulation and the serotonergic system
Operating
Grant
$580,586.00
$120,529.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Hamani C
Deep brain stimulation in an
animal model of depression
NARSAD
Grant
$60,000.00
$15,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/12/2011
Hamilton
H
Resilience, mental health, and
youth in conflict with the law
Dept. of Justice
Canada
Grant
$9,978.00
$9,978.00
06/12/2011 to
30/06/2012
Treating Cognitive Dysfunction in
Clinically Stable Bipolar Adults
with Quetiapine XR
Other
Contract
$1,600,000.00
$800,000.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
OperatingGrant
$25,000.00
$12,500.00
$379,930.00
$24,120.00
01/02/2012 to
31/03/2012
Harvey P
McIntyre RS
Heinmaa
M
Pinhas L,
Katzman DK,
Boachie A, Jasper
K, Henderson K,
Buccholz A, Spettigue W, Norris
M, Barrowman N,
Lafrance A
Hendershot C
Menon M, Boileau I
A CentralHospital for
ized Clinical
Sick Children
Outcome
Measurement of
Eating Disorders
in Youth Across
Ontario: A MultiSite Partnership
Pilot Study
Identfying brain-based measures CIHR
of alcohol sensitivity in early
adulthood
Grant
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Hendershot C
Le Foll B, Selby P, Prazosin as a Novel Treatment for Ontario Lung
George T, Wing V Smoking Cessation
Association
Operating
Grant
$42,500.00
$42,500.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Hendershot C
Sensitivity to intravenous
ethanol: Neuroimaging and
behavioural phenotypes
NIH (subgrant
from University
of New Mexico)
Grant
$23,794.00
$23,794.00
01/09/2011 to
31/03/2012
Hendershot C
Claus E, Hutchsion K
Sensitivity to Intravenous
Alcohol: Neuroimaging and
Behavioral Phenotypes
NIH
Operating
Grant
$434,254.00
$237,806.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Hendershot C
Stoner S
Adaptive Goal-Directed Adherence Tracking for Naltrexone Subcontract
NIH
Contract
$348,775.00
$209,054.00
30/09/2011 to
29/09/2012
Henderson J
Chaim G, Guenther S, Rush B,
Beitchman J
Drug Treatment Funding Program Health Canada
(DTFP), Enhancing youthfocused, evidence-informed
treatment practices through
cross-sectoral collaboration
Operating
Grant
$663,607.00
$227,522.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Topography and genetics of
smoking and nicotine dependence in American Indians.
NCI/P50
Contract
$919,940.00
$40,286.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Henderson J
Henderson J
Chaim G
Integration in practice: Multiagency establishment of a common screening process and tool
for youth concurrent disorders
Other
Operating
Grant
$3,500.00
$-
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Henderson J
Chaim G, Guenther S, Rush B,
Beitchman J
Enhancing youth-focused,
evidence-informed treatment
practices through cross-sectoral
collaboration
Health Canada
Contract
$663,608.00
$166,002.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Herrmann
N
Lanctot K
A multinational, multicentre,
Sanofi Aventis
randomized double-blind,
Canada Inc
placebo-controlled study of the
effects on cognitive performance,
safety and tolerability of SAR
110894D at the doses of 0.5
mg, 2 mg, and 5 mg/day for 24
weeks in patients with mild to
moderate A
Contract
$86,587.00
$54,687.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Hilton NZ
Actuarial risk, recidivism, and
treatment participation among
incarcerated female IPV perpetrators
Public Safety
Canada
Contract
$20,000.00
$20,000.00
01/01/2012 to
31/03/2012
Hilton NZ
Development and evaluation of
an e-learning program for the
Ontario Domestic Assault Risk
Assessment (ODARA)
Other
Operating
Grant
$30,000.00
$30,000.00
01/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Hodges B
Associated Medical Services
(AMS) Phoenix Project: A Call to
Caring, 5 year project with the
goal of restoring the balance of
compassionate health care with
technical competence
Associated
Medical Services
Operating
Grant
$25,000,000.00
$500,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
145
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Hogg RS
Klein M, Machouf
N, Rourke
SB, Tsoukas
C, Aykroyd G,
Bayoumi A,
Gough K, Smieja
M, Rachlis A,
Cairney J, Millson
P, Calzavara L,
Salit I, Raboud
J, Walmsley,
Loutfy M, Read
S, Wobeser W,
Cooper C, Kilby
D, Balfour L
CIHR team in HIV Treatment
Outcomes: the Canadian
Observational Cohort (CANOC)
Collaboration
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$2,362,250.00
$472,450.00
01/07/2011 to
01/01/2012
New radioactive probes to image
the living human brain
MRI-ERA
Grant
$140,000.00
$28,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Houle S
Howell D
Bezjak A, Devins
G, Gagliese L,
Leighl N, Rodin
G, Zimmerman C
Influence of beliefs about symptoms on symptom intensity, distress and patient’s participation
in self-management behaviours
in lung cancer
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$205,912.00
$84,190.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Howell D
Jones JM, Bottorff J, Elser C,
Krzyzanowska
C, Fleshner N,
McGowan P
Integration of a Disease SelfManagement Approach in the
Cancer System to Optimize
Health and Living with Cancer: A
Road Map for Implementation
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$228,250.00
$114,125.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Howell D
Kiu G, Brundage On-PROST: Ontario Patient
CCO
M, Hope A, Rodin Reported Outcomes of Symptoms
G, Barbera L,
and Toxicity
Bradbury P, Hung
R, Kim R, Leighl
, Li M, Mittmann
N, Waldron J,
Wong R, Zimmermann C
Operating
Grant
$1,182,500.00
$236,500.00
01/07/2011 to
02/07/2012
Hunter JJ
Cohen L
Chemotherapy and mindfulness
relaxation, a randomized trial.
NCIC
Operating
Grant
$653,800.00
$65,380.00
29/04/2011 to
01/06/2012
Iaboni A
Flint AJ, Lam R,
Banez C
The effect of depression on
improvement in fear of falling
and gait in a falls prevention
program
Other
Operating
Grant
$12,804.00
$6,402.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Im-Bolter
N
Cohen NJ
The Relationship Between Language and Literacy Examining
Models of Development
Other
Operating
Grant
$113,164.00
$38,288.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Ip R
Ghaffar O
Outcome measures on a neuropsychiatric inpatient unit
Ontario Shores
Pilot Research
Fund
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$10,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/03/2012
Jones JM
Amir E, Bedard P,
Catton P, Blackburn D, Grunfeld
E, Guimond T,
Sisler J, Steven J,
Stricker C
Pilot Study of a Brief TelephoneBased Intervention (adhere) to
Improve Adherence to Adjuvant
Hormone Therapy in Women with
Early Stage Breast Cancer
Canadian
Breast Cancer
Foundation
Operating
Grant
$144,764.00
$72,382.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Jones JM
Howell D, Earle
C, Harrison M,
Warde P, Urowitz
S, Ferguson S,
Wiljer D, Friedman A, Sharpe
M, Fitzgerald B,
Gospodarowitz
M, Buchman S,
Gagliardi A
Transition to Survivorship: Translating knowledge into action
for testicular and endometrial
cancer populations
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$256,582.00
$81,775.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kaplan AS
Genetic determinants of low body CIHR
weight in anorexia nervosa
Grant (Fellowship)
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kaplan AS
Genetic determinants of low body AFP Innovation
weight in anorexia nervosa
Fund Operating
Grant
Grant
$52,514.00
$52,514.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kaplan AS Attia E, Marcus
M, Guardia A
Olanzapine Versus Placebo
in Outpatients with Anorexia
Nervosa
Operating
Grant
$662,488.00
$132,400.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Kaplan AS Collier DG, Bulik
CM, Genetic
Consortium for
Anorexia Nervosa
A Genome Wide Association Study Other
of Anorexia Nervosa
Operating
Grant
$350,000.00
$60,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2012
Kaplan AS
A pilot study to determine the
CAMH Foundasafety and efficacy of H-coil tran- tion
scranial magnetic stimulation in
anorezia nervosa
Grant
$5,000.00
$2,500.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Kaplan AS
Graduate Student Award to
Zeynep Yilmaz
CIHR
Graduate
Scholarship
$30,000.00
$5,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
NIH
Kaprio J
Tyndale RF
Genetic and environmental
predictors of tobacco, drug and
alcohol addiction in adolescence
and young adulthood – a life
course twin and population
approach.
CIHR
Contract
$992,387.00
$200,000.00
01/07/2012 to
30/06/2012
Karabanow J
Kidd SA, Hughes
J
Exiting Street Life: Exploring
Trajectories out of Homelessness
SSHRC
Operating
Grant
$249,618.00
$78,118.00
15/03/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kelly A
Carter JC, Olmsted MP
Compassion Focused Self-Help
for Binge Eating Disorder: A
Preliminary Study
Department
of Psychiatry
Research
Competition,
Toronto General
Hospital, University Health
Network
Operating
Grant
$14,996.00
$14,996.00
01/10/2011 to
01/10/2012
Kelly A
Carter JC, Olmsted MP
The role of shame and self-com- Allied Health
passion in binge eating problems Research Fund,
Toronto General
Hospital, University Health
Network
Operating
Grant
$2,500.00
$2,500.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Kelly A
Carter JC, Olmsted MP
A Pilot Study of Compassionate
Mind Training for Binge Eating
Disorder (BED)
Operating
Grant
$2,500.00
$2,500.00
01/02/2011 to
01/02/2012
Other
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
147
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Kennedy
JL
De Luca V, Tiwari
A, Zai C, Mueller
D, Voineskos A,
Remington G,
Wong A
Strategies for gene discovery in
schizophrenia: subphenotypes,
deep sequencing, and interactions
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$791,150.00
$78,977.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Kennedy
JL
CAMH Pharmacogenetics
Program
MEDI
Grant
$6,500,000.00
$500,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kennedy
JL
CAMH Pharmacogenetics
Program
Min. Econ. Dev.
& Innov.
Operating
Grant
$17,000,000.00
$2,780,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Kennedy
JL
2/2A genome-wide association
study to detect genetic variation
for schizophrenia
NIH (sub grant
with University of North
Carolina, PI is
Patrick F Sullivan)
Grant
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kennedy
JL
Anti-psychotic induced metabolic NARSAD
syndrome: Gene-gene interactions in leptin-melanocortin
pathway # PostDoc-Arun Tiwari
Fellowship
(Young Investigator)
$60,000.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kennedy
JL
GABA system genes and suicidal
behaviour in psychiatric disorders # PostDoc-Clement Zai
American
Foundation for
Suicide Prevention
Fellowship
$100,000.00
$49,999.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kennedy
JL
Study of the DRD4 tandem repeat CIHR (subgrant
polymorphism in behavioural
with U of T PI
phenotypes: Common variant
France Gagnon)
across multiple diseases? #
PostDoc-Vanessa FG de Oliveira
Fellowship
$45,000.00
$31,491.00
30/09/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kennedy
SH
CANMAT (Canadian Network for
Mood and Anxiety Treatments)
Biomarker Network
Operating
Grant
$9,250.00
$9,250.00
01/06/2011 to
30/05/2012
Kennedy
SH
A Multicentre Randomized Double Bristol Myers
Blind Active Controlled Study of
Squibb
the Efficacy and Safety of Flexibly
Dosed BMS 820836 in Patients
with Treatment Resistant Major
Depressive Disorder
Contract
$146,839.00
$146,839.00
30/07/2011 to
01/08/2012
CIHR
Kennedy
SH
Giacobbe P,
Lozano AM
Subcallosal Cingulate Gyrus
Deep Brain Stimulation for Treatment Resistant Depression: A
Field Evaluation
Saint-Jude
Medical Inc.
Contract
$959,000.00
$479,500.00
01/06/2011 to
01/06/2012
Kennedy
SH
Giacobbe P,
Styra R
A Pilot Placebo Controlled,
Double-blind, Randomized
Parallel Group Study to Evaluate
the Efficacy of Treatment with
CLR3001 in Depression.
Clera
Contract
$103,000.00
$51,500.00
01/03/2011 to
28/02/2012
Kennedy
SH
Lam RW, MacQueen G, Soares
C, Milev R
CANMAT Biomarker Network:
Neuroimaging, Molecular and
Clinical Markers for Diagnosis
and Treatment Prediction in
Major Depressive Disorder and
Bipolar Disorder
Lundbeck
Operating
Grant
$2,700,000.00
$540,000.00
31/03/2011 to
30/03/2012
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Kennedy
SH
Lozano AM, Giacobbe P, Styra R
Subcallosal Cingulate Gyrus
Deep BrainStimulation for Treatment Resistant Depression: A
Double blind Sham Controlled
Trial.
Saint-Jude
Medical Inc.
Contract
$959,000.00
$320,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Khenti A
Vidal C, McKenzie K
Culturally adapted CBT for
Spanish, Francophone and
Anglophone Caribbeans - grant
extension
Other
Operating
Grant
$538,000.00
$120,000.00
01/07/2010 to
01/07/2011
Kidd SA
CIHR Centre for Research on
Gender and Social disparities in
mental health and addictions
CIHR
Seed Grant
$15,000.00
(subgant from
Simon Fraser
University
$15,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Kidd SA
Youth Trajectories Project
SSHRC
Grant (co-PI)
$90,200.00
$32,900.00
01/09/2011 to
15/03/2012
Kidd SA
George T, McKen- Examining the Effectiveness of
zie K, Ganguli R, Cognitive Remediation in a SupKaur J, Khamneh ported Education Setting
B
Schizohprenia
Society of
Ontario
Operating
Grant
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Kidd SA
McKenzie K, Gan- Cognitive enhancement in
guli R, George T, schizophrenia, an RCT
Kaur J
schizophrenia
society of
ontario
Operating
Grant
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
01/10/2011 to
01/07/2012
Kidd SA
McKenzie K
Other
Operating
Grant
$55,000.00
$40,000.00
01/07/2011 to
01/09/2011
Kish S
Guttman M,
PET Imaging Study of Brain
Hanson G, Houle VMAT2 in Human MethamphetS, Kennedy J,
amine Users
Lerch J, Saint-Cyr
J, Meyer JH,
Warsh J, Wilkens
D, Wilson AA
NIH
Operating
Grant
$904,452.00
$203,283.00
01/02/2011 to
31/01/2012
Kish S
Boileau I
PET imaging of brain VMAT2 in
NIH
human methamphetamine users.
Personal
Award
$904,452.00
$301,484.00
01/03/2011 to
31/01/2012
Kolla N
Meyer JH
Monoamine oxidase A in individuals with major depressive
disorder and comorbid borderline
personality disorder
American
Psychiatric Association
Operating
Grant
$50,000.00
$16,667.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
KornerBitensk N
Rapoport M,
Vrkljan B,
Gelinas I
Are OT nationally fulfilling their
role of problem identification/
screening/assessing/referring
drivers with potential cognitive
impairment process.
Edith Strauss
Rehabilitation Research
Projects
Operating
Grant
$11,750.00
$6,000.00
01/02/2012 to
30/06/2012
Koszycki D Kennedy JL,
Bradwejn J,
Flament MF, Gow
RM, Merali Z,
Schneider BH,
Taljaard M
Children at Risk for Panic
Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$642,015.00
$130,921.00
01/04/2010 to
31/03/2011
Kovacs AH Burchill L, Harrison J, Oechslin
E, Silversides C,
Cullen-Dean G
The development and evaluation
of an internet site to enhance
the transfer and transition from
pediatric to adult cardiology care
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$17,404.00
$6,768.00
01/06/2011 to
31/01/2012
Addressing mental health
disparities among marginalized
groups:
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
149
funding
PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Kovacs AH Silversides C,
Oechslin E,
Granton J
A Prospective observation study
of the impact of first-line bosentan treatment on the quality of
life of adults with pulmonary
arterial hypertension secondary
to congenital heart disease
Actelion Pharmaceuticals
Canada
Operating
Grant
$91,066.00
$22,767.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Kovacs AH
An examination of interests
and preferences for psychological treatment in adults with
congenital heart disease: a
qualitative approach
Other
Operating
Grant
$9,123.00
$4,500.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Sustaining a knowledge transfer
and exchange community of
practice: linking science and
practice in the real world
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$19,398.00
$19,398.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Kristensen Manassis K
H
Anxiety Disorders in Children
Other
Aged 7-12 Years: Association
with Neurodevelopmental Delays/
Disorders and Temperament/
Personality
Operating
Grant
$5,000,000.00
$400,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Kuper A
Albert M, Hodges
B
The origins and development of
medical education research: A
sociohistorical study
Other
Operating
Grant
$111,138.00
$38,000.00
01/07/2011 to
01/11/2011
Lam RW
Levitt A, Enns
M, Moorehouse
R, Cheung A,
Beaulieu S, Kiss
AJ, Levitan RD,
Michalak E,
Parikh SV
Light and Ion Treatment to
Enhance Medication Efficacy in
Depression (LITE+MED): A Randomized Controlled Trial of Light
and Fluoxetine in Nonseasonal
Major Depression
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$874,760.00
$257,320.00
Kramer
DM
CO-PI
Bullock H, Barwick M
Lanctôt KL Herrmann
N, Black SE,
Gladstone DJ,
Snaiderman A,
Gao F, Aviv R,
Albert PR, Kiss A
The role of cytokine-serotonin
Heart & Stroke
interactions in post-stroke depression and cognitive symptoms
Operating
Grant
$286,197.00
$71,549.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N,
Black SE, Williams E, Eryavec
GM
A discontinuation study of
cholinesterase inhibitors for the
treatment of Alzheimers disease
in a long-term care setting
Alzheimer Society of Canada
Operating
Grant
$146,183.00
$73,091.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N,
Oh PI, Mielke M,
Haughey N, Kiss
A, Shammi P
The Heart-Mind Connection:
Evaluating the Association
between Ceramides and Cognitive Decline in Coronary Artery
Disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$394,842.00
$51,119.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann NH,
The Neurotrophic Effects of
Black SE, Gao
Lithium Carbonate Following
FQ, MacIntosh
Stroke: A Feasibility Study
B, Stefanovic B,
Swartz R, Hopyan
J, Albert P, Kiss A
Heart & Stroke
Operating
Grant
$198,546.00
$66,182.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N, Oh
PI, Ma D, Kiss A
OMHF
Operating
Grant
$146,402.00
$73,372.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CAROTID: CAD Randomized
Omega-3 Trial In Depression
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
ADMET: Apathy in Alzheimer’s
disease methylphenidate trial.
NIH
Operating
Grant
$166,000.00
$13,833.00
01/07/2011 to
30/08/2011
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N, Li A, Resource utilization associAbbott Canada
Gilbert J
ated with administration of i.m.
