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 7 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. FULLY AFFILIATED SITES 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 87 FULLY AFFILIATED SITES 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 Department of Psychiatry Annual Report 89 FULLY AFFILIATED SITES 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 91 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 93 FULLY AFFILIATED SITES 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 95 FULLY AFFILIATED SITES 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. 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Current Psychiatry Reports, 13(3), 211-218. Ismail Z, Wessels AM, Uchida H, Ng W, Mamo DC, Rajji TK, Pollock BG, Mulsant BH, Bies RR, (2011). Age and sex impact clozapine plasma concentrations in inpatients and outpatients with schizophrenia. American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 20(1), 53-60. Jadad A, To MJ, Emara M, Jones J, (2011). Traditional randomized controlled?clinical trials do not meet the needs of people living with multiple chronic diseases. JAMA, 306(24), 2670-2672. Jahanshahi M, Czernecki V, Zurowski M, (2011). Neuropsychological, neuropsychiatric, and quality of life issues in DBS for dystonia. Movment Disorder, 26(1), 63-78. Jerrell JM, McIntyre RS, Tripathi A, (2011). Childhood treatment with psychotropic medication and development of comorbid medical conditions in adolescent-onset bipolar disorder. Hum Psychopharmacol., 26(7), 451-459. Jerrell JM, Tripathi A, Mcintyre RS, (2011). Prevalence and treatment of depression in children and adolescents with sickle cell disease: a retrospective cohort study. prim care companion CNS disord, 13(2). Johnson S, Stockmeier C, Meyer JH, Austin M, Albert P, Wang J, May W, Rajkowska G, Overholser J, Jurjus G, Dieter L, Johnson C, Sittman D, Ou X, (2011). The reduction of R1, a novel repressor protein for monoamine oxidase A, in major depressive disorder. Neuropsychopharmacol, 36(10), 2139-2148. Jonassaint CR, Peng J, Thornton L, Bloss C, Berrettini W, Kaye W, Bergen A, Magistretti P, Strober M, Crow S, Fichter M, Goldman D, Halmi K, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, Klump K, La Via M, Mitchell J, Rotondo A, Treasure J, Keel,P, (2011). Specific common variants of the obesity associated PTO gene are not associated with psychological and behavioural eating disorder phenotype. American Journal of Medical Genetics, 156(4), 454-461. Jonassaint CR, Szatkiewicz JP, Bulik CM, Thornton LM, Bloss C, Berrettini WH, Kaye WH, Bergen AW, Magistretti P, Strober M, Keel PK, Brandt H, Crawford S, Crow S, Fichter MM, Goldman D, Halmi KA, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, Klump KL, La Via M, Mitchell JE, Rotondo A, Treasure, (2011). Absence of association between specific common variants of the obesityrelated FTO gene and psychological and behavioral eating disorder phenotypes. Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet, 156(4), 454-461. Jones JM, Ferguson S, Edwards E, Walton T, McCready N, Howell D, (2012). Experiences of care delivery: Endometrial cancer survivors at end of treatment. Gynecologic Oncology, 124, 458-464. Jones JM, MacPherson C, Zimmermann C, Rodin GM Le L, Cohen R, (2011). Assessing Agreement Between Terminally Ill Cancer Patients’ Reports of Their Quality of Life with Family Caregiver and Palliative Care Physician Proxy Ratings. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 42(3), 354-365. Jones JM, Papadakos J, Bennett C, Blacker S, Catton P, Harth T, Hatton-Bauer J, McGrath K, Schwartz F, Turnbull G, Walton T, Jusko-Friedman A, (2011). Maximizing your Patient Education Skills (MPES): A multi-site evaluation of an innovative patient education skills training course for oncology health care professionals. Patient Education and Counseling, 84(2), 176-184. Department of Psychiatry Annual Report 193 publications - articles 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. Kapur BM, Hutson JR, Chibber T, Luk A, Selby P, (2011). Methadone: a review of drug-drug and pathophysiological interactions. Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci, 48(4), 171-195. Kennedy JL, Davis C, Zai C, Levitan RD, Kaplan AS, Carter JC, Reid-Westoby C, Curtis C, Wight K, (2011). Opiates, overeating and obesity: a psychogenetic analysis. 