versus oral testosterone. A crossCanada survey
Contract
$15,145.00
$15,145.00
01/01/2012 to
01/04/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N
A pilot randomized controlled
trial of cholinesterase inhibitor
discontinuation in a long-term
care facility
Coleman Fund
Operating
Grant
$114,500.00
$4,580.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Lanctôt KL Herrmann N,
Eizenman M,
Grupp L
Measuring visual attention
in apathetic and depressed
Alzheimer’s disease patients:
evidence for a diagnostic tool
Coleman Fund
Personal
Award
$66,667.00
$61,539.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Law M
Leslie K, Ballon
B, Yueng E
Students and Faculty as Partners ITIF Fund
in Innovation: The e-Faculty
Development Project
Operating
Grant
$30,000.00
$15,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Law S
Andermann L
Efficacy of Family Psycho-education in Chinese with Severe and
Persistent Mental Illness
University of Toronto Education
Development
Fund
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$1,250.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Le A
Stress-Induced Relapse to Alcohol in a Rat Model
NIH-NIAAA
Operating
Grant
$711,650.00
$129,908.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Le Foll B
Implementing a laboratory to
develop new medications for
drug dependence
CFI
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$50,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Le Foll B
Role of ethanolamines in nicotine Heart & Stroke
seeking
Operating
Grant
$140,000.00
$70,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Le Foll B
Evaluating the Effects of Insular
Cortex Inactivation in Preclinical
Models of Gambling
Operating
Grant
$42,000.00
$42,000.00
01/03/2011 to
01/03/2012
Lanctôt KL Mintzer JE,
Rosenberg PB,
Sherer RW, Herrmann N, Black
SE
OPGRC
Le Foll B
Mann R, Rehm J,
Selby P, George
T, Redelmeier D,
Samokhvalov A,
Thomas R
A multisite pilot study to disAHSC AFP Inseminate and evaluate pharma- novation Fund
cotherapy for alcohol dependence
in convicted drinking drivers
Operating
Grant
$112,000.00
$52,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Le Foll B
Selby P, Ernest D
Psychopharmacology of Addictions for Primary Care Physicians
and Practitioners
Development
and Dissemination Fund
Operating
Grant
$140,000.00
$46,000.00
01/10/2011 to
01/10/2012
Le Foll B
Insual inactivation: A novel
therapeutic strategy for tobacco
smoking
NARSAD
Grant
$100,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/08/2011
Le Foll B
Sativex associated with
behavioural-relapse prevention
strategy as a treatment for cannabis dependence
NIH
Operating
Grant
$295,916.00
$147,455.00
30/09/2011 to
30/06/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
151
funding
PI
CO-PI
Le Foll B
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Smoking in
Schizophrenia:Targeting Insula
to Reduce Smoking in Schizophrenia
NARSAD
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$50,000.00
01/10/2010 to
01/10/2011
Pfizer
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$62,173.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Grant
$50,000.00
$16,667.00
01/07/2011 to
31/07/2011
Le Foll B
Selby P,
Does the insula control smokingZawertailo L,
induced dopamine release? A
Zangen A, Wilson TMS/[11C]PHNO Study
A, Strafella A,
Brody A, Boileau
I, Daskalaskis J,
Busto U
Le Foll B
Zawertailo L,
Selby P
Investigating the effects of Var- Ontario Lung
enicline on D2/3 receptor binding Association/
in brain of tobacco-smokers: a
Pfizer
PET/[11C](+)PHNO study
Le Foll B
An Integrated Approach to Develop New Treatment for Tobacco
Dependence
Ontario Ministry Personal
of Research and Award
Innovation
$90,000.00
$18,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Le Foll B
Role of disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) gene in nicotine
dependence: an integrated approach # PostDoc-Yijin Yan
CIHR
Fellowship
$135,000.00
$45,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
An Analysis of Public and Private
Discourses of Education Migration in Canadian Schools: A Case
Study of South Korean Families
SSHRC
Operating
Grant
$96,583.00
$21,085.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Lee EJ
Kwak MJ, Kim A,
Noh S, Park WS,
Yoon SH
Lerman C
Tyndale R, Bald- Pharmacogenetics of nicotine
win D, Benowitz addiction treatment
N, Bergen A, Cinciripini P, Conti
D, George T
NIH
Operating
Grant
$12,264,601.00
$158,600.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Leung
WYY
Rodin G
CIHR
Fellowship/
Studentship
$80,000.00
$35,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Levine BT
Alain C, Black
Diffuse brain damage effects on
SE, Feinstein A,
distributed systems: multimodal
Graham S, Gryfe brain imaging and rehabilitation
P, McIntosh AR,
O’Connor P, Stuss
DT, Turner G,
Ween J
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$853,770.00
$170,754.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$252,606.00
$99,102.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CIHR
Operating
$763,126.00
$152,625.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Levinson A Daskalakis ZJ,
Ravindrun A,
Kennedy JL,
Blumberger D,
Giacobbe P
Levitan
RD
Posttraumatic growth and
adjustment in the spouses of
advanced cancer patients
Cortical Inhibition in the Pathophysiology and Treatment of
Major Depressive Disorder
Meaney M, Davis An Early Developmental Model of
C, Dube L, Gruber Overeating, Obesity and ExecuR, Hamilton J,
tive Dysfunction
Kennedy JL, Matthews S, Soares
C, Steiner M
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Levitan
RD
Meaney M, Kennedy JL, Davis C,
Soares C Steiner
M, Matthews S,
Loucks E
A Longitudinal Study of Food
Reward and Obesity in Young
Children: The Role of GeneEnvironment Interaction
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$780,390.00
$156,078.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Lewis M
Manassis K
The Electrophysiology of Threat
Perception in Anxious Children in
Relation to
Other
Operating
Grant
$1,478,860.00
$25,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/12/2011
Li ATW
Fung KP, Wong
JPH
Community Champion HIV/AIDS
Advocates Mobilization Project:
A community-based intervention
study (CHAMPS)
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$375,000.00
$125,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Li M
Rodin G
Distress Assessment and Response Tool (DART)
Other
Operating
Grant
$125,000.00
$125,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Establishing a common understancing of “mental Health” vis
a vis disability
Office for Disability Issues
Grant
$22,100.00
$22,100.00
22/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Gender Role
Conflict in
Chinese and
Chinese-Canadian Women
with Suicidal
Ideation and
Behaviour
CIHR
OperatingGrant
$84,096.00
$72,639.00
Lin E
Links PS
Liu P, Law S,
Shera W, Tsang
AKT
Links PS
Bender A,
Farvolden P,
Gnam W, Lanius
R, O’Grady J,
Strike C, Taback
N, Bergmans Y,
Murphy K
Prevention and Treatment of
Acute Psychological Truma: A
Case Studey in Public Transport
Other
Operating
Grant
$446,070.00
$89,214.00
01/07/2011 to
01/12/2011
Liu F-F
Gong Y
The role of CUL4B in the regulation of dopamine transporter
function
CIHR
Grant
$225,000.00
$18,750.00
01/01/2012 to
31/03/2012
Liu F-F
Li M, Catton P,
Fyles A, Gospodarowicz M, Minden
M, Sutherland R,
Xu W
The relationship between local
breast radiation and hematopoietic stem cell trafficking and
fatigue
CBCF
Operating
Grant
$449,577.00
$149,859.00
02/01/2012 to
30/06/2012
Liu F-F
Uncoupling the D1-D2 receptor:
in search for the novel therapeutic target for antipsychotics
MRI-ERA
Grant
$128,262.00
$11,185.00
01/04/2011 to
30/09/2011
Lobo D
Identfying problem gamblers
in gambling venues in Ontario,
Canada
OPGRC
Grant
$10,000.00
$2,000.00
01/12/2011 to
28/02/2012
Lobo D
Investigating Emotional Alterations in Pathological Gamblers:
does depression play a role?
OPGRC
Operating
Grant
$42,000.00
$21,000.00
10/10/2011 to
30/05/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
153
funding
PI
CO-PI
Lobo D
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Operation Pathways: Mapping
the biopsychosocial routs to
problem gambling
OPGRC
Grant
$25,000.00
$4,000.00
01/12/2011 to
28/02/2012
Loh A
Roberts W, Anag- Autism Treatment Network
nostou E, Marcon
M, Weiss S, Brian
J, Feigenbaum
A, Schulze A,
Logan W, Chitiyat
D, Weksberg R,
Green P, Weiss
J, Mitchell W,
Berall G, Bradley
E, Freeman N,
Stinson J, Ornstein M, Atkinson
S, Goldfarb C,
Flanagan J
Autism Speaks
Operating
Grant
$420,000.00
$140,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Lotrich FE
Pollock BG
Vulnerability to depression: The
role of delta sleep in patients
receiving interferon-alpha
NIH
Operating
Grant
$315,596.00
$78,899.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Loutfy MR
Anema A, Angel
JB, Baril JG,
Brophy JC, Brotto
LA, Gahagan
JC, Hankins CA,
Kaushic C, Klein
MB, Leonary
LE, Lima VD,
Ilord-Smith EM,
Miller C, Money
DM, Ogilvie GS,
Palmer A, Pick
N, Raboud JM,
Rachlis AR, Roth
E, Rouleau D,
Rourke SB, et al
Canadian HIV women and reproductive cohort study, a Canadian
observational cohort (CANOC)
affiliated study
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,119,492.00
$161,504.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Managing psychiatric crises
in individuals with intellectual
disabilities
CIHR
Grant (New
investigator)
$275,000.00
$56,048.00
01/03/2011 to
29/02/2012
Lunsky Y
Lunsky Y
Balogh RS,
Isaacs BJ, Lin E,
Ouellette-Kuntz
H, Sullivan WF,
Barnsley J, Barry
K, Jaakkimainen
RL, Neitzert MC,
O’Shea MA
Indicators of Primary Care Provided to Persons With Developmental Disabilities in Ontario
CIHR - PHSI
Grant
$350,000.00
$110,906.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Lunsky Y
Weiss J, Bradley
E, Palucka AM,
Flora D
Understanding pathways to
emergency healthcare for adolescents and adults with Autism
Spectrum Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$255,972.00
$84,773.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Lunsky Y
Multidimensional assessment of
providers and systems
MCSS (subgrant Grant
with Queen’s
University)
$120,229.00
$39,793.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
MacKay
SA
Measuring and reducing firesetting risk in children and youth
City of Toronto
Fire Services
$35,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Contract
funding
PI
Grant Title
Agency
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
MacKay
SA
TAPP-C: An evidence-based
approach to addressing juvenile
firesetting in Ontario
Ministry of Com- Contract
munity Safety
and Correctional
Services
$20,000.00
$20,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
MacKay
SA
Understanding and addressing
juvenile firesetting: Tools and
techniques
Office of the
Fire Marshal of
Ontario
Contract
$25,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Contract
$25,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
MacMillan Stewart DE,
Centre for Research Development CIHR
HI
Coben J, Herrman in Gender, Mental Health and
HE, Wathen CN
Violence Across the Lifespan
Operating
Grant
$2,000,000.00
$400,000.00
01/08/2011 to
31/07/2012
Mah L
Neural substrates of emotional
Scottish Rite
processing in mild cognitive im- Charitable
pairment and late-life depression Foundation of
Canada
Operating
Grant
$103,484.00
$35,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
MacKay
SA
CO-PI
Ruttle E
Treating youth firesetting:
Other
Randomized controlled trial of
The Arson Prevention Program for
Children (TAPP-C)
Type
Maki BE
Flint AJ
CIHR Team for the Development,
Testing and Knowledge Translation of Innovative Approaches
to Optimize Gait and Balance of
Older Adults
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,456,000.00
$167,248.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Mamo D
Graff-Guerrero
A, Mulsant BH,
Pollock BG
The Minimal Effective Dose of
CIHR
Antipsychotic Medication in Older
Patients with Schizophrenia: A
PET Study
Operating
Grant
$284,516.00
$71,129.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Mamo D
Pollock BG,
Mulsant BH
Optimal Dosing of Antipsychotic
Drugs in Late Life
Operating
Grant
$622,220.00
$159,352.00
24/03/2011 to
31/01/2012
Mamo DC
Graff-Guerrero
A, Mulsant BH,
Pollock BG
Minimal Effective Dose of
CIHR
Antipsychotic Medication in Older
Patients with Schizophrenia
Personnel
Award
$284,516.00
$71,129.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Mood Assessment via Animated
Characters: Accessing the Emotional World
Other
Operating
Grant
$98,425.00
$30,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Manassis K
NIH
Manion I
Rummens JA
School Bases Mental Health and
Addication Consortium
Other
Operating
Grant
$385,000.00
$128,333.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Man-SonHing MG
Marshall S,
Naglie G, Cranney M, Rapoport
M, Molnar F,
Gelinas I, Mazer
B, Finestone H
CIHR Team in Driving in Older
Persons (CANDRIVE) II Team
Grant: Common cohort project
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$5,578,735.00
$1,136,655.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Maunder
R
Angus J, Cho C,
Newton G, Nolan
RP
The impact of close relationships Heart & Stroke
and social support on heart
failure
Operating
Grant
$264,415.00
$88,138.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
155
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
McCay E
Beanlands H,
Cooper L, Hughes
J, Hwang S,
Karabanow
J, Langley J,
MacLaurin B,
McMain S, Quesnel S, Sidani S,
Worthington C
Enhancement of Transitional
Housing Programmes for Streetinvolved Youth through the
Application of Dialectical
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$329,792.00
$130,179.00
01/11/2011 to
31/10/2012
McCay E
Romano D, Langley J, Archie S,
Cheng C, Conrad
G, Manchanda R,
Menezes N, Roy
P, Tibbo P, Beanlands H, Dewa
C, Rose D, Santa
Mina E, Schwind
J, Zipursky R,
Aiello A, Rehder
M, Gehrs M,
Robinson K, Jeffs
L, Norman R
Sustaining Recovery: Supporting CIHR
the Transition from Specialized
Services to Primary Care for AtRisk Youth Who Have Experienced
a First Episode of Psychosis
Travel Conference
$25,000.00
$25,000.00
01/02/2011 to
31/01/2012
McDonald
SD
Mueller VM,
Bracken K,
Brouwers MC,
McDonald HC,
Pullenayegum
EM, Sword WA,
Taylor VH
Developing interventions to pre- CIHR
vent excess maternal weight gain
and its consequences: Improving
the translation of guidelines into
practice (The IMPROVE Study)
Operating
Grant
$199,679.00
$199,679.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
McDonell J Wolfe DA
A multi-level, cohort-sequential
study of rural adolescent dating violence victimization and
perpetration
NICHHD
Operating
Grant
$1,875,000.00
$455,000.00
02/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
McIntyre
RS
Intranasal Insulin and Major
Depressive Disorder.
NARSAD
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$12,500.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
A Randomized, Double-blind,
Placebo-Controlled Trial Evaluating the Effects of Intranasal
Insulin of Cognitive Function in
Euthymic Individuals with Major
Depressive Disorder.
NARSAD
Operating
Grant
$99,360.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
McIntyre
RS
Kennedy SH, Lewis G, MacQueen
G, McKinnon M,
Konarski, J
Mcintyre
RS
The Quietude Study: Comparing
Astra Zeneca
the Effectiveness of Escitalopram
to Quetiapine XR in the Treatment of Agitated Depression.
Operating
Grant
$1,600,000.00
$-
01/01/2011 to
01/12/2012
McIntyre
RS
A Multicentre, Double-Blind,
Randomised, Parallel Group,
Escitalopram Controlled Phase
III-B Study of the Efficacy and
Safety of Quetiapine Fumarate
Extended Release (Seroquel
XRTM) as Monotherapy in the
Treatment of Adult Patients with
Agitated MDD.
Contract
$1,600,000.00
$800,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Other
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
McIntyre
RS
A Randomized, 6-week, DoubleOther
Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Flexible-Dose, Parallel-Group Study of
Lurasidone Adjunctive to Lithium
or Divalproex for the Treatment of
Bipolar I Depression.
Contract
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/05/2012
Mcintyre
RS
Evaluating the Prevalance of
Metabolic Abnormalities Associated with Stimulant Therapy in
Individuals with Bipolar Disorder
Contract
$500,000.00
$250,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Other
McKenna
BG
Skipworth JJ Tap- A model of care for prison mental Other
sell, R, Cavney
health services
J, Simpson AIF,
Madell D
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$90,000.00
01/08/2011 to
30/06/2012
McKenzie K
Kidd S, Collins A,
Paterson J, Clark
C, Costa L
Bringing a recovery focus to
schizophrenia services through
client narratives
Grant
$29,363.00
$14,763.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
McKenzie
KJ
Archie S, Noh
S, Lurie S, Tuck
A, Williams C,
Kidd S, Simich
L, Hamilton H,
Tang T
A comparative study of pathways CIHR
to first episode care for psychosis
in three ethnic groups in Ontario
Operating
Grant
$402,000.00
$159,865.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
McKenzie
KJ
Barwick M,
CIHR Strategic Training Program
Fulford B, Gliks- in the Social Aetiology of Mental
man L, Hodges B, Illness
Jadad A, Knapp
M, Muntaner C,
Noh S, Pollack B,
Toner B, Ross L
CIHR
Grant
$1,783,890.00
$324,776.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
McLean
LM
Jones JM, Esplen A Randomized Controlled Study
MJ, Zimmermann of a Couples’ Intervention for
C, Rodin GM
those Where One is Facing
Advanced Cancer
Other
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$10,000.00
01/05/2011 to
01/05/2012
McMain S
Guimond T,
Streiner D
Evaluating the effectiveness of
OMHF
dialectical behaviour skills training for suicidality in borderline
personality disorder
Grant
$148,964.00
$74,423.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Meadows
G
Judd P, Martin P,
Segal Z, Piterman L
Effectiveness of MindfulnessBased Cognitive Therapy within
strategies for preventing depressive relapse for people at very
high risk.
Other
Operating
Grant
$611,775.00
$159,003.00
01/07/2011 to
30/11/2011
Meaney
MJP
Kennedy JL
Molecular Genetics of Cognitive
Development in an Increased
Vulnerability Cohort
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$835,000.00
$167,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Meaney
MJP
Kennedy JL,
Determinants of individual difAtkinson LR,
ferences in maternal care
Fleming AS,
Lydon JE, Moss E,
Soares C, Steiner
M, Wazana A
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$390,000.00
$142,322.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Canadian
Health Services
Research Foundation
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
157
funding
PI
CO-PI
Meaney
MJP
Mehta S
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Kennedy JL, SeThe interaction of fetal developguin JR, Atkinson ment and genotype in determinLR, Wazana A
ing neurocognitive development
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$861,655.00
$172,331.00
07/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Hunter JJ, Rose L,
Maunder R, Fergusson N, Ethier
C, Steinberg M,
Burry L
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$63,494.00
$57,946.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Monoamine oxidase A binding in CIHR
impulsive aggressive individuals with borderline personality
disorder and antisocial personality disorder: A carbon 11-labeled
harmine PET study # FellowshipNathan Kolla
Clinician
Scientist 1
$172,500.00
$44,375.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Meyer JH
Grant Title
SLEAP-SCP: Psychological
distress, disturbed sleep and
confusion associated with two
strategies for sedation and pain
relief in the critically ill.
Meyer JH
George TP, Houle
S, Selby PL,
Wilson AA
Cigarette smoking and prefrontal CIHR
monoamine oxidase-A (MAO-A)
binding in health and depression
Grant
$454,819.00
$71,901.00
01/04/2011 to
30/09/2011
Meyer JH
Houle S, Soares
CDN, Steiner
M, Stewart DE,
Wilson AA
Neurochemical Aspects of Depression in Women: Monoamine
Oxidase A During Perimenopause
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$129,436.00
$103,549.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Meyer JH
Major depression and stressinduced MAO-A binding in the
prefrontal cortex # PostDocAlexandra Soliman
NARSAD
Grant
$60,000.00
$22,500.00
01/04/2011 to
31/12/2011
Meyer JH
Assessment of brain nociceptin/
orpharin FQ peptide (NOP) receptor occupancy after single oral
dose of LY2940094 as measured
by PET with the radioligand
LY2959530 in healthy subjects
Eli Lilly Canada
Inc.
Contract
$1,077,336.00
$1,077,336.00
22/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Contract
$432,012.00
$216,006.00
01/07/2011 to
01/07/2012
Meyer JH
Houle S, Wilson A Serotonin and Dopamine TransOther
porter Occupancy in Healthy Male
and Female
Meyer JH
Canada Research Chair in Neuro- CIHR
chemistry of Major Depression
Personnel
Award
$478,585.00
$95,717.00
15/08/2011 to
15/08/2012
Meyer JH
Monoamine oxidase A in individuals with major depressive
disorder and comorbid borderline
personality disorder: A [11C]
harmine PET study # PostDocNathan Kolla
APA American
Psychiatric
Foundation
Fellowship
$45,000.00
$40,500.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Monoamine Oxidase A, Betacarbolines and Mood During
Early Alcohol Withdrawal: A New
Strategy for Preventing Alcohol
Relapse
OMHF
Fellowship/
Studentship
$48,000.00
$16,000.00
01/05/2011 to
01/05/2012
Group Therapy Program: Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Exercise
and Nutrition in Youth with Mood
and Anxiety Disorders
CAMH Foundation
Operating
Grant
$20,248.00
$10,124.00
01/03/2011 to
29/02/2012
Meyer JH
Mian IA
Matthews B
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Mishna F
Craig W, Beran
T, Pepler D,
Wiener J
Motivations for Cyber Bullying:
A Longitudinal and MultiPerspective
Mitchell I
Paes B, Lanctôt
KL
Canadian Registry of Synagis
(CARESS)
University of
Calgary through
Abbott Laboratories
Contract
Mapping neuro-inflamation
In Alzheimer’s disease with
[18F]-FEPPA - A new ligand for
the peripheral benzodiazepine
receptor (PBR)
Scottish Rite
Charitable
Foundation of
Canada
Cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia: Biological and clinical
correlations
Mizrahi R
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Inquiry
SSHRC
$272,513.00
$272,513.00
01/09/2011 to
01/09/2012
Grant
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CIHR
Grant
$92,000.00
$5,334.00
01/08/2011 to
31/07/2012
Neuroinflammation in Schizophrenia, testing a new hypothesis
NARSAD
Operating
Grant
$60,000.00
$30,000.00
15/06/2011 to
15/06/2012
Mizrahi R
Cross sensitization between
cannabis and stress in subjects
at clinical high risk for psychosis
# PostDoc-Romina Mizrahi
OMHF
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$13,125.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Mizrahi R
New York Scientific Symposium
NARSAD
Travel Conference
$3,000.00
$3,000.00
01/10/2011 to
01/10/2011
Mizrahi R
Stress-induced dopamine release CIHR
in subjects at clinical high risk
for psychosis: a [11C]-(+)-PHNO
PET study
Personnel
Award (New
Investigator)
$300,000.00
$60,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Behavioural and Functional
Neuroimaging Studies of Recent
and Remote Spatial Memory in
Humans
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$775,000.00
$158,149.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Genetics of antipsychoticinduced metabolic syndrome
CIHR
Grant (New
investigator)
$300,000.00
$60,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Mueller DJ Kennedy JL, Cohn Genetics of AntipsychoticTA, Remington G, Induced Metabolic Syndrome
Tiwari AK
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$807,430.00
$161,486.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Mueller DJ
Lipogenesis gene variants in
antipsychotic-induced weight
gain in independent samples
from the US and Germany
NARSAD
Fellowship
$60,000.00
$22,500.00
01/04/2011 to
31/12/2011
Mueller DJ
Molecular genetic hypothesis
for predicting dose of medication, response and side effects
in psychiatry # PostDoc-Daniel
Mueller
OMHF
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Longitudinal Study of Cognition in Older Adults with Bipolar
Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$470,483.00
$117,621.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
3/3-Incomplete Response in
Late-Life Depression: Getting to
Remission
NIH
Grant
$1,488,504.00
$314,254.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Mizrahi R
Mizrahi R
Moscovitch M
Rao NP
Rosenbaum
S, Grady CL,
Winocur G
Mueller DJ
Mulsant
BH
Mulsant
BH
Blumberger DM,
Menon M, Pollock BG, Rajji T,
Ravindran A
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
159
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Mulsant
BH
Kennedy J, Pollock BG
Mulsant
BH
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Incomplete Response in Late-Life NIH
Depression: Getting to Remission
Operating
Grant
$1,149,904.00
$292,581.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Pollock B, Meyer
JH, George T,
Rehm J, Remington G, Houle S,
Kennedy J
Transforming Care for Mental
Illness and Addiction - An Integrated Approach
Other
Operating
Grant
$40,000,000.00
$800,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Nebes R
Pollock BG
Effect of anticholinergic drugs
and white matter hyperintensities on balance and gait
NIH
Operating
Grant
$1,242,300.00
$310,575.00
01/03/2011 to
29/02/2012
Niccols A
Dobbins M,
Optimizing the health of women
Sword W, Henwith substance use issues and
derson J, Smith P, their children
Thabane L, Dewit
D, Lipman E,
Milligan K, Jack
S, Schmidt L,
Dooley M
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,447,990.00
$270,241.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Nitz M
Vasdev N
PET Imaging Probes for Alzheimer’s Disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$241,951.00
$81,650.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Nobrega
JN
Dopamine D3 receptors, hyperdopaminergia, and behavioural
sensitization
Other
Operating
Grant
$125,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Nobrega
JN
Contribution of the serotonin
system to the effects of deep
brain stimulation # StudentshipMeaghan Creed
CIHR
Research
Studenship
$35,000.00
$35,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/03/2012
Noh S
Creating E-learning tools and
a community of practice for
refugee mental health
Citizenship and
Immigration
Canada
Grant
$652,039.00
$412,017.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Noh S
Agic B, Kim IH,
McKenzie K,
Schieman S
Self Employment and Immigrant
Health: Job Stress and Health
among Asian Immigrant Micro
Business Owners
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$373,808.00
$54,697.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Noh S
Fenta-Wube H,
An HIV/AIDS Intervention in
Rourke SB, Adam Ethiopian Immigrant CommuniB, Adrien A, Hus- ties
bands W, Rueda
S, Strike S
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$281,394.00
$90,730.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Noh S
Agic B
E-Learning Tools for and a Community of Practice for Refugee
Mental Health Project
Citizenship and
Immigration
Canada
Contract
$592,230.00
$37,391.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Nolan RP
Chessex C,
Feldman R,
Gwadry-Sridhar
F, Hachinski V,
Ivanov J, Kaczorowski J, Lynn H,
Oh P, Shoemaker
K, Dawes M,
Barr SI
Reducing risk with E-based
support for Adherence to lifestyle
Change in Hypertension: REACH
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$622,714.00
$171,666.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
funding
PI
CO-PI
Novak M
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
A longtitudinal study of quality
of life and depression in patients
with chronic kidney disease
through transition to dialysis
Other
Operating
Grant
$9,920.00
$1,984.00
01/07/2011 to
01/07/2012
O’Campo
P
Murphy KA,
Bayoumi AM,
Dunn JR, Fafard
P, Flicker S,
Glazier RH, Hoch
JS, Hwang SW,
Kahn K, Lavery
JV, Nisenbaum
R, Rourke SB,
Smylie JK,
Sridharan S,
Travers R, Walks
A, Wheaton B
The CIHR ACHIEVE Research
Partnership: Action for Health
Equity Interventions
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,790,000.00
$325,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2015
O’Campo
P
Hwang S,
Stergiopolous
V, McKenzie K,
George T
At Home Project: Mental Health
Commission of Canada Homelessness project Toronto site
Other
Operating
Grant
$3,500,000.00
$750,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Ovens H
Hunter J, Maunder R, Borgundvaag B
The effectiveness of individualized interprofessional care plans
for heavy emergency department
users
AHSC AFP Innovation Fund
Operating
Grant
$57,146.00
$28,573.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
PascualLeone A
Giacobbe P, Chen
R, Fernandez H,
Wu A, Bystritsky
A
Magnetic Stimulation for
Other
the Treatment of Depressive
Symptoms in Parkinson’s Disease
(MASTER PD): A 4-Center, ShamControlled, Parallel Group Trial
Operating
Grant
$1,498,914.00
$125,000.00
27/08/2011 to
30/06/2012
Penney S
Abramowitz C,
Lavoie J, Simpson S
Assessing dynamic risk factors
for violence and victimization
among psychiatric patients: A
prospective, repeated-measures
study
Other
Operating
Grant
$4,165.00
$4,165.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Perlman M Jenkins JM,
Barr CL, Pascal
C, Georgiades
KK, Leckie G,
Moore C, Moran
GA, O’Connor
TG, Ross HS,
Schmidt LA,
Steele F
The impact of family relationships on children’s developmental health: Child versus context
effects.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$99,981.00
$24,995.00
01/04/2012 to
30/06/2012
Peterkin A
Working With Portfolios: Measuring medical students’ reflective
capacity and empathy levels over
time and evaluating student narratives for reflective capacity.
RCPSC AMS
CanMEDS
Research and
Development
Operating
Grant
$23,250.00
$23,250.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Peterkin A
Working With Portfolios: Measuring medical students’ reflective
capacity and empathy levels over
time and evaluating student narratives for reflective capacity.
University of
Toronto Dean’s
Educational
Development
Fund
Operating
Grant
$18,000.00
$18,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
161
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
PetersonBadali M
Skilling TA
Petronis A
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Rehabilitating youth: The impact Other
of matching court-ordered
treatment services according to
youths’ individual risk, need, and
responsivity factors.
Operating
Grant
$88,340.00
$28,699.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Epigenomic Studies of Twins
Discordant for Crohn’s Disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$643,203.00
$214,401.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Petronis A
Palmert M
DNA methylome study in type 1
diabetes
NIH
Grant
$3,026,840.00
$1,049,593.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Petronis A
Schumacher A,
Wang S, Ravindran A, Boutros
P, Mak D
DNA methylome analysis in
bipolar disorder
NIH
Operating
Grant
$4,200,000.00
$840,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Petronis A
Epigenetics of Major Depressive
Disorder # Studentship-Gabriel
Oh
CIHR
Fellowship
$150,000.00
$50,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Petronis A
Epigenomics of schizophrenia
OMHF
Fellowship
$120,000.00
$40,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Petronis A
The involvement of the epigenome in the mechanism of
action and efficacy of pharmacotherapeutic interventions
for bipolar disorder # PostDocViviane Labrie
CIHR
Fellowship
$135,000.00
$45,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Pillai Riddell R
Flora D, Bailey
H, Taddio A,
Stevens S
Bridging the Gap between Childhood Health and Mental Health
Canadian
Foundation for
Innovation
Operating
Grant
$438,148.00
$87,630.00
01/11/2011 to
31/10/2012
Pillai Riddell R
Flora D, Moran G
Bridging the Gap Between Infant
Mental Health and Infant Health:
Bringing Attachment Theory into
the Infant Acute Pain Context
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$312,000.00
$49,539.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Suffer the Little Children:
Understanding the Development
of Infant Pain Reactivity and the
Impact of Parental Management
Ontario Ministry Operating
of Research and Grant
Innovation
$150,000.00
$30,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Pillai Riddell R
Pimlott N
Cohen C, Persaud
M, Drummond N,
Dalziel W, Silvius
J, Hollingworth G
The Role of Family Physicians in
the Provision of Dementia Care:
Expectations of Patients, Family
Caregivers, Medical Specialists,
and Family Physicians Themselves
Other
Contract
$10,000.00
$1,250.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Pinhas L
Woodside DB
Risperidone in Adolescents with
Anorexia Nervosa
NIH
Operating
Grant
$25,000.00
$125,000.00
01/07/2010 to
30/06/2012
Pollock BG
Annual CFI Infrastructure Operat- CFI
ing Request
Grant
$5,809,605.00
$734,622.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Pollock BG
Canadian Foundation for Innovation Research Hospital Fund
Project
CFI
Grant
$15,349,243.00
$716,774.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Pollock BG Houle S, Kennedy J
Transforming Lives: neuroIMAGENE, the convergence of
genetics and brain imagining in
mental health and addictions
CFI
New Initiatives Fund
$2,806,900.00
$561,380.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Pollock BG Mulsant BH,
Kennedy J, Houle
S, Kaplan A,
Rehm J, George
T, Remington G,
Meyers J
Transforming care for mental
illness and addiction
Canadian
Foundation for
Innovation
Operating
Grant
$15,444,800.00
$3,088,960.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Pollock BG
Acute pharmacotheraphy of latelife mania
NIH (Mulsant
is PI, held at
Pittsburgh)
Grant
$158,905.00
$28,157.00
01/04/2011 to
31/07/2011
Pollock BG
Citalopram treatment for agitation in alzheimer dementia
NIH
subgrant from $324,215.00
John Hopkins,
Lyketsos,
Constantine
$41,513.00
01/04/2011 to
31/08/2011
Pollock BG Mulsant B
Citalopram Treatment for Agitation in Alzheimer Dementia
NIH
Operating
Grant
$1,195,578.00
$239,115.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Pollock BG
APA - DSM5 - Field Trial
American
Psychiatric Association
Contract
$100,000.00
$30,000.00
01/04/2011 to
15/10/2011
Pollock BG Bagby M, McKenzie K, Voore
P, Greben D,
George T, Quilty,
Remington G
Improving diagnosis of
schizophrenia, schizoaffective
disorder, personality disorders,
and attenuated psychotic
symptoms disorder – Integration
of categorical and dimensional
approaches
Other
Operating
Grant
$229,000.00
$180,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Pollock BG Bagby RM, McKenzie K, Voore P
Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders,
fifth edition (DSM5) Field Study
for Academic and Large Clinical
Centres in adult populations
Other
Contract
$100,000.00
$100,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Pollock BG Houle S, Kennedy J
Transforming Lives: neuroIMAGENE, the convergence of
genetics and brain imagining in
mental health and addictions
MRI
Research
Infrastructure
Fund
$2,806,900.00
$561,380.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rajji TK
Mulsant BH,
Daskalakis ZJ
Long-Term Potentiation in the
CIHR
Motor and Dorsolateral Prefrontal
Cortex of Patients with Schizophrenia
Operating
Grant
$188,055.00
$30,683.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Rajji TK
Daskalakis JZ,
Mulsant BH
Cognitive Enhancement in PaOther
tients with Schizophrenia Across
the Lifespan: a Brain Stimulation
Project
$81,348.00
$81,348.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Rajji TK
Rao N
Mizrahi RM
Enhancing working memory in
patients with schizophrenia
through paired associative
stimulation of the dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex
NARSAD
Fellowship
$59,500.00
$19,833.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Role of Dopamine in cognitive
symptoms of Schizophrenia - A
11C-FLB457 PET study
Other
Fellowship/
Studentship
$50,000.00
$50,000.00
15/07/2011 to
15/07/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
163
funding
PI
CO-PI
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Rapoport
M
Herrmann N,
Dementia and driving in Ontario.
Naglie G, Messlis
M, Tang-Wai
D, Pimlott N,
Molnar F
Transport
Canada Road
Safety Transfer
Payment
Program
Personal
Award
$23,200.00
$23,200.00
01/09/2011 to
31/03/2012
Ravindran Harkness K, Bag- First-episode major depression
Other
A
by M, Graham S, and treatment with escitalopram:
Ravindran L
An fMRI study
Contract
$55,000.00
$55,000.00
01/01/2011 to
01/08/2011
Ravitz P
Leszcz M, Lancee
W, Rawkins
S, Maunder R,
Fefergrad M
Enhancing Supervision of Psychotherapy (ESP) Project
University of
Toronto Faculty of Medicine
Education
Development
Fund
Operating
Grant
$20,000.00
$10,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Razack S
McGuire M,
Steinert Y,
Hodges BD
Understanding competing discourses and creating dialogues
about equity, excellence and
diversity in a medical school
admissions process in a diverse
urban setting
Other
Operating
Grant
$127,600.00
$38,966.00
01/07/2011 to
30/04/2012
Rehm J
Health Canada: First Nations
Costing Study
Health Canada
Grant
$24,405.00
$24,405.00
31/03/2012 to
31/10/2012
Rehm J
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health (CAMH SER Research Unit
grant)
Ministry of
Grant
Health and Long
Term Care
$2,499,012.00
$2,499,012.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rehm J
Centre for Addiction and Mental
Health (CAMH SER Research Unit
grant) Indirect Costs
MOHLTC
Grant
$499,778.00
$499,778.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Predicting and Understanding
Patterns of Service Utilization
in Children’s Mental Health
Agencies
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$336,160.00
$126,711.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Remington G
Investigations of the Phenomenology and Neurobiology of the
Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia # Fellowship-George
Foussias
CIHR
Clinician Sci- $172,500.00
entist Training
Award 2
$57,500.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Remington G
George T, Streiner Patterns of antipsychotic nonD, Foussias F,
adherence: impact on treatment
Agid O, Hahn M
outcome
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$92,539.00
$92,539.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Remington G
Foussias G
Schizophrenia
Society of
Ontario
Operating
Grant
$50,000.00
$12,500.00
01/07/2011 to
30/11/2011
An investigation of the neurobiol- APA American
ogy of motivational deficits in
Psychiatric
schizophrenia
Institute for
Research and
Education
Fellowship
$45,000.00
$45,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Reid G
Remington G
Stewart SL, Barwick M, Evans
B, Leschied A,
Neufeld R, St
Pierre J, Tobon
J, Vingilis E,
Zaric G
Grant Title
Evaluation of Motivational Deficits in Schizophrenia in a Virtual
Environment: Development of an
Ecologically Valid Assessment
Tool
funding
PI
CO-PI
Remington G
Grant Title
Agency
Functional magnetic resonance
NARSAD
imaging in a virtual environment:
An investigation of the neurobiology of motivational deficits in
schizophrenia
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Fellowship
(Young Investigator)
$60,000.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rhodes AE Newton A, Bethell Suicide-Related Behaviours in
J, Royschuk R,
Children and Youth - Time Trends
Carlisle C
in Alberta and Ontario
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$89,052.00
$20,651.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Richter
MA
Kennedy JL,
Predicting Medication Response
Levitt A, Daska- in Obsessive-Compulsive
lakis ZJ, Arnold P, Disorder
Mueller D, Rector
N, Ravindran A
OCF
Operating
Grant
$49,901.00
$3,838.00
01/07/2011 to
01/10/2011
Rochon E
Black SE, Freedman M, Chow TW,
Tang-Wai DF
The language
impairment
in progressive
aphasia: A
longitudinal
neuropsychological and
imaging study
CIHR
OperatingGrant
$567,938.00
$121,697.00
Rochon E
Grady CL, Leonard C
The effect of intensity on a
treatment for naming deficits in
aphasia and associated neural
underpinnings
Heart & Stroke
Operating
Grant
$259,191.00
$86,397.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Rodin GM
Hales S, Lo C,
Donner A, Gagliese L, Kurdyak
P, Li M, Moore M,
Nissim R, Rydall
A, Esplen MJ,
Zimmermann C
Managing Cancer and Living
Meaningfully: An RCT of a psychotherapeutic intervention for
patients with metastatic cancer
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$773,249.00
$150,610.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rodin GM
Zimmermann
C, Brandwein
JM, Donner A,
Gagliese L, Jones
JM, Minden MD,
Schimmer AD
A prospective study of psychosocial distress and palliative care
in patients with hematological
malignancies
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$644,681.00
$31,213.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Ross LE
Bisexual Identity: Implications
for mental, behavioural, and
physical health
CIHR (subgrant
with University
of McGill)
Grant
$18,370.00
$18,370.00
01/10/2011 to
31/03/2012
Ross LE
Social locations, social connectedness, and postpartum
depression
CIHR
Grant (New
Investigator)
$300,000.00
$60,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Ross LE
Bauer G, Gillis L
Risk and resilience among
Bisexual People in Ontario: A
Community-Based Study of
Bisexual Mental Health
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$402,768.00
$126,912.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Ross LE
Steele L, Epstein
R
Using Theatre to Disseminate
LGBT Peoples’ Experiences with
Assisted Human Reproduction
Services
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$24,956.00
$24,956.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
165
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Ross LE
Steele LS, Daley
A, Gillis L
Examining pathways to effective
depression treatment for sexual
and gender minority women in
Ontario
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$297,452.00
$297,452.00
01/06/2011 to
01/06/2012
Ross LE
Chambers J, Sav- Access to primary care for people Other
age B, Kasperski with serious mental health and/
J, Vigod S
or substance use issues: A
qualitative study
Operating
Grant
$123,930.00
$123,930.00
01/10/2011 to
01/10/2013
Rourke SB Adam B, Bacon
J, Bayoumi A,
Edmiston L, Gahagan J, Hogg R,
Johnson A, Jolly
R, Kirkland S,
Klein N, McGee F,
Mykhalovskiy E,
Mugford G, Nixon
S, Orsini M, Otis
J, Ristock J
Centre of REACH (Research Evidence into Action for Community
Health)
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$2,500,000.00
$500,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2012
Rourke SB Adam B, Gahagan J, Hogg R,
Jolly R, Kirkland
S, Mykhalovskiy
E, Orsini M, Patton C, Worthington C
Universities Without Walls - CIHR CIHR
Strategic Training Grant in HIV/
AIDS Health Research
Operating
Grant
$1,790,000.00
$325,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$300,000.00
$100,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Rourke SB Willison DJ,
Adam BD,
Chambers LA,
Worthington CA
Facilitators and barriers to enCIHR
gagement in HIV health research:
Key communities affected by HIV
Operating
Grant
$375,000.00
$125,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rousseau
C
Cleveland J, Crépeau F, Nakache
D, Andermann L
Detention of vulnerable adult
asylum seekers: impact on mental and psychosocial status
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$182,149.00
$60,716.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rousseau
C
Rummens JA
The Migratory Status of the Child
and Limited Access to Health
Care
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$503,313.00
$168,199.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Rummens
JA
Anisef P, Shields
J
A Renewed Research Agenda on Other
Migration, Diversity and Civic
Participation: Prioritization - Synthesis - Transfer - Impact
Operating
Grant
$1,535,000.00
$307,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
“Best Practice” assessment
procedures project
Grant
$503,725.00
$299,880.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rourke SB Tucker R, Hogg R, Impact of food security on health
Kennedy R, Swan outcomes in people living with
D, Evin-Jones J,
HIV/AIDS across Canada
Jose M, Monteith
K, Klein M,
Anema A, Fielden
S, Miewald C,
Weiser SD
Rush BR
Health Canada,
Drug Treatment Funding
Program
funding
PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Rush BR
Client outcome monitoring
project
Health Canada,
Drug Treatment Funding
Program
Grant
$1,290,420.00
$789,799.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rush BR
Client Satisfaction Project
Health Canada,
Drug Treatment Funding
Program
Grant
$548,607.00
$307,079.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rush BR
Development and implementation of a province-wide program
to assess and benchmark the
cost of addictions treatment
services
Health Canada,
Drug Treatment Funding
Program
Grant
$440,874.00
$251,439.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rush BR
Review of children and adolesMinistry of Chilcent assessment tools in support dren and Youth
of Working Together for Kids’
Services
Mental Health Initiative
Operating
Grant
$19,305.00
$10,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/07/2011
Rush BR
Substance use treatment system
improvement in Ontario: Four
integrated projects concerning
assessment, outcome monitoring, costing and client satisfaction
Ontario Ministry
of health and
long-term care
Operating
Grant
$3,300,210.00
$1,650,105.00
01/03/2011 to
01/03/2012
Rush BR
Working together for Kid’s Mental
Health Review: Review of intake
and needs assessment tools
Ministry of Children and Youth
Services
Grant
$19,305.00
$19,305.00
15/06/2011 to
02/08/2011
Development of needs-based
planning models for substance
use services and supports in
Canada
Health Canada
Contract
$1,557,160.00
$527,842.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Impact of major depression on
compliance with cervical and
breast cancer # PostDoc-Simone
Vigod
OMHF
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
Rush BR
CO-PI
Tremblay J
Rush BR
Sadavoy J
Barratt J, Aiello
Addressing the Needs of Unpaid
A, Rose M, Yau A, Caregivers – A Collaborative
Ballon B
Training Program for Families
and Caregivers to Maintain
Persons with Dementia in the
Community.
Human
Resources and
Skills Development Canada
Operating
Grant
$690,000.00
$150,000.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Sadavoy J
Yau A
SMHAS
Operating
Grant
$94,000.00
$25,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Sadavoy J
BSO System Education and Train- TC LHIN
ing Consortium
Operating
Grant
$196,000.00
$100,000.00
01/01/2012 to
30/06/2012
Sadavoy J
Behavioural Supports initiative
- Preparation of TCLHIN proposal
submission to the MOHLTC
TC LHIN
Contract
$25,000.00
$12,500.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
CASS Centralized Access to
Specialty geriatric Mental health
Beds in Toronto - expanding the
ALC focus
Toronto Central Operating
Community Care Grant
Access Centre
$55,000.00
$27,500.00
01/07/2011 to
31/12/2011
Sadavoy J
Yau A, Chiu M
Emergency Department – Geriatric Mental Health (ED-GMH)
Program Evaluation
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
167
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Sampson
R
Mayhall S,
Rourke SB,
Couchie M,
Croxall W, Fortin
C, Kenny P, Vail
H, McCabe M
Sapag
Munoz De
La Pena
JC
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
The development and evaluation CIHR
of integrated, activity-based HIV/
AIDS awareness and education in
elementary schools
Operating
Grant
$33,000.00
$33,000.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Rush BR
Developing a Framework to
Evaluate Collaborative Mental
Health Services in Primary Care
Systems in Latin America
CIHR
Scholarship
/ Doctoral
Award
$110,000.00
$36,666.00
01/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Sarang A
McKenzie K
Knowledge translation for More
Than a Label
PHAC
Operating
Grant
$84,548.00
$84,548.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Sarang A
McKenzie K,
Simich L, Kerr
M, Edwards G,
Patychuk D,
Shakarya Y
Equipping Canadians for mental
health throughout life, priority
youth
Other
Operating
Grant
$600,000.00
$350,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Sawka AM Rodin G, Straus S Exploring the long-term impact
of a cancer treatment decision
aid
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$49,900.00
$49,900.00
01/03/2011 to
29/02/2012
Schachar
RJ
Crosbie J, Arnold
PD
Exploring the Genetic Architecture of ADHD Phenotypes and
Endophenotypes in a General
Population Sample
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,049,785.00
$347,782.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Schachar
RJ
Crosbie J, Marshall C, Scherer
S, Arnold PD
Exploring Copy Number Variation
in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$341,649.00
$189,145.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Schaffer A Goldstein B,
Chandler G,
Levitt A
Prospective Metabolic Monitoring Pfizer
of Youth and Adults with Bipolar
Disorder.
Contract
$166,000.00
$83,000.00
01/10/2011 to
01/10/2012
Scharf J
Whole Exome and Targeted
Sequencing in Tourette Syndrome
Multiplex Families.