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Possible association of the DRD4 gene with a history of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in women with bulimia nervosa. Int J Eat Disord, 45(4), 622-625. Khokhar J, Tyndale R, (2011). Drug Metabolism within the Brain Changes Drug Response: Selective Manipulation of Brain CYP2B Alters Propofol Effects. Neuropsychopharmacology, 36(3), 692-700. Khokhar JY, Tyndale RF, (2012). Rat brain CYP2B-enzymatic activation of chlorpyrifos to the oxon mediates cholinergic neurotoxicity. Toxicological Sciences, 126(2), 325-335. Kiang M, Christensen BK, Zipursky RB, (2011). Depth-of-processing effects on semantic activation deficits in schizophrenia: an electrophysiological investigation. Schizophrenia Research, 133(1), 91-98. Kidd S, Bajwa J, Mckenzie K, Ganguli R, (2012). Cognitive Remediation for Individuals with Psychosis in a Supported Education Setting: A Pilot Study. Rehabilitation Research and Practice, 2012(2012), 1-5. Kidd SA, (2012). 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Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 32(2), 163-168. Lunsky Y, Tint A, Robinson S, Khodaverdian A, Jaskulski C, (2011). Emergency psychiatric service use by individuals with intellectual disabilities living with family. Journal of Mental Health Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 4(3), 172-185. Lutsiv O, Bracken K, Pullenayegum E, Sword W, Taylor VH, McDonald SD, (2012). Little congruence between health care provider and patient perceptions of counselling on gestational weight gain. J Obstet Gynaecol Can., 34(6), 518-524. MacDonnell J, Dastjerdi M, Bokore N, Khanlou N, (2012). “Becoming resilient”: Promoting the mental health and wellbeing of immigrant women in a Canadian context. Nursing Research and Practice, 2012(2012), 1-10. MacKay SA, Feldberg A, Ward AK, Marton P, (2012). Research and practice in adolescent firesetting. Criminal Justice & Behavior, 39(6), 842-864. Madan RI, Conn DK, Dubo E, Voore P, Wiesenfeld L, (2012). Enablers and Barriers to the Use of Direct Observation of Trainee Clinical Skills by Supervising Faculty in a Psychiatry Residency Program. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 57(4), 269-272. Mah K, Bezjak A, Loblaw DA, Gotowiec A, Devins GM, (2011). Do ongoing lifestyle disruptions differ across cancer types after the conclusion of cancer treatment?. Journal of Cancer Survivorship, 5(1), 18-26. Mah K, Bezjak A, Loblaw DA, Gotowiec A, Devins GM, (2011). Measurement invariance of the Illness Intrusiveness Ratings Scale’s 3-factor structure in men and women with cancer. Rehabilitation Psychology, 56(1), 58-66. Maki BE, Sibley KM, Jaglal SB, Bayley M, Brooks D, Fernie GR, Flint AJ, Gage W, Liu BA, McIlroy WE, Mihailidis A, Perry SD, Popovic MR, Pratt J, Zettel JL, (2011). Reducing fall risk by improving balance control: Development, evaluation and knowledge-translation of new approaches. Journal of Safety Research, 42, 473-485. Malat J, Kahn DA, (2011). Clinical Barriers to Effective Pharmacotherapy in Co-occurring Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorders. Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 17(5), 360-367. Malat J, Morrow S, Stewart P, (2011). Applying Motivational Interviewing Principles in a Modified Interpersonal Group for Comorbid Addiction. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 61(4), 557-575. Department of Psychiatry Annual Report 199 publications - articles Man VY, Dougan CM, Rector NA, (2012). Examination of coping in the anxiety disorders with and without comorbid depression. International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 5, 185-195. Manassis K, (2012). An adaptation of prolonged exposure therapy for single-incident trauma. J Cdn Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 20(2), 127-133. Manassis K, (2012). Anxiety, social skills, friendship quality, and peer victimization: an integrated model. J Anxiety Dis, 25(7), 924- 931. Manassis K, (2012). Generalized anxiety disorder in the classroom. 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Inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3 enhances the differentiation and reduces the proliferation of adult human olfactory epithelium neural precursors. Experimental Cell Researcb, 317(15), 2086-2098. Mann RE, Paglia-Boak A, Adlaf EM, Beitchman J, Wolfe D, Wekerle C, Hamilton HA, Rehm J, (2011). Estimating the prevalence of anxiety and mood disorders in an adolescent general population: An evaluation of the GHQ12. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 9, 410-420. Mann RE, Paglia-Boak A, Adlaf EM, Beitchman J, Wolfe D, Wekerle C, Hamilton HA, Rehm J, (2011). Estimating the prevalence of anxiety and mood disorders in an adolescent general population: An evaluation of the GHQ12. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 9(4), 1- 11. Marion BE, Sellbom M, Bagby RM, (2011). The detection of feigned psychiatric disorders using the MMPI-2-RF overreporting validity scales: An analog investigation. Psychological Injury and the Law, 4(1), 1-12. Markowitsch HJ, Staniloiu A, (2011). Neuroscience, neuroimaging and the law. Cortex, 47(10), 1248-1251. Marques TR, Arenovich T, Agid O, Sajeev G, Muthen B, Chen LC, Kinon BJ, Kapur S, (2011). The different trajectories of antipsychotic response: Antipsychotics versus placebo. Psychological Medicine, 41(7), 1481-1488. Marras C, Gruneir A, Wang X, Fischer H, Gill S, Herrmann N, Anderson GM, Hyson C, Rochon PA, (2012). Antipsychotics and mortality in parkinsonism. American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 20, 149-158. Marshall C, Addington J, Epstein I, Liu L, Deighton S, Zipursky RB, (2012). Treating young individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis. Early Int Psychiatry, 6(1), 60-68. Publications - Articles Martinussen R, Tannock R, Chaban P, (2011). Teachers’ reported use of instructional and behavior management practices for students with behavior problems: Relationship to role and level of training in ADHD. Child Youth Care Forum, 40, 193210. Marzolini S, (2012). Musculoskeletal comorbidities in cardiac patients: prevalence, predictors, and health services utilization. Arch Phys Med Rehabil, 93(5), 856-862. Marzolini S, Oh P, Alter DA, Stewart DE, Grace SL, (2012). Prevalence of musculoskeletal comorbidities in cardiac patients: A prospective investigation of correlates and health services utilization. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 93(5), 856-862. Maunder RG, Halpern J, Schwartz B, Gurevich M, (2012). Symptoms and responses to critical incidents in paramedics who have experienced childhood abuse and neglect. Emergency Medical Journal, 29(3), 222-227. Maunder RG, Nolan RP Co-Principal Author, Hunter JJ, Steinhart AH, Greenberg GR, (2012). Relationship between social support and autonomic function during a stress protocol in ulcerative colitis patients in remission. Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 18(4), 737-742. Maxwell M, Thornton L, Root T, Pinheiro A, Brandt H, Crawford S, Crow S, Fichter M, Halmi K, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, Keel P, Klump K, LaVia, Mitchell J, Plotnicov K, Rotondo A , Strober M, Woodside B, Berrettini W, Kaye, Bulik C, (2011). Life Beyond the Eating Disorder: Education, Relationships, Reproduction. International Journal of Eating Disorders, 44(3), 2232. Mazereeuw G, Lanctôt KL, Chau SA, Swardfager WL, Herrmann N, (2012). Effects of omega-3 fatty acids on cognitive performance: a meta-analysis. Neurobiology of Aging, 33(1482), 17-29. McCay E, Quesnel S, Langley J, Beanlands H, Cooper L, Blidner R, Aiello A, Howes C, Bach K, (2011). A RelationshipBased Intervention to Improve Social Connectedness in Street-Involved Youth: A Pilot Study. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing, 24(4), 208-215. McDonald SD, Pullenayegum E, Bracken K, Chen AM, McDonald H, Malott A, Hutchison R, Haley S, Lutsiv O, Taylor VH, Good C, Hutton E, Sword W, (2012). Comparison of midwifery, family medicine, and obstetric patients’ understanding of weight gain during pregnancy: a minority of women report correct counselling. J Obstet Gynaecol, 34(2), 129-135. McDonald SD, Pullenayegum E, Taylor VH, Lutsiv O, Bracken K, Good C, Hutton E, Sword W, (2011). Despite 2009 Guidelines few women report being counselled correctly about weight gain during pregnancy. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 205(4), 1-6. McIntyre J, Daley A, Rutherford K Ross LE, (2011). Systems-level Barriers in Accessing Supportive Mental Health Services for Sexual and Gender Minorities: Insights from the Provider’s Perspective. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 30(2), 173-186. McIntyre R, Rosenbluth M, Ramasubbu R, Bond DJ, Taylor VH, Beaulieu S, Schaffer A, (2012). Managing Medical and Psychiatric Comorbidity in Individuals with Major Depressive Disorder and Bipolar Disorder. Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 24(2), 163-169. McIntyre RS, (2011). Aripiprazole: striving towards euthymia with a novel mechanism of action. j affect disord, 128(1), 1-2. McIntyre RS, (2011). Asenapine: a review of acute and extension phase data in bipolar disorder. CNS Neurosci Ther., 17(6), 645- 648. McIntyre RS, (2011). Implementing guideline-based strategies to avoid relapse and recurrence in depression. J Clin Psych, 72(11), 0- 0. Department of Psychiatry Annual Report 201 publications - articles McIntyre RS, (2011). Long-term treatment of bioplar disorder in adults. j clin psychiatry, 72(2). McIntyre RS, (2011). Transforming drug safety information. expert opin drug saf, 10(1), 1-2. McIntyre RS, Alsuwaidan M, Goldstein BI, Taylor VH, Schaffer A, Beaulieu S, Kemp DE, (2012). The Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) task force recommendations for the management of patients with mood disorders and comorbid metabolic disorders. Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 24(1), 69-81. Mcintyre RS, Liauw S, Taylor VH, (2011). Depression in the workforce: the intermediary effect of medical comorbidity. J affect disord, 128(1), 29-36. McIntyre RS, Mcelroy SL, Eudicone JM, Forbes RA, Carlson BX, Baker RA, (2011). A 52-week, double-blind evaluation of the metabolic effects of aripiprazole and lithium in bioplar I disorder. prim care companion cns disord, 13(6). McIntyre RS, Wagner KD, (2011). Performance improvement CME: Long-term treatment of bipolar disorder. J Clin Psychiatry, 72(3), 0- 0. McIntyre RS, Yoon J, Jerrell JM, Liauw SS, (2011). Aripiprazole for maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder: a review of available evidence. neuropsychiatr dis treat, 7, 319-323. McKenzie K, (2012). Suicide studies in ethnic minorities: improving the science to help develop policy. ethnicity and health, 17(1), 7- 11. McKenzie K, Tuck A, Noh S, (2011). Moving traditional Caribbean medicine practices into healthcare in Canada. Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 4, 60-70. McLarty K, Moran MD, Scollard DA, Chan C, Sabha N, Mukherjee J, Guha A, McLaurin J, Nitz M, Houle S, Wilson AA, Reilly RM, Vasdev N, (2011). Comparisons of [F-18]-1-deoxy-1-fluoro-scyllo-inositol with [F-18]-FDG for PET imaging of inflammation, breast and brain cancer xenografts in athymic mice. Nucl Med Biol, 38(7), 953-959. McLean L, Walton T, Matthew A, Jones JM, (2011). Examination of couples’ attachment styles in relation to marital distress, depression and hopelessness: A buffer or facilitator of psychosocial distress in cases of end-stage cancer. Supportive Care in Cancer, 19(10), 1539- 1548. McMain S, Guimond T, Streiner D, Cardish RJ, Links P, (2012). Clinical Outcomes and Functioning Post-Treatment: A TwoYear Follow-up of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Versus General Psychiatric Management for Borderline Personality Disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry, 169(6), 650-661. McMain S, Guimond T, Streiner D, Cardish RJ, Links P, (2012). Dialectical Behavior Therapy Compared With General Psychiatric Management for Borderline Personality Disorder: Clinical Outcomes and Functioning Over a 2-Year Follow-Up. American Journal of Psychiatry, 169(6), 650- 661. Mehta V, Subramanyam R, Shapiro CM, Chung F, (2012). Health effects of identifying patients with undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea in the preoperative clinic: a follow up study. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 59(6), 544-555. Meijer A, (2011). Depression screening and patient outcomes in cancer: a systematic review. PLoS One, 6(11), 1-13. Menon M, Anderson A, Schmitz T, Graff A, Korostil M, Mamo D, Addington J, Gerretsen P, Remington G, Kapur S, (2011). Exploring the neural correlates of delusions of reference. Biological Psychiatry, 70(12), 1127-1133. Meyer JH, (2012). Neuroimaging Markers of Cellular Function in Major Depressive Disorder: Implications for Therapeutics, Personalized Medicine and Prevention. Clin Pharm Ther, 91(2), 201-214. 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Mizrahi R, Agid O, Borlido C, Suridjan I, Rusjan P, Houle S, Remington G, Wilson A, Kapur S, (2011). Effects of antipsychotics on D3 receptors: A clinical PET study in first episode antipsychotic naive patients with schizophrenia using [C-11](+)-PHNO. Schizophrenia Research, 131(1), 63-68. Mizrahi R, Rusjan PM, Kennedy J, Pollock B, Mulsant B, Suridjan I, De Luca V, Wilson AA, Houle S, (2012). Translocator protein (18?kDa) polymorphism (rs6971) explains in-vivo brain binding affinity of the PET radioligand [(18)F]-FEPPA. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab, 32(6), 968-972. Department of Psychiatry Annual Report 203 publications - articles Mizuno Y, Bies RR, Remington G, Mamo DC, Suzuki T, Pollock BG, Tsuboi T, Watanabe K, Mimura M, Uchida H, (2012). Dopamine D2 receptor occupancy with risperidone or olanzapine during maintenance treatment of schizophrenia: A crosssectional study. Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry, 37(1), 182-187. 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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 221 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 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. 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 CONTINUING MENTAL HEALTH 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