NIH
Operating
Grant
$462,000.00
$231,000.00
30/06/2011 to
31/12/2011
Segal Z
Increasing access to depressive
relapse prophylaxis with webbased MBCT
NIH/NIMH
Grant
$404,236.00
$217,570.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Selby PL
PREGNETS
ECHO: Improving Women’s
Health
Grant
$70,250.00
$29,193.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Selby PL
Summer Student Trainee
OTRU
Grant
$20,000.00
$18,333.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Selby PL
Quit 360
Pfizer
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$-
01/02/2011 to
31/03/2012
Selby PL
Aboriginal Smoking Cessation
Health Canada
Contract
$145,000.00
$48,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Barr CL, Cox N,
Freimer N, Heutink P, Mathews
C, McMahon W,
Oostra B, Pauls
D,
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Selby PL
TEACH: Training, Enhancement in Ministry of
Applied Counselling and Health
Health Promo– a program to enhance capacity tion
for delivery of smoking cessation
interventions in Ontario Smoke
free Ontario
Contract
$1,596,400.00
$-
01/04/2011 to
01/03/2012
Selby PL
The Smoking Treatment for
Ontario Patients (STOP) Study
Ministry of
Health Promotion
Contract
$21,831,410.00
$5,186,250.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Obesity and Mental Health Hot
Topic Conference Planning Grant
CIHR
Travel Conference
$20,000.00
$20,000.00
26/06/2012 to
28/06/2012
Shorter E
Regulatory Policy and the Availability of Psychopharmacologic
Agents
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$75,000.00
$25,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Shorter E
Big Footprint: The Story of Medicine in Toronto
Office of the
Dean, Faculty of
Medicine
Contract
$169,850.00
$15,000.00
01/06/2011 to
31/05/2013
Grant
$264,179.00
$88,561.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Sharma A
Taylor VH, Ganguili R, Ramos
Salas X
Shuper P
Loutfy MR, Rehm
JT
The causal role of acute alcohol
consumption in unprotected sex
among MSM at risk for acquiring HIV
CIHR
Sinopoli V
Arnold PD
A Genetic Study in Children Associating Obsessive-compulsive
Traits with Serotonin Transporter
Variants
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$3,000.00
$3,000.00
01/01/2011 to
31/12/2011
Sinyor M
Schaffer A,
Cheung A
Understanding Suicides in
Toronto: A Comparison of Suicide
Victims with and without a History of Suicide Attempts
Physicians’
Services
Incorporated
Foundation
Fellowship/
Studentship
$20,000.00
$12,000.00
02/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Sloan E
Driver H, Maxwell The impact of maternal obstrucC, Brian C,
tive sleep apnea on fetal well
Finan E
being and development and on
neonatal health.
UHN-MSH AMO
Operating
Grant
$108,850.00
$36,283.00
01/06/2011 to
01/06/2012
Smith N
Ross L
Bisexual Identity: Implications for CIHR
Mental, Behavioural and Physical
Health
Operating
Grant
$436,386.00
$64,309.00
10/10/2011 to
31/03/2012
So J
Kennedy JL,
Mueller DJ
Discovery of clinical and
metabolic genetic syndromes
manifesting as neuropsychiatric
disorders
CIHR
Fellowship
$119,166.00
$55,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Soares C
Steiner M
Desvenlafaxine succinate in
major depressive disorder:
effects on structural and functional imaging, cognition, and
functional outcomes in midlife
women and men
Other
Contract
$468,250.00
$93,652.00
01/07/2011 to
30/12/2011
Sockalingham S
Stergiopoulos V,
Maggi J, Hodges
B, Zaretsky A,
Stove L
Measuring Psychiatry Residents’
Competency in the Physician
Manager Role: Developing a
Resident Assessment Tool
Faculty of
Medicine Deans
Fund
Operating
Grant
$9,178.00
$1,836.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
169
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Sockalingham S
Okrainec A, Tan
A, Hawa R, Abbey S, Zaretsky
A, Jackson T,
Grigoriadis S
Preparing international medical
graduates for fellowship in
Canada: A needs assessment
and curriculum development.
Other
Operating
Grant
$10,000.00
$10,000.00
01/06/2011 to
01/06/2012
Soklaridis S
Selby PL, Herie
M, Hunter K, Norman CD
Why should we WIKI? Training
health care providers on updating evidence-based guideline
through a WIKI platform
CIHR
Grant
$25,000.00
$25,000.00
01/02/2012 to
31/03/2012
Sproule
BA
Brands B
Pathways to Prescription Opioid
Addiction
Health Canada
Contract
$55,650.00
$33,686.00
01/02/2011 to
31/01/2012
St George- Barr CL, SiminoHyslop P
vitch K, Rogaeva
E, Robertson J,
Schmitt-Ulms
G, Schlichter
L, Fraser P,
Mount H, Hazratti L, Bussey
T, Saksida L,
Vendruscolo M,
Lomas D, Toth G,
Favrin G, Dobson
C, Crowt
Application of Genomics,
Systems Biology, Chemistry and
Physics to Neurodegenerative
Disease
Other
Operating
Grant
$5,732,622.00
$1,050,984.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Stead J
Wohl M, Matheson K, Anisman
H, Ravindran A
Genetic analysis of the endophenotypes of impulsivity and
reward dependence in pathological gambling
OPGRC
Operating
Grant
$538,549.00
$179,516.00
01/06/2011 to
01/05/2012
Steele L
Cheung A
Primary Care Reform and the
Ministry of
Provision of Care to Patients with Health of
Mental Illness
Ontario
Operating
Grant
$35,000.00
$9,500.00
01/07/2011 to
01/12/2011
Stergiopoulos V
Hwang S,
Research Demonstration Project
O’Campo P, Dunn in Mental Health and HomelessJ, Bayoumi A,
ness, Toronto Site
Murphy K, George
T, McKenzie K
The Mental
Operating
Health Commis- Grant
sion of Canada
$896,959.00
$896,959.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Toronto Central
Local Health
Integration
Network
Operating
Grant
$150,000.00
$112,500.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Coordinated access to care from MOHLTC
hospital Emergency Department
assessing effectiveness and cost
effectiveness
Operating
Grant
$400,000.00
$50,000.00
01/04/2012 to
30/06/2012
Stergiopoulos V
Collaborative Mental Health Care
for the Homeless
OMHLTC
Personal
Award
$428,750.00
$85,750.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Stergiopoulos V
Ministry of Health and Long-term
Care Career Scientist Award
MOHLTC
Personal
Award
$428,750.00
$17,865.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Stergiopoulos V
Stergiopoulos V
Coordinated Access to Care for
the Homeless Program
Guimond T,
Wasylenki D,
Leczc M, Voore
P, O’Campo
P, Hwang S,
Kurdyak P, Ovens
H, Kahan M
funding
PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Stevens BJ Barwick M,
Campbell F,
Chambers C, Cohen J, Cummings
G, Estabrooks
C, Finley GA,
Harrison D, Holsti
L, Latimer M, Lee
S, LeMay S, McGrath P, Rashotte
J, Rosmus C,
Sawatzky-Dickinson D, Scott S,
Sidani S, Squires
J, Stinson J, Taddio A, Warnock F,
Willan A
Sustainability of Multidimensional Knowledge Translation
Intervention to Improve Pediatric
Pain Practices and Outcomes
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$988,826.00
$205,946.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Stevenson Bergmans Y,
C
Links PS
Psychosocial/Psychoeducational
Intervention for People with
Suicide Attempts: A Pilot RCT
of Effectiveness and Individual
Response
Other
Operating
Grant
$278,000.00
$-
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Strafella A Duff Canning SJ,
Houle S, Monchi
O, Rusjan PM,
Vasdev N
The neural circuitry of executive
functions in Parkinson’s disease
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$229,946.00
$91,978.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Strauss J
BDNF promoter methylation and
sucidal behaviour in bipolar
disorder
American
Foundation for
Suicide Prevention
Grant
$85,000.00
$10,629.00
01/04/2011 to
30/06/2011
Change the Cycle - a Feasibility
and Pilot Intervention Study
Ontario HIV
Treatment
Network
Operating
Grant
$288,052.00
$144,026.00
01/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Sullivan W Berg J, Bissell
M, Bradley E,
Cheetham T,
Denton R, Gillis
G, Gitta M, Heng
J, Hennen B,
Isaacs B, Jackson J, Korossy
M, Lunsky Y,
McMillan S, Tao
L, Flannery J
Building Capacity Primary Health
Care Services to Improve the
Health and Quality of Life of
Ontarians with Developmental
Disabilities
Ontario Ministry Contract
of Community and Social
Serives, Ontario Ministry of
Health and Long
Term Care
$1,560,000.00
$153,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Szmuilow- Dalfen A
icz S
Creating a Collaborative Community Perinatal Psychiatric
Outreach Program
AHSC AFP Innovation Fund
Operating
Grant
$132,600.00
$132,600.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Szyf M
Hallett MT,
Soares C, Steiner
M, Turecki GX
Whole epigenome profiling of the
epigenetic marks of maternal
depression and its impact on the
offspring epigenome.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$500,000.00
$166,667.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Taddio A
Pillai Riddell R,
Ipp M
Effectiveness of Parent-Led
Interventions in Reducing Infant
Hypersensitivity to Pain: A Longitudinal Randomized Controlled
Trial
Pfizer
Contract
$654,429.00
$163,607.00
01/09/2011 to
31/08/2012
Strike C
CO-PI
Balian R,
Altenberg J,
Roy E, Guimond
T, Millson P,
Arenovich T
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
171
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Tannenbaum C
Mulsant BH, Belleville S
Querying Cognition and Pharmacologic Treatment of Urinary
Incontinence in the Elderly
CIHR
Personnel
Award
$647,411.00
$129,482.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Tannock R Lewis M, Jain U,
Toplak M
Working memory training in
ADHD: Neural mechanisms of
change
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$450,000.00
$60,621.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Tannock R
Inattentive Behaviors and
Cognition as Predictors of Later
Academic Outcomes
Hospital for Sick Operating
Children
Grant
$131,000.00
$131,000.00
01/04/2011 to
01/03/2012
Tannock R
Public Policy Cluster Chair in
Special Education and Adaptive
Technology
Other
Operating
Grant
$200,000.00
$25,000.00
01/03/2011 to
28/02/2012
Tannock R Chaban P, Jain U, Human Resources and Skills
Martinussen R
Development Canada (competitive government contract)
Human
Resources and
Skills Development Canada
Contract
$22,847.00
$22,847.00
01/07/2011 to
01/12/2011
Tasca GA
Balfour L, Gandhi
J, Hansley J,
Joyce A, Kinley
J, Koszycki D,
Leszcz M,
Lybanon-Diagle
V, Mercer D,
Ogrodniczuk J,
Ravitz P, Ritchie
K, Sylvestre J,
Talbot J
Scanning the way ahead:
Developing a shared vision of
practice-based psychotherapy
research in Canada
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$24,410.00
$12,205.00
01/02/2012 to
31/07/2012
Thombs B
Rosberger Z,
Batist G, Coyne
J, Koerner
AC, Palmer S,
Stefanek ME,
Stewart DE
Will screening for distress
improve patient well-being in
cancer? A systematic review
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$88,489.00
$8,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
TopolevicVranic J
Colantino A,
Cusimano M,
Hwang S, Michalak A, Ouchterlony D, Kontos P,
Stergiopoulos V
Clarifying the link between trau- CIHR
matic brain injury and homelessness: a planning workshop
Operating
Grant
$24,837.00
$24,837.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Trainor J
RotmanCAMH Social Venture
Rotman School
Development Project - Evaluation of Management
Strategy
Grant (coinvestigator)
$15,000.00
$15,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Trainor J
SEDI Grant
Operating
Grant
$100,000.00
$91,667.00
01/04/2011 to
31/01/2012
Social and
Enterprise
Development
Innovations
(SEDI)
Trainor J
Nailer W, Dewa C, Workforce Advisory Committee
Mental Health
Krupa T, Kirsh B and The Aspiring Workforce: Sus- Commission of
tainable Income and Employment Canada
Contract
$115,000.00
$81,700.00
01/09/2009 to
28/02/2012
Tu K
Jaakkimainen
L, Butt D, Jette
N, Guttman M,
Herrmann N,
O’connor P, Ivers
N, Tierney M,
Lam R
Operating
Grant
$599,334.00
$239,734.00
01/11/2011 to
31/10/2012
Validation of administrative
algorithms to determine population prevalence and incidence of
Alzheimer’s disease, dementia,
multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and
Parkinson’s disease
Other
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Tyndale R
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Pharmacogenet- CIHR
ics: CYP genetic
variants alter
smoking
OperatingGrant
$923,520.00
$178,880.00
Tyndale R
Reduced brain CYP2B6 metabolism influences smoking initiation and treatment response:
Investigations in a rat model
NIH
Operating
Grant
$294,525.00
$147,263.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Tyndale RF
Drug metabolism in the Brain:
Expression and Regulation of
Cytochromes P450.
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$921,550.00
$184,310.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Vigod SN
Rochon P,
Anderson R, Ray
J, Grigoriadis S,
Grenier A, Dennis
CL
Schizophrenia Understood in
CIHR
the Perinatal Period: Psychiatric
Outcomes and Reproductive
Trajectories (The SUPPORT Study)
“ Phase 2 Psychiatric Outcomes”
Operating
Grant
$95,988.00
$95,988.00
01/03/2012 to
30/06/2012
Vigod SN
Rochon P, Anderson G, Ray J,
Grunier A, Kurdyak P, Grigoriadis
S, Dennis CL
Schizophrenia Understood in
the Perinatal Period: Psychiatric
Outcomes and Reproductive
Trajectories: Phase 1: Reproductive Trajectories (The SUPPORT
Study)
Schizophrenia
Society of
Ontario (SSO)
Operating
Grant
$35,000.00
$15,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Vigod SN
Grigoriadis
S, Dennis CL,
Stewart D
Women’s decisions about antidepressant use in pregnancy.
AFP
Operating
Grant
$30,000.00
$10,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Vigod SN
Taylor V, Grunier
A, Lin E, Seitz
D, Hermann N,
Rochon P
Risk of Readmission to Acute
Psychiatric Units in Ontario: A
Gender-based Analysis
Pfizer
Operating
Grant
$30,000.00
$30,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Research Training Fellowship
OMHF
Fellowship/
Studentship
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Risk of readmission to acute
psychiatric units in Ontario: A
gender-based analysis
Ontario Ministry
of Health and
Long Term Care
AFP Provincial
Innovation Fund
Personal
Award
$30,000.00
$7,500.00
01/04/2012 to
30/06/2012
Identification of Loci and Genes
for Autosomal Recessive Mental
Retardation and Autism in Consanguineous Pakistani Families
CIHR
Operating
$568,695.00
$145,515.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Vigod SN
Vigod SN
Seitz D, Lin
E, Grunier A,
Rochon PA,
Herrmann N,
Taylor C
Vincent J
Vincent J
De Luca V, Kennedy JL, Strauss
J, Wei X
Novel strategies for gene discovery in bipolar affective disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$757,251.00
$163,612.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Vincent J
Frankland PW,
Scherer SW
Elucidating the Role of PTCHD1
in Autism and Intellectual Disability
CIHR - OOG
Grant
$580,070.00
$61,807.00
01/10/2011 to
31/03/2012
Vincent J
Autism spectrum and associated
neurodevelopmental disorders:
Genomes to outcomes
MRI/ORF (GL2)
Grant (subgrant from
Sick Kids)
$93,692.00
$20,974.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Vincent J
Comparative functional studies
of the two MeCP2 isoforms,
MeCP2e1 and MeCP2e2
International
Rett Syndrome
Foundation
Grant
$99,312.00
$24,828.00
01/04/2011 to
30/09/2011
Voineskos
AN
Oligodendrocyte Genes, White
Matter Disconnectivity, and
Cognition in Schizophrenia: An
Imaging-Genetics Study
CIHR
Personal
Award
$172,500.00
$57,500.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
173
funding
PI
CO-PI
Voineskos
AN
Warsh JJ
Li PP, Tseng M,
Witterick I
Warsh JJ
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
rTMS treatment trial of working
memory deficits in schizophrenia and genetic prediction of
response
NARSAD
Fellowship
(Young Investigator)
$60,000.00
$20,000.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
BDNF/TRPC Signal Transduction
in Bipolar Disorder and Mood
Stabilizer Action
CIHR
Grant
$305,193.00
$101,731.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
BDNF-TRPC3 coupled signal
transduction in the pathophisiology of bipolar disorder and mood
stabilizer # PostDoc-Michael
Tseng
OMHF
Fellowship
$105,000.00
$35,000.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
CIHR Team in using a mobile
community research laboratory to improve understanding,
treatment and prevention of
addiction and mental illness comorbidities at the individual and
community level : The Ontario
Communities Project
CIHR
CIHR
$1,498,207.00
Emerging
Team Grant:
Co-morbidity
of brain disorders and other
problems
$299,674.00
01/10/2011 to
30/09/2012
Wells SG
Cairney J, Graham K, Kates N,
Rehm J, Chaition
M, Kennedy J,
Lobo D, Menzies
P, Tyndale R,
Verjee Z
Wennberg
R
Tator C, Davis
Postconcussion syndrome in
PSI
K, Green R,
professional athletes: a multidisSoklaridis S,
ciplinary study
Cassidy I, Hazrati
LN, Feinstein A,
Keightley M
Operating
Grant
$169,392.00
$56,464.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Wildes J
Marcus M,
Kaplan A
Wilson A
Wolfe D
Mood and Anxiety Subtypes in
Anorexia Nervosa
NIH
Operating
Grant
$656,374.00
$131,274.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Novel radiotracers for positron
emission tomography imaging of
fatty acid amid hydrolase (FAAH)
NIH
Grant
$430,475.00
$121,732.00
01/07/2011 to
31/03/2012
SSHRC
Operating
Grant
$2,253,741.00
$281,718.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Ballon B, LeBlanc Canadian Prevention Science
J, Craig W, Hymel Cluster for Children and Youth
S, Josephson
Support
W, Battiste M,
Crooks C, Jaffe P,
Cairney J
Wolfe D
A multi-level, cohort-sequential
study of rural adolescent dating violence victimization and
perpetration
NIH
Grant (co-PI
Jim McDonell)
$33,190.00
$19,362.00
01/09/2011 to
31/03/2012
Wong AHC
Investigation Of Mechanisms By
Which DISC1 Affects Neuronal
Function In Schizophrenia #
Fellowship-Albert Wong
CIHR
Clinician
Scientist
Phase 2
$180,000.00
$60,000.00
01/04/2011 to
30/03/2012
Functional assessment and
treatment planning for schizophrenia in a virtual-reality
environment. CA$105,000 over
two years: Jan 2011-Dec 2012
Principal Investigator:
Ontario Ministry
of Health and
Long-Term Care
Operating
Grant
$105,000.00
$52,500.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Operating
Grant
$99,516.00
$49,758.00
01/10/2011 to
30/11/2012
Wong AHC
Wong AHC
Remington G,
Foussias G,
Zawadzki J
Disc1 Gene-Environment
NARSAD
interactions in schizophrenia and
depression
funding
PI
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Total Amount Current
Amount
current
period
Woodside
DB
Pinhas
L,Katzman
D, Lackstrom
J,Dimitropoulos
G,Boachie A
Family therapy in Adolescent
Anorexia Nervosa
NIH
Operating
Grant
$625,000.00
$104,166.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Yatham
LN
Bond D, Beaulieu
S, Cervantes
P, McIntyre RS,
Milev RV, Parikh
SV, Ravindran
A, Schaffer A,
Sharma V, Wong,
HH, Young LT
Mood Stabilizer Plus Antidepressant versus Mood Stabilizer Plus
Placebo in the Maintenance
Treatment of Bipolar Disorder
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$1,450,636.00
$362,659.00
01/04/2011 to
31/03/2012
Zack MH
Kennedy JL, Lobo
DSS
Comparative effects of a D2
and mixed D1-D2 dopamine
antagonist on gambling and
amphetamine reinforcement
in pathological gamblers and
healthy
CIHR
Operating
Grant
$413,054.00
$68,842.00
01/10/2009 to
30/09/2012
Zawertailo LeFoll B, Selby P
L
Smoking cessation in a residential drug treatment program: A
randomized trial of varenicline
vs. placebo
Ontario Lung
Association
Grant
$47,600.00
$27,767.00
01/04/2011 to
31/10/2011
Zawertailo Lobo DS, Selby P,
L
Kennedy JL
Common genetic determinants
of smoking behaviour, tobacco
dependence and cancer risk: A
population-based analysis
Cancer Care
Ontario
Operating
Grant
$20,586.00
$3,000.00
01/07/2011 to
30/09/2011
Zimmermann C
Randomized trial of an early
CCSRI
palliative care team intervention for patients with metastatic
cancer: Effects on aggressiveness of care, quality of death and
caregiver bereavement
Operating
Grant
$660,568.00
$215,025.00
01/07/2011 to
30/06/2012
Dystonia Coalition Career Development Award
Operating
Grant
$50,000.00
$25,000.00
01/05/2011 to
30/04/2012
Zurowski
M
Donner A, Hales
S, Krzyzanowska
M, Leighl N, Lo
C, Mittmann N,
Rodin G
NIH
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
175
PublicationS
Journal Articles
Abbass MH, Abbass MH, Lunsky Y, (2011). Antipsychotic prescription patterns in adults with developmental disability with
and without psychotic disorder. Journal on Developmental Disabilities, 17(2), 51-55.
Abbey SE, (2012). Mindfulness and Psychiatry. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 57(2), 61-62.
Abbey SE, Charbonneau M, Tranulis C, Moss P, Baici W, Dabby L, Gautam M, Pare M, (2011). Stigma and discrimination.
Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 56(10), 1-9.
Abbey SE, De Luca E, Mauthner O, McKeever P, Shildrick M, Poole J, Gewarges M, Ross H, (2011). Qualitative interviews
vs. standardized self-report questionnaires in assessing quality of life in heart transplant recipients. Journal of heart and
lung transplantation, 30(8), 963-966.
Abraham AG, Lau B, Deeks SG, Moore RD, Zhang J, Eron JJ, Harrigan R, Gill MJ, Kitahata MM, Klein MB, Napravik S,
Rachlis AR, Rodriguez B, Rourke SB, Benson CA, et al, (2011). Missing Data in the Estimation on the Prevalance of Accumulated HIV Drug Resistance in Antiretroviral-Treated Patients in North America. American Journal of Epidemiology,
174(6), 727-735.
Abrams KM, Robinson GE, (2011). Stalking by Patients: Doctors’ Experiences in a Canadian Urban Area. The Journal of
Nervous and Mental Disease, 199(10), 738-743.
Agid O, Arenovich T, Sajeev G, Zipursky RB, Kapur S, Foussias G, Remington G, (2011). An Algorithm-Based Approach to
First-Episode Schizophrenia: Response rates over three antipsychotic trials with a retrospective data analysis. Journal of
Clinical Psychiatry, 72(11), 1439-1444.
Ahmed AT, Blair TR, McIntyre RS, (2011). Surgical treatment of morbid obesity among patients with bipolar disorder: a
research agenda. Adv Ther., 28(5), 389-400.
Aiello A, Khayeri MYE, Raja S, Peladeau N, Romano D, Leszcz M, Maunder RG, Rose M, Adam MA, Pain C, Moore A, Savage D, Schulman RB, (2011). Resilience Training for Hospital Workers in Anticipation of an Influenza Pandemic. Journal of
Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 31(1), 15-20.
Akbar N, Honarmand K, Feinstein A, (2011). Self-assessment of cognition in multiple sclerosis: The role of personality and
anxiety. Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 24(3), 115-121.
Aleksandrova LR, Souza RP, Bagby MR, Casey DM, Hodgins DC, Smith GJ, Williams RJ, Schopflocher DP, Wood RT, elGuebaly N, Kennedy JL, Lobo DSS, (2012). Genetic Underpinnings of Neuroticism: A Replication Study. Journal of Addiction Research and Therapy, 3(1), 2-5.
Ali S, Saeed K, Hughes P, (2012). Evaluation of a Mental Health Training Project in the Republic of Sudan using the Mental Health Gap Action Program Curriculum. International Psychiatry, 9(2), 43-45.
Ameis SH, Fan J, Rockel C, Voineskos AN, Lobaugh NJ, Soorya L, Wang AT, Hollander E, Anagnostou E, (2011). Impaired
structural connectivity of socio-emotional circuits in autism spectrum disorders: a diffusion tensor imaging study. PLoS
One, 6(11).
Anderson N, Davidson P, Mason WP, Gao F, Binns M, Winocur G, (2011). Right frontal lobe mediation of recollection- and
familiarity-based verbal recognition memory: Evidence from patients with tumour resections. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 23(12).
Publications - Articles
Andreescu C, Glick RM, Emeremni CA, Houck PR, Mulsant BH, (2011). Acupuncture for the treatment of major depressive
disorder - A randomized, controlled trial. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 72(8), 1129-1135.
Apisamai S, Thavorn K, Noh S, (2012). Mental Health Needs in the Thai Immigrants in Toronto, Canada. International
Journal of Culture and Mental Health, 3(1), 1-15.
Araujo JA, Nobrega JN, Raymond R, Milgram NW, (2011). Aged dogs demonstrate both functional and physiological cholinergic deficits. Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 89(2), 203-209.
Arbour-Nicitopoulos K, Faulkner G, Hsin A, Selby P, (2011). A pilot study examining the acute effects of exercise on cigarette cravings and affect among individuals with serious mental illness. Mental Health and Physical Activity, 4(2), 89-94.
Asefa D, Haque FN, Wong AHC, (2012). Anxiety and fear in a patient with meningioma compressing the left amygdala.
Neurocase, 18(2), 91-94.
Attia E, Kaplan AS, Walsh BT, Gershkovich M, Yilmaz Z, Musante D, Wang Y, (2011). Olanzepine vs. placebo for outpatients with anorexia nervosa. Psychological Medicine, 4(2), 2177-2182.
Aupperle RL, Tankersley D, Ravindran LN, Flagan T, Stein NR, Stein MB, Paulus MP, (2012). Pregabalin effects on neural
response to emotional faces. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 6, 1-42.
Awad AG, (2011). Is It Time to Consider Comorbid Substance Abuse as a New Indication for Antipsychotic Drug Development?. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 10(1177), 1-5.
Awad AG, Voruganti LNP, (2012). Measuring Quality of Life in Patients with Schizophrenia. Pharmoeconomics, 30(3), 183195.
Axelson DA, Birmaher B, Findling RL, Fristad MA, Kowatch RA, Youngstrom EA, Arnold EL, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR,
Chang KD, Delbello MP, Ryan ND, Diler RS, (2011). Concerns regarding the inclusion of temper dysregulation disorder
with dysphoria in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry,
72(9), 1257-1262.
Axelson DA, Birmaher B, Strober MA, Goldstein BI, Ha W, Gill MK, Goldstein TR, Yen S, Hower H, Hunt JI, Liao F, Iyengar
S, Dickstein D, Kim E, Ryan ND, Frankel E, Keller MB, (2011). Course of subthreshold bipolar disorder in youth: diagnostic progression from bipolar disorder not otherwise specified. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, 50(10), 1001-1016.
Azar R, (2011). Listening to the heart-brain talk: persistent depressive symptoms are associated with hsCRP in apparently
healthy individuals at high risk for coronary artery disease. Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil, 6(1), 1-7.
Azimi K, Raina P, Lunsky Y, (2011). Brief Report: Occurrence of metabolic syndrome in inpatients with intellectual disability treated with atypical antipsychotics. Journal on Developmental Disabilities, 17(2), 47-50.
Bacher I, Houle S, Xu C, Zawertailo L, Wilson AA, Selby P, George T, Sacher J, Miler L, Kish SJ, Soliman A, Rusjan P,
Meyer JH, (2011). Rapid Rise in Monoamine Oxidase A Binding In Prefrontal and Anterior Cingulate Cortex During Acute
Cigarette Withdrawal. Arch Gen Psych, 68(8), 817-826.
Bacher I, Houle S, Xu X, Zawertailo L, Soliman A, Wilson AA, Selby P, George TP, Sacher J, Miler L, Kish SJ, Rusjan P,
Meyer JH, (2011). Monoamine oxidase A binding in the prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortices during acute withdrawal
from heavy cigarette smoking. Arch Gen Psychiatry, 68(8), 817-826.
Ballester J, Goldstein T, Goldstein B, Obreja M, Axelson D, Monk K, Hickey M, Iyengar S, Farchione T, Kupfer DJ, Brent D,
Birmaher B, (2012). Is bipolar disorder specifically associated with aggression?. Bipolar Disorders, 14(3), 283-290.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
177
publications - articles
Barr MS, Farzan F, Arenovich T, Chen R, Fitzgerald PB, Daskalakis ZJ, (2011). The Effect of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation on Gamma Oscillatory Activity in Schizophrenia. PLoS One (Page e22627), 6(7).
Barr MS, Farzan F, Wing VC, George TP, Fitzgerald PB, Daskalakis ZJ, (2011). Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
and Addiction. Int Rev Psychiatry, 23(5), 454-466.
Barrett J, Wonch KE, Gonzalez A, Ali N, Steiner M, Hall GB, (2012). Maternal affect and quality of parenting experiences
are related to amygdala response to infant faces. Social Neuroscience, 7, 252-268.
Barwick M, Kimber M, Fearing G, (2011). Shifting Sands: A Case Study of Process Change in Scaling Up for EvidenceBased Practice. International Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Change Management, 10(8), 97-114.
Barwick MA, (2011). Master’s level clinician competencies in child and youth behavioral health care. Report on Emotional
and Behavioral Disorders in Youth, 11(2), 32-39.
Bassett AS, (2011). Commentary: Anxiety disorders and perceptual disturbances in adolescents with 22q11.2 deletion
syndrome treated with SSRI: a case series. Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 20(4),
311-311.
Bassett AS, (2011). Parental origin, DNA structure and the schizophrenia spectrum. American Journal of Psychiatry,
168(4), 350- 353.
Bassett AS, Fung WLA, (2011). Genetic testing in schizophrenia. Nature. Comment (#20637, 2011-04-28 04:56:44 PM)
on Piggins HD article: Schizophrenia: Zooming in. Nature, 471(6), 455-456.
Bassett AS, McDonald-McGinn DM, Devriendt K, Digilio MC, Goldenberg P, Habel A, Marino B, Oskarsdottir S, Philip N,
Sullivan K, Swillen A, Vorstman J and the International q Deletion Syndrome Consortium, (2011). Clinical practice guidelines for 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome. Journal of Pediatrics, 159(2), 332-339.
Bauer I, Wilansky-Traynor P, Rector NA, (2012). Cognitive-behavioural therapy for anxiety disorders with comorbid depression: A review. International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 5, 118-156.
Beaulieu S, Saury S, Sareen J, Tremblay J, Schutz C, McIntyre RM, Schaffer A, (2012). The Canadian Network for Mood
and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) Task Force Recommendations for the Management of Patients with Mood Disorders and
Comorbid Substance Use Disorders. Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 24(1), 38-55.
Bega S, Schaffer A, Goldstein B, Levitt A, (2012). Differentiating between Bipolar Disorder types I and II: results from the
National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC). Journal of Affective Disorders, 46(7), 865872.
Bega S, Schaffer A, Goldstein BI, Levitt A, (2012). Differentiating between Bipolar Disorder Types I and II: results from
the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC). Journal of Affective Disorders, 138(1),
46-53.
Beitchman JH, Zai C, Muir K, Berall L, Nowrouzi B, Choi E, Kennedy J, (2012). Childhood Aggression, Callous-Unemotional Traits and Oxytocin Genes. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 21(3), 125-132.
Bella T, Goldstein T, Axelson D, Obreja M, Monk K, Hickey MB, Goldstein B, Brent D, Diler RS, Kupfer D, Sakolsky D,
Birmaher B, (2011). Psychosocial functioning in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders,
133(12), 204-211.
Benach J, Malmusi D, Yasui Y, Martínez JM, Muntaner C, (2011). Beyond Rose’s strategies: a typology of scenarios of
policy impact on population health and health inequalities. Int J Health Serv, 41(1), 1-9.
Publications - Articles
Benach J, Muntaner C, Delclos C, Menéndez M, Ronquillo C, (2011). Migration and “low-skilled” workers in destination
countries. PLoS Med, 8(6).
Benach J, Tarafa G, Muntaner C, (2012). The health copay and inequality: science and policy. Gaceta Sanitaria, 26(1), 8082.
Bentz D, Steiner M, Meinlschmidt G, (2012). SIPS – Screening-Instrument für prämenstruelle Symptome: Die deutsche
Version des Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool zur Erfassung klinisch relevanter Beschwerden. Der Nervenarzt, 83(1),
33-39.
Bethell J, Rhodes AE, Bondy SJ, Lou W, Guttmann A, (2010). Repeat self-harm: An application of hurdle models. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 196(3), 243-244.
Bhui, Dinos, Mckenzie, (2011). Ethnicity and its influence on suicide rates and risk. Ethnicity and health, 17(1), 141148.
Bieling P, Hawley L L, Bloch R T,Corcoran K, Levitan R, Young T, MacQueen G, Segal Z, (2012). Treatment Specific
Changes in Decentering Following Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy Versus Antidepressant. Journal of Consulting and
Clinical Psychology, 80(3), 365-372.
Bigos KL, Bies RR, Pollock BG, Lowy JJ, Zhang F, Weinberger DR, (2011). Genetic variation in CYP3A43 explains racial
difference in olanzapine clearance. Molecular Psychiatry, 16(6), 620-625.
Binnington MJ, Zhu AZX, Renner CC, Lanier AP, Hatsukami DK, Benowitz NL, Tyndale RF, (2012). CYP2A6 and CYP2B6
genetic variation and its association with nicotine metabolism in South Western Alaska Native people. Pharmacogenomics
and Genetics, 22(6), 429-440.
Bisceglia R, Jenkins JM, Wigg KG, O’Connor TG, Moran G, Barr CL, (2012). Arginine vasopressin 1a receptor gene and
maternal behavior: evidence of association and moderation. Genes Brain Behav, 11(3), 262-268.
Blanchard R, Kuban ME, Blak T, Klassen PE, Dickey R, Cantor, JM, (2012). Sexual attraction to others: A comparison of
two models of alloerotic responding in men. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 41(1), 13-29.
Blom K, How M, Dai M, Baker B, Irvine J, Abbey S, Abramson BL, Myers M, Perkins N, Tobe SW, (2012). Hypertension
Analysis of stress Reduction using Mindfulness meditatiON and Yoga (The HARMONY Study): study protocol of a randomised control trial. BMJ Open, 2(2).
Bloss C, Berrettini W, Bergen A, Magistretti P, Duvvuri V, Strober M, Fichter M, Halmi K, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, MD, Keel
P, Klump K, La Via M, Mitchell J, Rotondo A, Treasure J, Marzola E, Schork N, Kaye W, (2011). Genetic Association of
Recovery from Eating Disorders: The Role of GABA Receptor SNPs. Neuropsychopharmaclogy, 36(11), 2222-2232.
Blumberger DM, Mulsant BH, Emeremni C, Houck P, Andreescu C, Mazumdar S, Whyte E, Rothschild AJ, Flint AJ, Meyers
BS, (2011). Impact of prior pharmacotherapy on remission of psychotic depression in a randomized controlled trial. Journal
of Psychiatric Research, 45(7), 896- 901.
Bogo M, Regehr C, Mishna F, (2011). Competency frameworks: Bridging education and practice. Canadian Social Work
Review: Forum Section on Competency, 28(2), 275-279.
Boileau I, Payer D, Houle S, Behzadi A, Rusjan PM, Tong J, Wilkins D, Selby P, George TP, Zack M, Furukawa Y, McCluskey
T, Wilson AA, Kish SJ, (2012). Higher binding of [11C]PHNO in Methamphetamine polydrug abusers: A Positron Emission
Tomography Study. Journal of Neuroscience, 32(4), 1353-1359.
Bond DJ, Hadjipavlou G, Lam RW, McIntyre RM, Beaulieu S, Schaffer A, Weiss M, (2012). The Canadian Network for Mood
and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) Task Force Recommendations for the Management of Patients with Mood and Comorbid
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 24(1), 23-37.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
179
publications - articles
Boydell KM, Gladstone BM, Volpe T, Allemang B, Stasiulis E, (2012). The production and dissemination of knowledge: A
scoping review of arts- based health research. Forum Qualitative Sozialforchung/Forum:Qualitative Social Research, 13(1).
Boydell KM, Volpe T, Cox S, Katz A, Dow R, Brunger F, Parsons J, Belliveau G, Gladstone BM, Zlotnik Shaul R, Cook S,
Kamensek O, Lafreniere D, Wong L, (2012). Ethical challenges in arts-based health research. International Journal of the
Creative Arts in Interprofessional Practice, 0(11), 0- 0.
Bradley E, Ames C, Bolton P, (2011). Psychiatric Conditions and Behavioural Problems in Adolescents with Intellectual
Disabilities. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 56(2), 102-109.
Bradley E, Lunsky E, Palucka A, Homitidis S, (2011). Recognition of Intellectual Disabilities and Autism in Psychiatric
Inpatients diagnosed with Schizophrenia and other Psychotic Disorders. Advances in Mental Health and Intellectual Disabilities, 5(6), 4-18.
Bradley E, Sinclair L, Greenbaum R, (2012). Trauma and Adolescents with Intellectual Disabilities: Interprofessional Clinical and Service Perspectives. Journal of Child and Adolescent Trauma, 5(1), 33-46.
Brandl EJ, Muller DJ, Richter MA, (2012). Pharmacogenetics of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. Pharmacogenomics,
13(1), 71-81.
Brietzke E, Kapezinski F, Grassi-Oliveira R, Grande I, Vieta E, McIntyre RS, (2011). Insulin dysfunction and allostatic load
in bipolar disorder. Exper Rev Neurother., 11(7), 1017-1028.
Brown ZJ, Nobrega JN, Erb S, (2011). Central injections of noradrenaline induce reinstatement of cocaine seeking and
increase c-fos mRNA expression in the extended amygdala. Behavioural Brain Research, 217(7), 472-476.
Bruce B, Snowdon A, Cunningham CE, Cramm CL, Whittle K, Correale H, Barwick M, Piotrowski C, Warda L, (2011). Predicting parents’ use of booster seats. Injury Prevention, 17(5), 313-318.
Buckman R, Tulsky JA, Rodin G, (2011). Empathic responses in clinical practice: Intuition or tuition?. CMAJ, 183(5),
569-571.
Caban-Martinez AJ, Lee DJ, Goodman E, Davila EP, Fleming LE, LeBlanc WG, Arheart KL, McCollister KE, Christ SL, Zimmerman FJ, Muntaner C, Hollenbeck JA, (2011). Health indicators among unemployed and employed young adults. JOEM,
53(2), 196-203.
Callaghan RC, Cunningham JK, Allebeck P, Arenovich T, Sanjeev G, Remington G, Boileau I, Kish SJ, (2012). Methamphetamine use and schizophrenia: a population-based cohort study in California. Am J Psychiatry, 169(4), 389-396.
Callaghan RC, Cunningham JK, Sykes J, Kish SJ, (2012). Increased risk of Parkinson’s disease in individuals hospitalized
with conditions related to the use of methamphetamine or other amphetamine-type drugs. Drug Alcohol Depend., 120(1),
35-40.
Cantor JM, (2012). Is homosexuality a paraphilia? The evidence for and against. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 41(1), 237247.
Cardinali DP, Srinivasan V, Brzezinski A, Brown GM, (2012). Melatonin and its analogs in insomnia and depression. Journal
of Pineal Research, 52(4), 365-375.
Caretti V, Porcelli P, Solano L, Schimmenti A, Bagby RM, Taylor GJ, (2011). Reliability and validity of the Toronto Structured Interview for Alexithymia in a mixed clinical and nonclinical sample from Italy. Psychiatry Research, 187(3), 432436.
Carlisle CE, Mamdani M, Schachar R, To T, (2012). Aftercare, emergency department visits, and readmission in adolescents. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 51(3), 283-293.
Publications - Articles
Carney C, Harris, A, Friedman, J, Segal, Z, (2011). Residual sleep beliefs and sleep disturbance following Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Major Depression. Depression and Anxiety, 28(14), 646-670.
Carter W, Grigoriadis S, Ravitz P, Ross LE, (2011). Conjoint IPT for postpartum depression: Literature review and overview
of a treatment manual. Am J Psychother, 64(4), 373-392.
Cassin SE, Rector NA, (2011). Mindfulness and the attenuation of post-event processing in social phobia: An experimental
investigation. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, 40(4), 267-278.
Cassin SE, Rector NA, (2012). The scarring effects of past depression on anxiety sensitivity: Examing risk for depressive
relapse and recurrence. International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 5, 18-27.
Cescon C, Cooper C, Chan K, Palmer AK, Klein MB, Machouf N, Loufty MR, Raboud J, Rachlis A, Ding E, Lima VD, Montaner JSG, Rouke SB, Smieja M, Tsoukas C, Hogg RS, (2011). Factors associated with virological suppresion among HIVpositive individuals on highly active antiretroviral therapy. HIV Medicine, 12(6), 352-360.
Chakraborty, King M, Leavey G, McKenzie K, (2011). Perceived racism, medication adherence, and hospital admission in
African-Caribbean patients with psychosis in the United Kingdom. social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology, 46(9),
915-923.
Chakravarty MM, Felsky D, Tampakeras M, Lerch JP, Mulsant BH, Kennedy JL, and Voineskos AN, (2012). DISC1 and striatal volume: a potential risk phenotype for mental illness. Frontiers in Neuropsychiatric imaging and stimulation, 3(57), 1-7.
Charach A, Dashti B, Carson P, Booker L, Lim CG, Lillie E, Yeung E, Ma J, Raina P, Schachar R, (2011). Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder: Effectiveness of Treatment in At-Risk Preschoolers; Long-Term Effectiveness in All Ages; and Variability in Prevalence, Diagnosis, and Treatment [Internet]. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 0.
Chivers M, Pittini R, Grigoriadis S, Villegas L, Ross LE, (2011). The relationship between sexual functioning and depressive symptomatology in postpartum women: A pilot study. J Sex Med, 8(3), 792-799.
Chmielewski M, Bagby RM, Quilty LC, Paxton R, McGee Ng SA, (2011). A (re)-evaluation of the symptom structure of borderline personality disorder. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 56(9), 530-539.
Cho SS, Pellecchia G, Ko JH, Ray N, Obeso I, Houle S, Strafella AP Effect of continuous theta burst stimulation of the
right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex on cerebral blood flow changes during decision making, (2012). Effect of continuous
theta burst stimulation of the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex on cerebral blood flow changes during decision making.
Brain stimulation, 5(2), 116-123.
Chorlton, Mckenzie, Morgan, Doody, (2012). Course and outcome of psychosis in black Caribbean populations and other
ethnic groups living in the UK: a systematic review. International journal of social psychiatry, 58(4), 400-408.
Chow EWC, Ho A, Wei C, Voormolen EHJ, Crawley A, Bassett AS, (2011). Association of schizophrenia in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome and gray matter volumetric deficits in the superior temporal gyrus. American Journal of Psychiatry, 168(5),
522-529.
Chow TW, Fridhandler JD, Binns MA, Lee A, Merrilees J, Rosen HJ, Ketelle R, Miller BL, (2012). Trajectories of behavioral
disturbance in dementia. Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 30(1).
Chow TW, Gao F, Links KA, Ween JE, Tang-Wai DF, Ramirez J, Scott CJM, Freedman M, Stuss DT, Black SE, (2011). Visual
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Hong JS, Kral MJ, (2012). The social ecology of adolescent-initiated parent abuse. Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 43(3), 431-454.
Hong JS, Kral MJ, (2011). Understanding suicide among sexual minority youth in America: An ecological systems analysis.
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Howell D, Hack TF, Oliver TK, Chulak T, Mayo S, Aubin M, Chasen M, Earle CC, Friedman AJ, Green E, Jones GW, Jones
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Jonassaint CR, Peng J, Thornton L, Bloss C, Berrettini W, Kaye W, Bergen A, Magistretti P, Strober M, Crow S, Fichter
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Kamkar K, Doyle AB, Markiewicz D,, (2012). Insecure Attachment to Parents and Depressive Symptoms in Early Adolescence: Mediating Roles of Attributions and Self-esteem. International Journal of Psychological Studies, 4(2), 3-18.
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Kidd S, Bajwa J, Mckenzie K, Ganguli R, (2012). Cognitive Remediation for Individuals with Psychosis in a Supported
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Kidd SA, (2012). Seeking a Coherent Strategy in our Response to Homeless and Street-Involved Youth: A Historical Review
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Kidd SA, Kaur J, Haji Khamneh B, McKenzie K, Ganguli R, (2012). Implementing Cognitive Remediation in a Supported
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Kidd SA, Liborio R, (2011). Commercial sexual exploitation of youth in Brazil and Canada: An integration of youth perspectives. Youth and Society, 43(3), 982-1009.
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Kim IH, Khang YH, Cho SI, Chun H, Muntaner C, (2011). Gender, professional and non-professional work, and the changing pattern of employment- related inequality in poor self-rated health, 1995-2006 in South Korea. J Prev Med Public
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Kupfer DJ, Angst J, Berk M, Dickerson F, Frangou S, Frank E, Goldstein BI, Harvey A, Laghrissi-Thode F, Leboyer M,
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Kitto S, Sargeant J, Reeves S, Silver I, (2012). Towards a sociology of knowledge translation: the importance of being disinterested in knowledge translation. Advances in Health Sciences Education, 17(2), 289-299.
Kral MJ, (2012). Postcolonial suicide among Inuit in Arctic Canada. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 36(2), 306-325.
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Kushner SC, Tackett JL, Bagby RM, (2012). The structure of internalizing disorders in middle childhood and evidence for
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Lachenmeier DW, Monakhova YB, Samokhvalov AV, Rehm J, (2012). Causality between polyhexamethyleneguanidine occurrence in unrecorded alcohol and cholestatic hepatitis outbreak in Russia. Clinical Toxicology, 50(2), 154-155.
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Lafrance Robinson A, Boachie A, Lafrance G, (2012). Assessment and Treatment of Pediatric Eating Disorders: A Survey of
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Langmuir JL, Kirsh SF, Classen CC, (2012). A pilot study of body-oriented group psychotherapy: Adapting sensorimotor
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Racine N, Pillai Riddell R, Flora D, Garfield H, Greenberg S, (2012). A Longitudinal Examination of Verbal Reassurance
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Rajah MN, Languay R, Grady CL, (2011). Age-related changes in right middle frontal gyrus volumes correlate with altered
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Roest AM, Thombs BD, Grace SL, Stewart DE, Abbey SE, de Jonge P, (2011). Somatic/affective symptoms, but not cognitive/affective symptoms, of depression after acute coronary syndrome are associated with 12 month all cause mortality.
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Seeman MV, (2012). Intervention to prevent child custody loss in mothers with schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research and
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Seeman MV, (2012). Menstrual exacerbation of schizophrenia symptoms. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 125(5), 363371.
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Shahid A, Khairandish A, Gladanac B, Shapiro C, (2012). Peeking into the minds of troubled adolescents: The utility of
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Simpson AIF, (2011). Recovery paradigm in Forensic Mental Health. Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health, 21(5), 299306.
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Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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Skilling TA, Doiron JM, Seto MC, (2011). Understanding differences in self and parent reports among adolescent sex and
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Sturgess JE, George TP, Kennedy JL, Heinz A, Müller DJ, (2011). Pharmacogenetics of alcohol, nicotine and drug addiction treatments. Addict Biol., 16(3), 357-376.
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Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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Suurvalli H, Hodgins DC, Toneatto T, Cunningham JC, (2012). Motivators for seeking gambling-related treatment among
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Tang D, Hello B, Mroziewicz M, Fellows L, Tyndale RF, Dagher A, (2012). Genetic variation in CYP2A6 predicts neural reactivity to smoking cues as measured using fMRI. NeuroImage, 60(4), 2136-2143.
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Taylor G, Bagby RM, (2011). Genetic contributions to alexithymia. Psychosomatic Medicine, 73(7), 633-635.
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Thase ME, Larsen KG, Kennedy SH, (2011). Assessing the ‘true’ effect of active antidepressant therapy v. placebo in major
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Thomson RH, Maller JJ, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB, (2011). Blood oxygenation changes resulting from suprathreshold
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Tobler D, Greutmann M, Colman JM, Greutmann-Yantiri M, Librach LS, Kovacs AH, (2012). End-of-life in adults with congenital heart disease: a call for early communication. International Journal of Cardiology, 155(3), 72-79.
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Tuck, Bhui, Nanchahal, Mckenzie, (2011). Suicide by burning in the South Asian origin population in England and Wales,
a secondary analysis of a national data set. BMJ open e000326, 1(2).
Turner NE, Liu E, Toneatto T, (2011). What does a random line look like: an experimental study. International Journal of
Mental Health & Addiction, 9(1), 64-71.
Uchida H, Chow TW, Mamo DC, Kapur S, Mulsant BH, Houle S, Pollock BG, Graff-Guerrero A, (2011). Effects of aging on
5-HT2AR binding: a HRRT PET study with and without partial volume corrections. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 26(12), 1300-1308.
Uchida H, Mamo DC, Pollock BG, Suzuki T, Tsunoda K, Watanabe K, Mimura M, Bies RR, (2012). Predicting plasma
concentration of risperidone associated with dosage change: a population pharmacokinetic study. Therapeut Drug Monit,
34(2), 182-187.
Ulturgasheva O, Wexler L, Kra MJ, Allen J, Mohatt GV, Nystad K, Ingstad B, (2011). Navigating international, interdisciplinary and indigenous collaborative inquiry. Journal of Community Engagement and Scholarship, 4(3), 50-58.
Vachon MLS, (2012). Reflections on the Grief of Nurses. Grief Matters, 15(1), 8-12.
Vahid Shahidi F, Muntaner C, Puig Barrachina V, Benach J, (2011). Recortes Profundos que hay que cortar por lo sano:
crisis economica, politicas sociales y danos en salud. Papeles de Relaciones Ecosociales y Cambio Global, 113, 107-120.
Valiengo LL, Soeiro-de-Souza MG, Marques AH, Moreno DH, Juruena MF, Andreazza AC, Gattaz WF, Machado-Vieira R,
(2012). Plasma cortisol in first episode drug-naïve mania: differential levels in euphoric versus irritable mood. J Affect
Disord., 138(1), 149-152.
Publications - Articles
Van Lieshout RJ, Taylor VH, Boyle MH, (2011). Pre-pregnancy and pregnancy obesity and neurodevelopmental outcomes in
offspring: a system review. Obes Rev, 12(5), 548-559.
van Mierlo T, Voci S, Lee S, Fournier R, Selby P, (2012). Superusers in Social Networks for Smoking Cessation: Analysis
of Demographic Characteristics and Posting Behavior From the Canadian Cancer Society’s Smokers’ Helpline Online and
StopSmokingCenter.net. J Med Internet Res, 26(14), 3-3.
Vasdev N, Sadovski O, Moran MD, Parkes J, Meyer JH, Houle S, Wilson AA, (2011). Development of new radiopharmaceuticals for imaging monoamine oxidase B. Nucl Med Biol, 38(7), 933-943.
Verster JC, Spence DW, Shahid A, Pandi-Perumal SR, Roth T, (2011). Zopiclone as positive control in studies examining
the residual effects of hypnotic drugs on driving ability. Curr Drug Saf, 4(6), 209-218.
Villegas L, McKay K, Dennis C-L, Ross LE, (2011). Postpartum Depression among Rural Women from Developed and Developing Countries: A Systematic Review. Journal of Rural Health, 27(3), 278-288.
Vinall J, Pillai Riddell R, Greenberg S, (2011). The Influence of Culture on Maternal Soothing Behaviours and Infant Pain
Expression in the Immunization Context. Journal of Pain Research and Management, 16(4), 234-238.
Voineskos AN, Lerch JP, Felsky D, Tiwari A, Rajji TK, Miranda D, Lobaugh NJ, Pollock BG, Mulsant BH, Kennedy JL,
(2011). The ZNF804A gene: Characterization of a novel neural mechanism for major psychoses. Neuropsychopharmacology, 36(9), 1871-1878.
Voineskos AN, Lett TAP, Lerch JP, Tiwari A, Ameis SH, Rajji TK, Muller DJ, Mulsant BH, Kennedy JL, (2011). Neurexin-1
and frontal lobe white matter: An overlapping intermediate phenotype for schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorders.
PLoS ONE, 6(6), 10-1371.
Voineskos AN, Rajji TK, Lobaugh NJ, Miranda D, Shenton ME, Kennedy JL, Pollock BG, Mulsant BH, (2012). Age-related
decline in white matter tract integrity and cognitive performance: A DTI tractography and structural equation modeling
study. Neurobiology of Aging, 33(1), 21-34.
Walker RL, Gee ME, Bancej C, Nolan RP, Kaczorowski J, Joffres M, Bienek A, Gwadry-Sridhar F, Campbell NRC, (2011).
Health behaviour advice from health professional to Canadian adults with hypertension: Results from a national survey.
Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 27(4), 446- 454.
Wassenaar CA, Dong Q, Wei Q, Amos CI, Spitz MR, Tyndale RF, (2011). Combined Impact of CYP2A6and CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 Variation on Smoking Behaviors and Lung Cancer Risk. Journal National Cancer Institute, 103(17), 13421346.
Watkins K, Way C, Fiander J, Meadus R, Esplen MJ, Green J, Ludlow V, Parfrey P, (2011). Lynch syndrome: barriers to and
facilitators of screening and disease management. Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice, 9(8), 1-9.
Watson C, Quilty LC, Bagby RM, (2011). Differentiating bipolar disorder from major depressive disorder using the MMPI2-RF: A receiver operating characteristics analysis. Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 33(3), 368374.
Weinberger AH, George TP, McKee SA, (2011). Differences in smoking expectancies in smokers with and without a history
of major depression. Addictive Behaviors, 36(1), 434-437.
Weinberger AH, McKee SA, George TP, (2012). Smoking cue reactivity in adult smokers with and without depression: a
pilot study. The American Journal on Addictions, 21(1), 136-144.
Weiss JA, Weiss JA, Slusarczyk M, Lunsky Y, (2011). Individuals with intellectual disabilities who live with family and experience psychiatric crisis: Who uses the emergency department and who stays home?. Journal of Mental Health Research in
Intellectual Disabilities, 4(3), 158- 171.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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publications - articles
Wells S, Flynn A, Graham K, Rehm J, Cairney J, Kates N, Kennedy JL, Lobo DSS, Chaiton M, Menzies P, Tyndale RF, Verjee
Z, (2011). Using a Mobile Laboratory to Study Mental Health, Addictions and Violence: A Research Plan. Challenges, 2(1),
1-18.
Wessels AM, Bies RR, Pollock BG, Schneider LS, Lieberman JA, Stroup S, Li CH, Coley K, Kirshner MM, Marder SR,
(2011). Population pharmacokinetic modeling of ziprasidone in patients with schizophrenia from the CATIE study. Journal
of Clinical Pharmacology, 51(11), 1587-1591.
White AR, Rampes H, Liu JP, Stead LF, Campbell J, (2011). Acupuncture and related interventions for smoking cessation.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 1.
White SE, White SE, McMorris C, Weiss JA, Lunsky Y, (2012). The experience of crisis in families of individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder across the lifespan. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 21, 457-465.
Whitehead C, Austin Z, Hodges BD, (2011). Flower Power: The Armored Expert in the CanMEDS Competency Framework?.
Advances in Health Science Education and Practice, 16(5), 681-694.
Wijeyesinghe A, Madan R, (2011). Managing Apathy. JAMDA, 12(8), 554-555.
Wiljer D, Urowitz S, Barbera L, Chivers ML, Quartey NK, Ferguson SE, To M, Classen CC, (2011). A qualitative study of
an Internet-based support group for women with sexual distress due to gynecologic cancer. Journal of Cancer Education,
26(3), 451-458.
Wilkinson K, Shapiro C, (2012). Nonrestorative sleep: Symptom or unique diagnostic entity?. Sleep Medicine, 13(6), 561569.
Williams JM, Anthenelli RM, Morris CD, Treadow J, Thompson JR, Yunis C, George TP, (2012). A randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled study evaluating the safety and efficacy of varenicline for smoking cessation in patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 73(5), 654-660.
Wing VC, Bacher I, Sacco KA, George TP, (2011). Neuropsychological performance in patients with schizophrenia and controls as a function of cigarette smoking status. Psychiatry Research, 188(1), 320-326.
Wing VC, Moss TG, Rabin RA, George TP, (2012). Effects of cigarette smoking status on delay discounting in schizophrenia
and healthy controls. Addictive Behaviors, 37(2), 67-72.
Wing VC, Wass CE, Soh DS, George TP, (2012). A review of neurobiological vulnerability factors and treatment implications
for co-morbid tobacco dependence in schizophrenia. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1248(1), 89-106.
Winocur G, Becker S, Luu P, Rosenzweig S, Wojtowicz M, (2012). Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis and Memory Interference. Behavioural Brain Research, 227(2), 464-469.
Winocur G, Binns MA, Tannock I, (2011). Donepezil reduces cognitive impairment associated with anti-cancer drugs in a
mouse model. Neuropharmacology, 61(8), 1222-1228.
Winocur G, Henkelman M, Wojtowicz M, Zhang H, Binns MA, Tannock I, (2012). The Effects of Chemotherapy on Cognitive
Function in a Mouse Model: A Prospective Study. Clinical Cancer Research, 18(11).
Winocur G, Moscovitch M, (2011). Memory Transformation and Systems Consolidation. Journal of International Neuropsychological Society, 17(5), 766-780.
Wiseman-Hakes C, Victor JC, Brandys C, Murray BJ, (2011). Impact of post-traumatic hypersomnia in functional recovery
of cognition and communication. Brain Injury, 20(3), 1-10.
Publications - Articles
Wiwanitkit V, Jerrell JM, Mcintyre RS, Tripathi A, (2011). Cardiometabolic conditions in patients with schizophrenia. clin
schizophr relat psychoses, 5(1).
Wolfe DA, Crooks CV, Chiodo D, Hughes R, Ellis W, (2012). Observations of adolescent peer resistance skills following a
classroom-based healthy relationship program: A post-intervention comparison. Prevention Science, 13(4), 196-205.
Wolfe DA, McIsaac C, (2011). Distinguishing between poor/dysfunctional parenting and child emotional maltreatment.
Child Abuse and Neglect, 35(11), 802-813.
Wong AH, Liu F, (2012). Uncoupling the dopamine D1-D2 receptor complex: a novel target for antidepressant treatment.
Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 91(2), 298-302.
Woodward TS, Menon M, (2011). Considerations for analysis of source monitoring data when investigating hallucinations in
schizophrenia research. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 261, 157-164.
Wu BS, Weinberger, AH Mancuso, E, Wing, VC Haji-Khamneh, B Levinson, AJ George, TP, (2012). A preliminary feasibility
study of varenicline for smoking cessation in bipolar disorder. Journal of Dual Diagnosis, 8(2), 131-132.
Wu K, Hanna GL, Rosenberg DR, Arnold PD, (2012). The role of glutamate signaling in the pathogenesis and treatment of
obsessive-compulsive disorder. Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behaviour, 100(4), 726-735.
Wu Y, Blichowski M, Daskalakis ZJ, Wu Z, Liu CC, Cortez MA, Snead OC rd, (2011). Evidence that Clozapine Directly Interacts on the GABAB Receptor. Neuroreport, 22(13), 637-641.
Wu Z, Schimmele CM, Penning MJ, Zheng C, Noh S, (2012). The effect of marital status on duration of treatment for mental illness. Canadian Studies in Population, 39(2), 109-124.
Xie W, Barr CL, Kim A, Yue F, Lee AY, Eubanks J, Dempster EL, Ren B, (2012). Base-resolution analyses of parent-of-origin
and sequence dependent allele specific DNA methylation in the mouse genome. Cell, 148(4), 816-831.
Yaghoub Zadeh Z, Farnia F, Geva E, (2012). Towards modeling reading comprehension and reading fluency in English language learners. Reading and Writing: An interdisciplinary Journal, 25(1), 163-187.
Yan Y, Pushparaj A, Gamaleddin I, Steiner RC, Picciotto MR, Roder J, Le Foll B, (2012). Nicotine-taking and nicotine-seeking in C57BI/6J mice without prior operant training or food restriction. Behav Brain Res, 230(1), 34-39.
Yan Y, Pushparaj A, Le Strat Y, Gamaleddin I, Barnes C, Justinova Z, Goldberg SR, Le Foll B, (2012). Blockade of dopamine d4 receptors attenuates reinstatement of extinguished nicotine-seeking behaviour in rats. Neuropsychopharmacology,
37(3), 685-696.
Yee J, Unsworth K, Suskin N, Reid RD, Jamnik V, Grace SL, (2011). Primary care provider perceptions of intake transition
records and shared care with outpatient chronic disease management programs. BMC Health Services Research, 11, 231231.
Yeh LL, Liu SK, Hwu HG, (2011). Needs and demands for community psychiatric rehabilitation programs from the perspectives of patients and caregivers. Community Mental Health Journal, 47(4), 415-423.
Yeshayahu J, Pacak K, Tallett S, De Souza C, M Palmert, (2011). When is a phaeo not a phaeo? Depression in an adolescent leading to a phaeochromocytoma-like biochemical profile. Clinical Endocrinology, 75(4), 567-568.
Yilmaz Z, Kaplan AS, Levitan R, Zai, C, Kennedy J, (2011). COMT Val158Met Variant and Functional Haplotypes Associated with Childhood ADHD History in Women with Bulimia Nervosa. Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology & Biological
Psychiatry, 35(3), 948-952.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
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publications - articles
Yilmaz Z, Kaplan AS, Zawertailo LA, (2012). Bulimia nervosa and alcohol use disorder: evidence for. Curr Psychiatry Rev,
8(1), 69-81.
Yim CY, Soczynska JS, Kennedy SH, Woldeyohannes HO, Brietzke E, McIntyre RS, (2012). The effect of overweight/obesity
on cognitive function in euthymic individuals with bipolar disorder. European Psychiatry, 27(3), 223-228.
Yoon SY, Jain U, Shapiro C, (2012). Sleep in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in children and adults: Past, present,
and future. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 16(4), 371-388.
Yucel K, Nazarow A, Taylor VH, Macdonald K, Hall GB, MacQueen GM, (2012). Cerebellar vermis volume in major depressive disorder. Brain Struct Funct., 0(06).
Zaheer J, Links P, Law S, Shera W,Hodges B, Tsang KT, Huang XZ, Liu L, (2012). Developing a matrix model of rural suicide prevention - a Canada- China collaboration. International Journal of Mental Health, 40(4), 28-49.
Zai C, Ehtesham S, Choi E, Nowrouzi B, deLuca V, Stankovich L, Davidge K, Freeman N, King N, Kennedy JL, Beitchman
JH, (2012). Dopaminergic System Genes in Childhood Aggression: Possible Role for DRD2. World Journal of Biological Psychiatry, 13(1), 65-74.
Zariffa J, Nagai MK, Schuettler M, Stieglitz T, Daskalakis ZJ, Popovic MR, (2011). A framework for the discrimination of
neural pathways using multi- contact nerve cuff electrodes. Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol oc, 2011, 4645-4648.
Zimmermann C, Burman D, Swami N, Krzyzanowska MK, Leighl N, Moore M, Rodin G, Tannock I, (2011). Determinants of
quality of life in patients with advanced cancer. Supportive Care in Cancer, 19(5), 621-629.
Zimmermann C, Cheung WY, Lo C, Rodin G, (2011). Edmonton Symptom Assessment System screening and depression at
the end of life. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 29(22), 3107-3108.
Zucker KJ, Bradley SJ, Owen-Anderson A, Kibblewhite SJ, Wood H, Singh D, Choi K, (2012). Demographics, behavior problems, and psychosexual characteristics of adolescents with gender identity disorder or transvestic fetishism. Journal of Sex
& Marital Therapy, 38(2), 151-189.
Zucker KJ, Wood H, (2011). Assessment of gender variance in children. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North
America, 20(4), 665-680.
Zucker KJ, Wood H, Singh D, Bradley SJ, (2012). A developmental, biopsychosocial model for the treatment of children
with gender identity disorder. Journal of Homosexuality, 59(3), 369-397.
Zucker N, Von Holle A, Thornton LM, Strober M, Plotnicov K, Klump KL, Brandt H, Crawford S, Crow S, Fichter MM, Halmi
KA, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, Keel P, Lavia M, Mitchell JE, Rotondo A, (2011). The significance of repetitive hair-pulling
behaviors in eating disorders. J Clin Psycho, 67(4), 391-403.
Publications - book chapters
Arnold PD, Taillefer S, “Genetics of childhood and adolescent anxiety” In: Handbook of Child and Adolescent Anxiety Disorders, McKay D, Storch EA. Springer, 2011, 49-73.
Awad AG, “Quality of Life Measurement in Schizophrenia” In: Guide to Assessment Scales in Schizophrenia, Keefe R,
Springer Healthcare Ltd, 2012, 41-45.
Barwick M, Buchanan D, Cheng M, Manion I, Ruffalo F, Short K, “Methods for engaging key stakeholders in mental health”
In: Implementing evidence-informed practice: international perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press Inc,
2012, 75-89.
Benach J, Muntaner C, “Science for the People” In: Ciencia en el Agora, Rodriguez Farre E, Lopez Arnal S. El Viejo Topo,
2012, 13-24.
Benach J, Muntaner C, Castedo A, Chung, Demiral Y, “Employment and working conditions as health determinants in Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants” In: Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants, The WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health Knowledge Networks, Lee JH, Sadana R. WHO, 2012,
294-318.
Boydell KM, Jackson S, Strauss JS, “Help-seeking experiences of youth with first episode psychosis: A research-based
dance production” In: Hearing Voices: Qualitative Inquiry in Early Psychosis, Boydell KM, Ferguson HB. Wilfrid Laurier
University Press, 2012, 25-44.
Boydell KM, Stasiulis E, Gladstone BM, Volpe T, Addington J, Goering P, Krupa T, McCay E, “Recognition of psychosis in
the pathway to mental health care” In: Hearing Vices: Qualitative Inquiry in Early Psychosis, Boydell KM, Ferguson HB.
Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2012, 9-24.
Brydon-Miller M, Kral MJ, Maguire P Noftke S, Sabhlok A, “Jazz and the Banyon Tree: Roots and Riffs in Participatory Action Research” In: The Sage Handbook of Qualitative Research, Denzin N, Lincoln Y. Sage, 2011, 387-400.
Caspary A, “Loneliness and Longing in No Country for Old Men” In: Loneliness and Longing Conscious and Unconscious
Aspects, Willock B, Routledge, 2012, 147-156.
Cassin S E, Rector N R, “Psychological models of obsessive-compulsive and spectrum disorders: From psychoanalytic to
behavioural conceptualizations” In: Oxford handbook of obsessive-compulsive and spectrum disorders, Steketee G, Oxford
University Press, 2012, 209-232.
Castel S, Rush B, “Screening” In: Mental Health and Substance Use Book Series. Book 5, Care in Mental Health Substance Use, David B Cooper, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd., 2011, 89-105.
Davis DA, Goldman J, Perrier L, Silver IL, “Continuing Professional Development” In: A Practical Guide for Medical Teachers: 4rd Edition, Dent JA, Harden RM. Elsevier Press, 2012, 46-54.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 16 Integrative themes, lessons learned and future challenges” In: Implementing evidence- informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 231-241.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 2 Pushing the envelope: Future directions for evidence-informed practice” In: Implementing
evidence-informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 11-26.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 1 Introduction” In: Implementing evidence-informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K,
Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 1-8.
Esplen MJ, Hunter J, “Therapy in the Setting of Genetic Predisposition to Cancer” In: Handbook of Psychotherapy in Cancer Care, Watson M, Kissane D. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2011, 201-212.
Esplen MJ, Hunter J, Kash K, “The need for psychosocial support in genetic counseling and genetic testing” In: Clinical
Psycho-oncology: An International Perspective, Grassi L, Riba M., 2012, 223-226.
Farzan F, Barr MS, Fitzgerald PB, Daskalakis ZJ, “Combination of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation with Electromyography and Electroencephalography: Application in Diagnosis of Neuropsychiatric Disorders” In: EMG Methods for Evaluating
Muscle and Nerve Function, Schwartz M, 2012, 341-372.
Feinstein A, “Psychiatric Disorders in Multiple Sclerosis” In: In cognitive impairment in Mulitiple Sclerosis, Elselvier,
2011, 1-1.
Foussias G, Daskalakis ZJ, “The patient who is psychotic” In: Psychiatry in Primary Care: a Concise Canadian Pocket
Guide, Goldbloom D, Davine J (eds). Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 2011.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
223
Publications - book chapters
Fung K, “Psychological Acculturation” In: Encyclopedia of Immigrant Health, Loue S, Sajatovic M. Springer, 2012, 12331234.
Fung K, “Psychotherapy” In: Encyclopedia of Immigrant Health, Loue S, Sajatovic M. Springer, 2012, 1236-1238.
George TP, “Nicotine and Tobacco” In: Cecil Textbook of Medicine, 24th edition, Goldman L, Schaffer A (eds). Elsevier,
2011, 268-273.
Goldbloom D, “The Patient With An Eating Disorder” In: Psychiatry in Primary Care: A Concise Canadian Pocket Guide,
Goldbloom D, Davine J (eds). CAMH, 2011, 129-144.
Grewal S, Pinhas L, “Bulimia Nervosa in Children and Adolescents” In: The Dance of Sleeping and Eating among Adolescents: Normal and Pathological Perspectives, Latzer Y, Tzischinsky O. Nova Publishers, 2011, 57-68.
Halpern J, Maunder RG, “Acute and chronic workplace stress in emergency medical technicians and paramedics” In:
Handbook of Stress in the Occupations, Langan-Fox J, Cooper CL. Edward Elgar, 2011, 135-156.
Harris GT, Rice ME, “Filicide and child maltreatment: Prospects for ultimate explanation” In: The Oxford handbook of
evolutionary perspectives on violence, homicide, and war, Shackelford T, Weekes-Shackelford V. Oxford University Press,
2012, 99- 105.
Herrmann N, “Common medical conditions that might affect competence in the elderly: The 4Ds (Depression, Delirium,
Dementia, Drugs)” In: Special Lectures 2010: A Medical-Legal Approach to Estate Planning and Decision Making for Older
Clients, Law Society of Upper Canada, Irving Law, 2011, 109-114.
Jones JM, Grunfeld E, “The Challenges of Care for Cancer Survivors” In: Quality Health Care for Cancer Survivors: Practice,
Policy and Research, Feuerstein M, Ganz P. Springer, 2011, 3-25.
Kaplan AS, Yilmaz Y, “Eating Disorders in Primary Mental Health Clinics” In: Companion to Primary Care Mental Health,,
Ivbijaro G, World Organization of Family Doctors, 2011, 23-46.
Kennedy SH, Grigoriadis S, Parikh S, “Depression” In: Therapeutic Choices, Canadian Pharmacists Association, Canadian
Pharmacists Association, 2011, 1-1.
Kish SK, “The pathology of methamphetamine use in the human brain” In: Book 2: The Effects of Drug Abuse on the Human Nervous System, Madras B, Kuhar M. Neuroscience-Net, 2012.
Kissane DW, Levin T, Hales S, Lo C, Rodin G, “Psychotherapy for depression in cancer and palliative care.” In: Depression
and Cancer, Kissane DW, Maj M, Sartorius N. Wiley-Blackwell, 2011, 177-206.
Kral MJ, Idlout L, “Its all in the family: Well-being among Inuit in Arctic Canada” In: Happiness across cultures; Views of
happiness and quality of life in non-Western cultures, Selin H, Davey G. Springer, 2012, 387-398.
Lanctôt KL, Kircanski I, Chau SA, Herrmann N, “The Current Status of Alzheimer DiseaseTreatment: Why we need better
therapies and how we will develop them” In: Frontiers in Neuroscience, Alzheimer’s Disease: Targets for New Clinical Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategies, Rudolf AS, Wegrzyn RD. CRC Press, 2012, 117-162.
Lawrence AA, Zucker KJ, “Gender identity disorders” In: Adult psychopathology and diagnosis (6th ed), Hersen M, Beidel
DC. John Wiley & Sons, 2012, 601-635.
Lee JH, Sadana R, Muntaner C, “The way forward: acting on the evidence and filling knowledge gaps determinants” In:
Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants, The WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health
Knowledge Networks, Lee JH, Sadana R. WHO, 2012, 294-318.
Leszcz M, “Psychotherapy supervision and the development of the psychotherapist” In: On Becoming a Psychotherapist,
Klein RH, Bernard HS, Schermer VL. Oxford University Press, 2011, 114-143.
Leszcz M, Kobos J, “Wie wissenchaftliche evidenz praktisch genutz warden kann: Gruppenpsychotherapie und die - Leitlinien for die klinische Praxis - der Amercian Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA)” In: Gruppen Psychotherapie, Strauh
B, Mattke D. Springer, 2012, 214-227.
Leszcz M, Malat J, “The interpersonal model of group psychotherapy” In: The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Group Psychotherapy, Kleinberg JL, 2011, 33-58.
Li M, Boquiren V, Lo C, Rodin G, “Depression and anxiety in supportive oncology” In: Supportive Oncology: Expert Consult
Online and Print, Davis MP, Fever P, Ortner P, Zimmermann C. Elsevier, 2011, 528-540.
Li M, Boquiren V, Lo C, Rodin G, “Anxiety and Depression” In: Supportive Oncology, Davis M, Feyer P, Ortner P, Zimmermann C. Elsevier, 2011, 528-540.
Publications - book chapters
Li M, Rodin G, “Depression in the medically ill” In: The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Psychosomatic Medicine: Psychiatric Care of the Medically III (2nd Edition), Levenson JL, American Psychiatric Publishing, 2011, 175-197.
Li M, Rodin G, “Altruism and Suffering in the Context of Cancer: Implications of a Relational Paradigm” In: Pathological
Altruism, Oakley B, Knafo A, Madhavan G, Sloan D, Wilson. Oxford University Press, 2012, 138-155.
Li M, Solty H, Rodin G, “Anxiety and Depression” In: Palliative Medicine: A Case-Based Manual, Oneschuk D, Hagan N,
Macdonald N. Oxford University Press, 2011, 197-208.
MacKay SA, Feldberg A, Ward AK, Marton P, “Firesetting” In: Encyclopedia of Adolescence, Levesque RJR, Springer,
2011, 1036-1048.
MacKay SA, Ruttle E, Ward AK, “The developmental aspects of firesetting” In: Firesetting and Mental Health: Theory, Research, & Practice, Dickens GL, Sugarman PA, Gannon TA. RCPsych Publications, 2012, 84-106.
Markowitsch HJ, Staniloiu A, “Amnesia: Neuropsychology, neurology, and psychiatry” In: Advances in Psychology Research,
Columbus F, Nova Science Publishers, 2011, 99-132.
Markowitsch HJ, Staniloiu A, “Neurobiological aspects of individual violent behaviour” In: Violence in clinical psychiatry:
Challenges for care and treatment, Needham I, Callaghan P, Palmstierna T, Nijman H, Oud N. Kavanah, 2011, 65-68.
Maunder RG, “Does stress matter?” In: Clinical Dilemmas in Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Irving PM, Siegel CA, Rampton
DS, Shanahan F. Wiley-Blackwell, 2011, 215-217.
Maunder RG, Hunter JJ, “Adult attachment and health: The interpersonal dance in medical settings” In: A Psychodynamic
Understanding of Modern Medicine: Placing the Person at the Center of Care, O’Reilly-Landry M, Radcliffe Medical Publishing, 2012, 93-107.
McCullagh S, Feinstein A, “Cognitive Deficits following traumatic brain injury” In: American Psychiatric Press, American
Psychiatric Press, 2011, 1-1.
McFarlane T, Trottier K, Polivy J, Herman CP, Arsenault J, Boivin M, “Eating Disorders” In: Psychopathology: Foundations
for a Contemporary Understanding, Maddux JE, Winstead BA. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2012, 517-552.
McIntyre RS, “Asenapine in bipolar disorder” In: Bipolar Psychopharmacotherapy, Hagop S, Akiskal H, Tohen M. WileyBlackwell Ltd, 2011.
Mishna F, Beran T, Poole A, Gadalla T, Daciuk J, “The cyber world and cyber bullying: Differences between children and
parents.” In: Creating a world without bullying, Volume 3, Pepler D, Cummings J, Craig W. Canada: National Printers.,
2011, 101- 112.
Mulsant BH, Pollock BG, “Psychopharmacology” In: Essentials of Geriatric Psychiatry, Second Edition, Blazer DG, Steffens
DC. Arlington: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2012, 257-303.
Muntaner C, Borrell C, Ng E, Chung H, Espelt A,Rodrigues Sanz M, Benach J, O’Campo P, “The Place of Politics in Social
Epidemiology” In: Rethinking Social Epidemiology, O’Campo P, Dunn J. Springer, 2011, 175-204.
Muntaner C, Chung H, Mahmood Q, Armada F, “History Is Not Over. The Bolivarian Revolution, Barrio Adentro and Health
Care in Venezuela” In: The Revolution in Venezuela, Ponniah T, Eastwood J, Harvard Univ Press, 2011, 225-256.
Nakai Y, Olmsted MP, McFarlane T, Wonderlich SA, Crosby RD, “Comparison of female Japanese and Canadian eating
disorder patients on the Eating Disorder Inventory” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders:
Scientific Findings for DSM-5, Striegel-Moore RH, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 351-364.
Nakai Y, Olmsted MP, McFarlane T, Wonderlich SA, Crosby RD, “Comparison of Japanese and Canadian Eating Disorder
Patients on the Eating Disorder Inventory” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders, StriegelMoore RH, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 351-364.
Nicolini H, Arnold PD, Nestadt G, Lanzagorta N, Kennedy JL, “Overview of genetics and obsessive-compulsive disorder” In:
Obsessive-Compulsive Behavior Spectrum Disorders: Refining the Research Agenda for DSM-V, Hollander E, Kim S, Braun
A, Simeone D, Zohar J. American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc, 2011, 141-160.
Norris M, Bryden P, Pinhas L, “Anorexia Nervosa in Adolescents: A review of clinical and treatment issues” In: The Dance
of Sleeping and Eating among Adolescents: Normal and Pathological Perspectives, Latzer Y, Tzischinsky O. Nova Publishers, 2011, 39- 55.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
225
Publications - book chapters
Norris ML, Bondy SJ, Pinhas L, “Epidemiology of Eating Disorders in Children and Adolescents” In: Eating Disorders in
Child and Adolescents: A Clinical Handbook, Le Grange D, Lock J. Guilford Publications Inc, 2011, 63-89.
Olmsted MP, Carter JC, Pike KM, “Relapse prevention” In: A Collaborative Approach to Eating Disorders, Alexander J, Treasure J. Routledge, 2011, 201-212.
Olmsted MP, Wonderlich SA, McFarlane T, Crosby RD, “Empirical Taxonomy of Patients with Eating Disorders” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders, Striegel-Moore R, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 121-131.
Owen-Anderson A, Zucker KJ, “Gender identity disorders in adolescents” In: Encyclopedia of adolescence, Levesque RJR,
Springer, 2011, 1129-1135.
Palucka AM, Celinski MJ, Salmon D, Shremer P, “Social and emotional intelligence: Contributors to resilience and resourcefulness” In: Wayfinding through life’s challenges: Coping and survival, Celinski MJ, Gow KM. Nova Science Publishers, 2011, 47-62.
Peisah C, Shulman KI, “Testamentary capacity” In: Civil Capacities in Clinical Neuropsychology: Research Findings and
Practical Applications, Demakis G, Oxford University Press, 2012, 95-120.
Pillai Riddell RR, Racine N, Stevens BJ, “Acute pain management in infants” In: The Encyclopedia of Pain, 2nd Edition,
Shmidt RF, Willis WD (eds). Springer-Verlag, 2011, 31-33.
Pinhas L, Bondy SJ, “Epidemiology of eating disorders in children and adolescents” In: The Oxford Handbook of Developmental Perspectives on Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders, Lock J, Oxford University Press, 2011, 15-38.
Portland M, Riskind JH, Rector NA, “Generalized Anxiety Disorder” In: Encyclopedia of Human Behaviour, Volume 2, Ramachandran VS, Academic Press, 2012, 215-220.
Ravitz P, Maunder RG, “Major Depressive Disorder: Role Transition” In: Casebook of Interpersonal Psychotherapy, Markowitz J, Weissman MM. Oxford, 2012, 50-66.
Rhodes AE, Lin E, Streiner D, “Confronting the confounders” In: A Guide for the Statistically Perplexed: Selected Readings
for Clinical Researchers., Streiner D, Canadian Psychiatric Association, 2012, 20-25.
Riskind JH, Cassin SE, Rector NA, “Phobias” In: Encyclopedia of Human Behaviour, Volume 2, Ramachandran VS, Academic Press, 2012, 211-217.
Rush BR, Castel S, “Screening for mental and substance use disorders” In: Mental Health-Substance Use Book 5, Cooper
D, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd, 2011, 89-105.
Rush BR, Nadeau L, “On the integration of mental health and substance use services and systems” In: Responding in
Mental Health-Substance Use Book 3, Cooper D, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd, 2011, 148-175.
Ryder A, Yang J, Dere J, Fung K, “Personality Disorders in Asians” In: Handbook of Adult Psychopathology in Asians:
Theory, Diagnosis, and Treatment, Chang E, Oxford University Press, USA, 2012.
Sabo B, Vachon MLS, “Care of Professional Caregivers” In: Supportive Oncology, Davis MP, Feyer PC, Ortner P, Zimmerman
C. Elsevier, 2011, 575-589.
Scott BW, Nobrega JN, Hamani C, “Deep Brain Stimulation in animal models of depression” In: Deep Brain Stimulation: A
New Frontier in Psychiatry, Denys D, Feenstra M, Schuurman R. xxxx-xxxx, 2011.
Shorter E, “Bipolar disorder in historical perspective” In: Bipolar II Disorder: Modeling, Measuring and Managing, 2nd edition, Parker G, Cambridge University Press, 2012, 1-9.
Shulman KI, “The practical framework - responding to common legal and medical issues of the older client” In: Special
Lectures 2010: A Medical-Legal Approach to Estate Planning and Decision-Making of Older Clients, Irving Law, 2011,
1-24.
Shulman KI, “When the black dog doesn’t retreat” In: Greying of the Black Dog: Managing Depression Growing Older, Eyers, K, Parker G, Brodaty H. Black Dog Institute, 2012, 216-218.
Shulman KI, Herrmann N, Sajatovic M, “Treatment of Bipolar Disorder in Old Age” In: Bipolar Psychopharmacotherapy:
Caring for the Patient. Second Edition, Akiskal H, Tohen M. Wiley Blackwell, 2011, 369-390.
Stanford C, Tannock R, “The Behavioural Neurobiology of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences Series” In: The Four Causes of ADHD, Killeen P, Tannock R, Sagvolden T. Springer, 2012, 20-25.
Publications - book chapters
Staniloiu A, Vitcu I Markowitsch HJ, “Neuroimaging and dissociative disorders” In: Advances in brain imaging, Chaudhary
V, INTECH – Open Access Publ, 2012, 11-34.
Taylor GJ, “Loneliness in the disaffected (alexithymic) patient” In: Loneliness and Longing. Conscious and Unconscious
Aspects, Willock B, Bohm LC, Coleman Curtis R. Routledge, 2012, 147-158.
Toneatto T, “Buddhists” In: Religion: A clinical guide for nurses, Taylor EJ, Springer, 2012, 129-136.
Toner B, Tang T, Ali A, Akman D, Stuckless N, Esplen MJ, Rolin-Gilman C, Ross L, “Developing a Gender Role Socialization Scale” In: The Design and Doing of Gender, Sex, and Health Research, Oliffe JL, Greaves L. Sage Publications, 2011,
198-200.
Vachon MLS, “Four decades of selected research in hospice/palliative care: have the stressors changed?” In: Caregiver
Stress and Staff Support in Illness, Dying, and Bereavement., Renzenbrink I, Oxford Uuniversity Press, 2011, 1-24.
Vachon MLS, “Prevention and Management of Burnout in Health Care Providers” In: Oxford American Handbook of Hospice
and Palliative Medicine, Yennurajalingam S, Bruera E. Oxford University Press, 2011, 449-464.
Vachon MLS, “Reflections on Compassion, Suffering and Occupational Stress” In: Perspectives on Human Suffering, Malpas J, Lickiss. Springer, 2012, 317-331.
Vigod SN, Steiner M, “Conditions Related to the Menstrual Cycle” In: Women’s Health Psychology, Spiers M, Geller P,
Kloss J. John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
Waddington J, O’Tuathaigh CMP, Remington GJ, “The pharmacology and neuroscience of antipsychotic drugs” In: Schizophrenia, Weinberger D, Harrison P. Blackwell, 2011, 485-514.
Watson W, Stewart DE, Vigod SN, “Postpartum Andjustment: helping families survive during the first year” In: Working with
Families: case-based modules on common problems in Family Medicine, Watson W, University of Toronto Press, 2012.
Wolfe DA, “Risk factors for child abuse perpetration” In: Violence against women and children: Mapping the terrain, White
JW, Koss MP, Kazdin AE., 2011, 31-53.
Zai CC, de Luca V, Strauss J, Tong RP, Sakinofsky I, Kennedy JL, “Genetic Factors and Suicidal Behaviour” In: The Neurobiological Basis of Suicide, Dwivedi Y, 2012, 214-231.
Zaretsky A, “Psychotherapy in primary care” In: Psychiatry in primary care: A concise Canadian pocket guide, Goldbloom
DS, Devine J. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 2011, 249-264. Zhu AZX, Tyndale RF, “Nicotine Metabolism and Its Implications.” In: Metabolism of Drugs and other Xenobiotics, Anzenbacher P, Zanger UM. Wiley publishers, 2012, 465-492.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
227
Publications - books
Arnold PD, Taillefer S, “Genetics of childhood and adolescent anxiety” In: Handbook of Child and Adolescent Anxiety Disorders, McKay D, Storch EA. Springer, 2011, 49-73.
Awad AG, “Quality of Life Measurement in Schizophrenia” In: Guide to Assessment Scales in Schizophrenia, Keefe R,
Springer Healthcare Ltd, 2012, 41-45.
Barwick M, Buchanan D, Cheng M, Manion I, Ruffalo F, Short K, “Methods for engaging key stakeholders in mental health”
In: Implementing evidence-informed practice: international perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press Inc,
2012, 75-89.
Benach J, Muntaner C, “Science for the People” In: Ciencia en el Agora, Rodriguez Farre E, Lopez Arnal S. El Viejo Topo,
2012, 13-24.
Benach J, Muntaner C, Castedo A, Chung, Demiral Y, “Employment and working conditions as health determinants in Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants” In: Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants, The WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health Knowledge Networks, Lee JH, Sadana R. WHO, 2012,
294-318.
Boydell KM, Jackson S, Strauss JS, “Help-seeking experiences of youth with first episode psychosis: A research-based
dance production” In: Hearing Voices: Qualitative Inquiry in Early Psychosis, Boydell KM, Ferguson HB. Wilfrid Laurier
University Press, 2012, 25-44.
Boydell KM, Stasiulis E, Gladstone BM, Volpe T, Addington J, Goering P, Krupa T, McCay E, “Recognition of psychosis in
the pathway to mental health care” In: Hearing Vices: Qualitative Inquiry in Early Psychosis, Boydell KM, Ferguson HB.
Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2012, 9-24.
Brydon-Miller M, Kral MJ, Maguire P Noftke S, Sabhlok A, “Jazz and the Banyon Tree: Roots and Riffs in Participatory Action Research” In: The Sage Handbook of Qualitative Research, Denzin N, Lincoln Y. Sage, 2011, 387-400.
Caspary A, “Loneliness and Longing in No Country for Old Men” In: Loneliness and Longing Conscious and Unconscious
Aspects, Willock B, Routledge, 2012, 147-156.
Cassin S E, Rector N R, “Psychological models of obsessive-compulsive and spectrum disorders: From psychoanalytic to
behavioural conceptualizations” In: Oxford handbook of obsessive-compulsive and spectrum disorders, Steketee G, Oxford
University Press, 2012, 209-232.
Castel S, Rush B, “Screening” In: Mental Health and Substance Use Book Series. Book 5, Care in Mental Health Substance Use, David B Cooper, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd., 2011, 89-105.
Davis DA, Goldman J, Perrier L, Silver IL, “Continuing Professional Development” In: A Practical Guide for Medical Teachers: 4rd Edition, Dent JA, Harden RM. Elsevier Press, 2012, 46-54.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 16 Integrative themes, lessons learned and future challenges” In: Implementing evidence- informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 231-241.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 2 Pushing the envelope: Future directions for evidence-informed practice” In: Implementing
evidence-informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K, Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 11-26.
Dill K, Shera W, “Chapter 1 Introduction” In: Implementing evidence-informed practice: International perspectives, Dill K,
Shera W. Canadian Scholars Press, 2012, 1-8.
Esplen MJ, Hunter J, “Therapy in the Setting of Genetic Predisposition to Cancer” In: Handbook of Psychotherapy in Cancer Care, Watson M, Kissane D. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2011, 201-212.
Esplen MJ, Hunter J, Kash K, “The need for psychosocial support in genetic counseling and genetic testing” In: Clinical
Psycho-oncology: An International Perspective, Grassi L, Riba M., 2012, 223-226.
Farzan F, Barr MS, Fitzgerald PB, Daskalakis ZJ, “Combination of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation with Electromyography and Electroencephalography: Application in Diagnosis of Neuropsychiatric Disorders” In: EMG Methods for Evaluating
Muscle and Nerve Function, Schwartz M, 2012, 341-372.
Feinstein A, “Psychiatric Disorders in Multiple Sclerosis” In: In cognitive impairment in Mulitiple Sclerosis, Elselvier,
2011, 1-1.
Foussias G, Daskalakis ZJ, “The patient who is psychotic” In: Psychiatry in Primary Care: a Concise Canadian Pocket
Guide, Goldbloom D, Davine J (eds). Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 2011.
Publications - books
Fung K, “Psychological Acculturation” In: Encyclopedia of Immigrant Health, Loue S, Sajatovic M. Springer, 2012, 12331234.
Fung K, “Psychotherapy” In: Encyclopedia of Immigrant Health, Loue S, Sajatovic M. Springer, 2012, 1236-1238.
George TP, “Nicotine and Tobacco” In: Cecil Textbook of Medicine, 24th edition, Goldman L, Schaffer A (eds). Elsevier,
2011, 268-273.
Goldbloom D, “The Patient With An Eating Disorder” In: Psychiatry in Primary Care: A Concise Canadian Pocket Guide,
Goldbloom D, Davine J (eds). CAMH, 2011, 129-144.
Grewal S, Pinhas L, “Bulimia Nervosa in Children and Adolescents” In: The Dance of Sleeping and Eating among Adolescents: Normal and Pathological Perspectives, Latzer Y, Tzischinsky O. Nova Publishers, 2011, 57-68.
Halpern J, Maunder RG, “Acute and chronic workplace stress in emergency medical technicians and paramedics” In:
Handbook of Stress in the Occupations, Langan-Fox J, Cooper CL. Edward Elgar, 2011, 135-156.
Harris GT, Rice ME, “Filicide and child maltreatment: Prospects for ultimate explanation” In: The Oxford handbook of
evolutionary perspectives on violence, homicide, and war, Shackelford T, Weekes-Shackelford V. Oxford University Press,
2012, 99- 105.
Herrmann N, “Common medical conditions that might affect competence in the elderly: The 4Ds (Depression, Delirium,
Dementia, Drugs)” In: Special Lectures 2010: A Medical-Legal Approach to Estate Planning and Decision Making for Older
Clients, Law Society of Upper Canada, Irving Law, 2011, 109-114.
Jones JM, Grunfeld E, “The Challenges of Care for Cancer Survivors” In: Quality Health Care for Cancer Survivors: Practice,
Policy and Research, Feuerstein M, Ganz P. Springer, 2011, 3-25.
Kaplan AS, Yilmaz Y, “Eating Disorders in Primary Mental Health Clinics” In: Companion to Primary Care Mental Health,,
Ivbijaro G, World Organization of Family Doctors, 2011, 23-46.
Kennedy SH, Grigoriadis S, Parikh S, “Depression” In: Therapeutic Choices, Canadian Pharmacists Association, Canadian
Pharmacists Association, 2011, 1-1.
Kish SK, “The pathology of methamphetamine use in the human brain” In: Book 2: The Effects of Drug Abuse on the Human Nervous System, Madras B, Kuhar M. Neuroscience-Net, 2012.
Kissane DW, Levin T, Hales S, Lo C, Rodin G, “Psychotherapy for depression in cancer and palliative care.” In: Depression
and Cancer, Kissane DW, Maj M, Sartorius N. Wiley-Blackwell, 2011, 177-206.
Kral MJ, Idlout L, “Its all in the family: Well-being among Inuit in Arctic Canada” In: Happiness across cultures; Views of
happiness and quality of life in non-Western cultures, Selin H, Davey G. Springer, 2012, 387-398.
Lanctôt KL, Kircanski I, Chau SA, Herrmann N, “The Current Status of Alzheimer DiseaseTreatment: Why we need better
therapies and how we will develop them” In: Frontiers in Neuroscience, Alzheimer’s Disease: Targets for New Clinical Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategies, Rudolf AS, Wegrzyn RD. CRC Press, 2012, 117-162.
Lawrence AA, Zucker KJ, “Gender identity disorders” In: Adult psychopathology and diagnosis (6th ed), Hersen M, Beidel
DC. John Wiley & Sons, 2012, 601-635.
Lee JH, Sadana R, Muntaner C, “The way forward: acting on the evidence and filling knowledge gaps determinants” In:
Improving Equity in Health by Addressing Social Determinants, The WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health
Knowledge Networks, Lee JH, Sadana R. WHO, 2012, 294-318.
Leszcz M, “Psychotherapy supervision and the development of the psychotherapist” In: On Becoming a Psychotherapist,
Klein RH, Bernard HS, Schermer VL. Oxford University Press, 2011, 114-143.
Leszcz M, Kobos J, “Wie wissenchaftliche evidenz praktisch genutz warden kann: Gruppenpsychotherapie und die - Leitlinien for die klinische Praxis - der Amercian Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA)” In: Gruppen Psychotherapie, Strauh
B, Mattke D. Springer, 2012, 214-227.
Leszcz M, Malat J, “The interpersonal model of group psychotherapy” In: The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Group Psychotherapy, Kleinberg JL, 2011, 33-58.
Li M, Boquiren V, Lo C, Rodin G, “Depression and anxiety in supportive oncology” In: Supportive Oncology: Expert Consult
Online and Print, Davis MP, Fever P, Ortner P, Zimmermann C. Elsevier, 2011, 528-540.
Li M, Boquiren V, Lo C, Rodin G, “Anxiety and Depression” In: Supportive Oncology, Davis M, Feyer P, Ortner P, Zimmermann C. Elsevier, 2011, 528-540.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
229
Publications - books
Li M, Rodin G, “Depression in the medically ill” In: The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Psychosomatic Medicine: Psychiatric Care of the Medically III (2nd Edition), Levenson JL, American Psychiatric Publishing, 2011, 175-197.
Li M, Rodin G, “Altruism and Suffering in the Context of Cancer: Implications of a Relational Paradigm” In: Pathological
Altruism, Oakley B, Knafo A, Madhavan G, Sloan D, Wilson. Oxford University Press, 2012, 138-155.
Li M, Solty H, Rodin G, “Anxiety and Depression” In: Palliative Medicine: A Case-Based Manual, Oneschuk D, Hagan N,
Macdonald N. Oxford University Press, 2011, 197-208.
MacKay SA, Feldberg A, Ward AK, Marton P, “Firesetting” In: Encyclopedia of Adolescence, Levesque RJR, Springer,
2011, 1036-1048.
MacKay SA, Ruttle E, Ward AK, “The developmental aspects of firesetting” In: Firesetting and Mental Health: Theory, Research, & Practice, Dickens GL, Sugarman PA, Gannon TA. RCPsych Publications, 2012, 84-106.
Markowitsch HJ, Staniloiu A, “Amnesia: Neuropsychology, neurology, and psychiatry” In: Advances in Psychology Research,
Columbus F, Nova Science Publishers, 2011, 99-132.
Markowitsch HJ, Staniloiu A, “Neurobiological aspects of individual violent behaviour” In: Violence in clinical psychiatry:
Challenges for care and treatment, Needham I, Callaghan P, Palmstierna T, Nijman H, Oud N. Kavanah, 2011, 65-68.
Maunder RG, “Does stress matter?” In: Clinical Dilemmas in Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Irving PM, Siegel CA, Rampton
DS, Shanahan F. Wiley-Blackwell, 2011, 215-217.
Maunder RG, Hunter JJ, “Adult attachment and health: The interpersonal dance in medical settings” In: A Psychodynamic
Understanding of Modern Medicine: Placing the Person at the Center of Care, O’Reilly-Landry M, Radcliffe Medical Publishing, 2012, 93-107.
McCullagh S, Feinstein A, “Cognitive Deficits following traumatic brain injury” In: American Psychiatric Press, American
Psychiatric Press, 2011, 1-1.
McFarlane T, Trottier K, Polivy J, Herman CP, Arsenault J, Boivin M, “Eating Disorders” In: Psychopathology: Foundations
for a Contemporary Understanding, Maddux JE, Winstead BA. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2012, 517-552.
McIntyre RS, “Asenapine in bipolar disorder” In: Bipolar Psychopharmacotherapy, Hagop S, Akiskal H, Tohen M. WileyBlackwell Ltd, 2011.
Mishna F, Beran T, Poole A, Gadalla T, Daciuk J, “The cyber world and cyber bullying: Differences between children and
parents.” In: Creating a world without bullying, Volume 3, Pepler D, Cummings J, Craig W. Canada: National Printers.,
2011, 101- 112.
Mulsant BH, Pollock BG, “Psychopharmacology” In: Essentials of Geriatric Psychiatry, Second Edition, Blazer DG, Steffens
DC. Arlington: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2012, 257-303.
Muntaner C, Borrell C, Ng E, Chung H, Espelt A,Rodrigues Sanz M, Benach J, O’Campo P, “The Place of Politics in Social
Epidemiology” In: Rethinking Social Epidemiology, O’Campo P, Dunn J. Springer, 2011, 175-204.
Muntaner C, Chung H, Mahmood Q, Armada F, “History Is Not Over. The Bolivarian Revolution, Barrio Adentro and Health
Care in Venezuela” In: The Revolution in Venezuela, Ponniah T, Eastwood J, Harvard Univ Press, 2011, 225-256.
Nakai Y, Olmsted MP, McFarlane T, Wonderlich SA, Crosby RD, “Comparison of female Japanese and Canadian eating
disorder patients on the Eating Disorder Inventory” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders:
Scientific Findings for DSM-5, Striegel-Moore RH, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 351-364.
Nakai Y, Olmsted MP, McFarlane T, Wonderlich SA, Crosby RD, “Comparison of Japanese and Canadian Eating Disorder
Patients on the Eating Disorder Inventory” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders, StriegelMoore RH, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 351-364.
Nicolini H, Arnold PD, Nestadt G, Lanzagorta N, Kennedy JL, “Overview of genetics and obsessive-compulsive disorder” In:
Obsessive-Compulsive Behavior Spectrum Disorders: Refining the Research Agenda for DSM-V, Hollander E, Kim S, Braun
A, Simeone D, Zohar J. American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc, 2011, 141-160.
Norris M, Bryden P, Pinhas L, “Anorexia Nervosa in Adolescents: A review of clinical and treatment issues” In: The Dance
of Sleeping and Eating among Adolescents: Normal and Pathological Perspectives, Latzer Y, Tzischinsky O. Nova Publishers, 2011, 39- 55.
Publications - books
Norris ML, Bondy SJ, Pinhas L, “Epidemiology of Eating Disorders in Children and Adolescents” In: Eating Disorders in
Child and Adolescents: A Clinical Handbook, Le Grange D, Lock J. Guilford Publications Inc, 2011, 63-89.
Olmsted MP, Carter JC, Pike KM, “Relapse prevention” In: A Collaborative Approach to Eating Disorders, Alexander J, Treasure J. Routledge, 2011, 201-212.
Olmsted MP, Wonderlich SA, McFarlane T, Crosby RD, “Empirical Taxonomy of Patients with Eating Disorders” In: Developing an Evidence-Based Classification of Eating Disorders, Striegel-Moore R, Wonderlich SA, Walsh BT, Mitchell JE. American Psychiatric Association, 2011, 121-131.
Owen-Anderson A, Zucker KJ, “Gender identity disorders in adolescents” In: Encyclopedia of adolescence, Levesque RJR,
Springer, 2011, 1129-1135.
Palucka AM, Celinski MJ, Salmon D, Shremer P, “Social and emotional intelligence: Contributors to resilience and resourcefulness” In: Wayfinding through life’s challenges: Coping and survival, Celinski MJ, Gow KM. Nova Science Publishers, 2011, 47-62.
Peisah C, Shulman KI, “Testamentary capacity” In: Civil Capacities in Clinical Neuropsychology: Research Findings and
Practical Applications, Demakis G, Oxford University Press, 2012, 95-120.
Pillai Riddell RR, Racine N, Stevens BJ, “Acute pain management in infants” In: The Encyclopedia of Pain, 2nd Edition,
Shmidt RF, Willis WD (eds). Springer-Verlag, 2011, 31-33.
Pinhas L, Bondy SJ, “Epidemiology of eating disorders in children and adolescents” In: The Oxford Handbook of Developmental Perspectives on Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders, Lock J, Oxford University Press, 2011, 15-38.
Portland M, Riskind JH, Rector NA, “Generalized Anxiety Disorder” In: Encyclopedia of Human Behaviour, Volume 2, Ramachandran VS, Academic Press, 2012, 215-220.
Ravitz P, Maunder RG, “Major Depressive Disorder: Role Transition” In: Casebook of Interpersonal Psychotherapy, Markowitz J, Weissman MM. Oxford, 2012, 50-66.
Rhodes AE, Lin E, Streiner D, “Confronting the confounders” In: A Guide for the Statistically Perplexed: Selected Readings
for Clinical Researchers., Streiner D, Canadian Psychiatric Association, 2012, 20-25.
Riskind JH, Cassin SE, Rector NA, “Phobias” In: Encyclopedia of Human Behaviour, Volume 2, Ramachandran VS, Academic Press, 2012, 211-217.
Rush BR, Castel S, “Screening for mental and substance use disorders” In: Mental Health-Substance Use Book 5, Cooper
D, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd, 2011, 89-105.
Rush BR, Nadeau L, “On the integration of mental health and substance use services and systems” In: Responding in
Mental Health-Substance Use Book 3, Cooper D, Radcliffe Publishing Ltd, 2011, 148-175.
Ryder A, Yang J, Dere J, Fung K, “Personality Disorders in Asians” In: Handbook of Adult Psychopathology in Asians:
Theory, Diagnosis, and Treatment, Chang E, Oxford University Press, USA, 2012.
Sabo B, Vachon MLS, “Care of Professional Caregivers” In: Supportive Oncology, Davis MP, Feyer PC, Ortner P, Zimmerman
C. Elsevier, 2011, 575-589.
Scott BW, Nobrega JN, Hamani C, “Deep Brain Stimulation in animal models of depression” In: Deep Brain Stimulation: A
New Frontier in Psychiatry, Denys D, Feenstra M, Schuurman R. xxxx-xxxx, 2011.
Shorter E, “Bipolar disorder in historical perspective” In: Bipolar II Disorder: Modeling, Measuring and Managing, 2nd edition, Parker G, Cambridge University Press, 2012, 1-9.
Shulman KI, “The practical framework - responding to common legal and medical issues of the older client” In: Special
Lectures 2010: A Medical-Legal Approach to Estate Planning and Decision-Making of Older Clients, Irving Law, 2011,
1-24.
Shulman KI, “When the black dog doesn’t retreat” In: Greying of the Black Dog: Managing Depression Growing Older, Eyers, K, Parker G, Brodaty H. Black Dog Institute, 2012, 216-218.
Shulman KI, Herrmann N, Sajatovic M, “Treatment of Bipolar Disorder in Old Age” In: Bipolar Psychopharmacotherapy:
Caring for the Patient. Second Edition, Akiskal H, Tohen M. Wiley Blackwell, 2011, 369-390.
Stanford C, Tannock R, “The Behavioural Neurobiology of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences Series” In: The Four Causes of ADHD, Killeen P, Tannock R, Sagvolden T. Springer, 2012, 20-25.
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
231
Publications - books
Staniloiu A, Vitcu I Markowitsch HJ, “Neuroimaging and dissociative disorders” In: Advances in brain imaging, Chaudhary
V, INTECH – Open Access Publ, 2012, 11-34.
Taylor GJ, “Loneliness in the disaffected (alexithymic) patient” In: Loneliness and Longing. Conscious and Unconscious
Aspects, Willock B, Bohm LC, Coleman Curtis R. Routledge, 2012, 147-158.
Toneatto T, “Buddhists” In: Religion: A clinical guide for nurses, Taylor EJ, Springer, 2012, 129-136.
Toner B, Tang T, Ali A, Akman D, Stuckless N, Esplen MJ, Rolin-Gilman C, Ross L, “Developing a Gender Role Socialization Scale” In: The Design and Doing of Gender, Sex, and Health Research, Oliffe JL, Greaves L. Sage Publications, 2011,
198-200.
Vachon MLS, “Four decades of selected research in hospice/palliative care: have the stressors changed?” In: Caregiver
Stress and Staff Support in Illness, Dying, and Bereavement., Renzenbrink I, Oxford Uuniversity Press, 2011, 1-24.
Vachon MLS, “Prevention and Management of Burnout in Health Care Providers” In: Oxford American Handbook of Hospice
and Palliative Medicine, Yennurajalingam S, Bruera E. Oxford University Press, 2011, 449-464.
Vachon MLS, “Reflections on Compassion, Suffering and Occupational Stress” In: Perspectives on Human Suffering, Malpas J, Lickiss. Springer, 2012, 317-331.
Vigod SN, Steiner M, “Conditions Related to the Menstrual Cycle” In: Women’s Health Psychology, Spiers M, Geller P,
Kloss J. John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
Waddington J, O’Tuathaigh CMP, Remington GJ, “The pharmacology and neuroscience of antipsychotic drugs” In: Schizophrenia, Weinberger D, Harrison P. Blackwell, 2011, 485-514.
Watson W, Stewart DE, Vigod SN, “Postpartum Andjustment: helping families survive during the first year” In: Working with
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Administration
OFFICE OF THE CHAIR
Dr. L. Trevor Young
Chair
416-979-6948
Ms. Kathy Ostaff
Administrative Coordinator
416-979-6948
Ms. Diane Granato
Business Manager
416-979-6893
Ms. Brenda Cerilli
Finance Officer
416-979-4280
Mr. Howard Chow
I.T. Administrator
416-260-4141
Ms. Suzanna Chang
Communications Coordinator
416-979-4275
Ms. Theresa Oliveira
Academic Appointments Coordinator 416 979-4985
CAMH
Dr. Benoit Mulsant
Vice-Chair
CLINICAL AFFAIRS
Dr. Molyn Leszcz
Vice-Chair
RESEARCH
Dr. Allan Kaplan
Vice-Chair
416-979-6913
EDUCATION
Dr. Susan Lieff
Vice-Chair
416-535-8501 x 4207
Ms. Rachel Delaney
Education Coordinator
416-535-8501 x 4207
Ms. Nithya Ravii
Education Assistant
416-979-4276
Dr. Raed Hawa
Director
416-603-5500
Ms. Rachel MacKenzie
Administrative Coordinator
416-979-6838
Dr. Ari Zaretsky
Director
416-979-4734
Ms. Julia Bella
Administrative Coordinator
416-979-4276
Ms. Nithya Ravii
Education Assistant
416-979-6911
Dr. Brenda Toner
Director
416-979-4271
Ms. Suzanna Chang
Administrative Coordinator
416-979-4275
Dr. Sagar Parikh
Director
416-603-5734
BUSINESS OFFICE
UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION
POSTGRADUATE EDUCATION
FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
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EDUCATION
416-979-4749
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
233
Fast Facts
Faculty
Emeritus
Full-Time
Part-Time
Adjunct
Status-Only
Total
8
320
179
129
215
851
Univ Prof
Prof Emeritus
Full Prof
Assoc Prof
Asst Prof
Lecturers
Total
1
8
103
110
331
298
851
Administrative Staff
10
EDUCATION
Medical Students
Residents
Fellows
CMHE Events
228
180
54
100
Sites
Baycrest
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Credit Valley Hospital
George Hull Centre for Children and Families
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Hospital for Sick Children
Humber River Regional Hospital
Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital
Lakeridge Health Network
Markham-Stouffville Hospital
Mount Sinai Hospital
North York General Hospital
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Providence Healthcare
Sault Area Hospitals
Southlake Regional Health Centre
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
St. Michael’s Hospital
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Surrey Place Centre
The Scarborough Hospital
Toronto East General Hospital
Trillium Health Centre
University Health Network
Waypoint Centre For Mental Health Care
Women’s College Hospital
fast Facts
Total number of awards
Canada Research Chairs
Endowed Chairs
Endowed Professorships
523
6
16
1
Divisions
Child & Adolescent
Geriatric Psychiatry
Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems
Forensic Psychiatry
Consultation Liaison Psychiatry
Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship
Brain and Therapeutics
Equity, Gender and Population
RESEARCH Funding Sources By Category (Peer, Non-Peer, Fellowship)
CATEGORIES: PEER REVIEWED FUNDING
1 - Federal Agency
$35,233,800.00
2 - Provincial Agency
$11,906,855.00
3 - University or Hospital
$734,231.00
4 - US Agency
$7,829,738.00
5 - International Agency
$584,248.00
Total Peer Reviewed Funding
$56,288,872.00
NON-PEER REVIEWED FUNDING
6 - Industry Agency
$3,402,401.00
7 - Miscellaneous Agencies
$16,675,903.00
Total Non-Peer Reviewed Funding
$20,078,304.00
FELLOWSHIP / PERSONAL AWARDS
Fellowship / Personal Award
$3,565,215.00
Total Fellowship / Personal Awards
$3,565,215.00
TOTAL FUNDING
$79,932,391.00
Department of Psychiatry Annual Report
235