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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
PSYCHIATRY ANNUAL REPORT
20142015
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Published by the Department of Psychiatry 250 College Street, 8th Floor Toronto, ON M5T 1R8 www.utpsychiatry.ca
Editor Lindsay Curtis 416-979-4275 lindsay.curtis@utoronto.ca
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Table of Contents Chair’s Message ............................................................
Sunnybrook...............................................................
Awards and Honours
University Health Network (UHN) .................................
Vice-Chair and Education Reports Vice-Chair, Clinical..................................................... Vice-Chair, Education ................................................. Vice-Chair, Research.................................................. Undergraduate Medical Education............................... Postgraduate Medical Education................................. Fellowship................................................................. Global Mental Health.................................................. Faculty Development.................................................. Continuing Professional and Practice Development ................................................
Women’s College Hospital ......................................... Community Sites George Hull Centre .................................................... Humber River ............................................................ Hincks-Dellcrest Centre ............................................. North York General Hospital ........................................ Ontario Shores .......................................................... St. Joseph’s Health Centre ......................................... Surrey Place Centre ................................................... Toronto East General.................................................. Trillium Health Partners ..............................................
Divisions Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems ..........................
Faculty Listing
Brain and Therapeutics ..............................................
Funding ..........................................................................
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry .................................
Publications
Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry ..................................
Journal Articles..........................................................
Equity, Gender and Population ....................................
Books .......................................................................
Forensics Division......................................................
Book Chapters...........................................................
Geriatric Psychiatry.................................................... Psychotherapies, Humanities and Educational Scholarship.......................................
Administration Fast Facts.......................................................................
Fully Affiliated Sites Baycrest.................................................................... CAMH ....................................................................... Hospital for Sick Children ........................................... Mount Sinai Hospital .................................................. St. Michael’s Hospital.................................................
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Chair's Message CHAIR’S MESSAGE I am very pleased to share the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto 2014-15 Annual Report with you. It has been my great privilege to serve as the Chair (Interim) for much of this academic year. This year’s report covers many positive developments in the Department and shows our impact on a number of levels: locally, provincially, nationally and internationally.
Several key recommendations came out of the review, which the Department is working towards implementing in the coming months and years. Specifically, we note the Department’s attention is turned to the following: •
marrying our social responsibility and our academic expertise in clinical care; research; education; knowledge translation; public policy; evaluation and innovation;
•
expanding child and youth resources and subspecialty training, furthering and continuing collaboration and cooperation with the Ministries of Health and Long Term Care, the Toronto Central LHIN, and in the domain of child & youth psychiatry, with the Ministries of Community and Youth and of Education;
•
continuing to recognize the importance of improving access to mental health care across the entire breadth of health care;
•
improving our neuroscience research capacity and training, by better coordination and mapping of resources within the Department;
In September 2014, the Department underwent its 5-year external review. With the help of the Departmental Executives, Division Leads and Psychiatrists-in-Chief at our partner hospitals, we submitted a comprehensive document for the review. This review was a significant undertaking, and we now have a document which thoroughly outlines our Department’s history, programs and successes over the past 5 years.
•
continuing ongoing synergies with regard to fundraising;
•
promoting faculty development opportunities for women;
•
promoting faculty development opportunities for other professionals and continuing to seek to appoint and engage with and promote academically, , our allied health colleagues;
The external reviewers commended former Chair Dr. L. Trevor Young for creating a strong department rich in research, education and clinical innovation within a culture of support and transparency, as well as committed to increasing outreach efforts. They noted that he has fostered loyalty and support among our Department members, particularly given the complicated structure in which the Department operates.
•
ensuring excellent training across all sites, which becomes even more important as our residency grows;
•
developing a more equitable system that partners the University’s financial resources with the hospitals so that practice plans contribute to the support leadership positions;
•
addressing stigma and the barrier it can create to recruitment and its impact as negative force
The Department has grown and thrived through a period of transition this year, and my colleagues and I are proud to share the strides that have been made by the members of our Department in education, research and clinical care, within the pages of this report.
DEPARTMENT REVIEW
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CHAIR’S MESSAGE
in clinical practices; The reviewers emphasized the importance of the further integration of status only non-physician faculty members, pointing out that enhancing inclusiveness and support for all faculty members is a critical objective for the Department to achieve. As a result, the Department conducted a survey targeting our full-time non-physician faculty members in order to learn more about their experiences and provide us with some direction as to the areas in which we could make improvements. The survey feedback was helpful in highlighting the important needs of this particular group, and the opportunities that we will address in the coming academic year. The Department greatly appreciates and is pleased with the reviewers’ constructive recommendations, all of which strongly resonate with our strategic plan, and we look forward to continued productive responses to their recommendations.
EDUCATION TRAINING PROGRAMS Ensuring the best possible quality of academic experience for our students is the highest priority in the Department of Psychiatry. We strive to ensure our students are well-equipped and ready to provide world-class care to their clients, and we are very proud of the programs we offer. Under the leadership of our Director of Undergraduate Education, Dr. Raed Hawa, the number of University of Toronto undergraduate medical students who entered the residency program increased by 7 for the 2014-15 academic year. As the increased need for psychiatrists grows both provincially and nationally, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care has recognized the need to train more psychiatrists to meet the growing demand. We are delighted that our residency program continues to expand, with an increase in 5 residency spots each year for the next 5 years. The incoming PGY-1 class has an unprecedented 37 residents joining our program.
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As one of the largest departments of Psychiatry in the world, ours is the first and only Department in Canada to be accredited for all three psychiatry subspecialties: child and adolescent, geriatric, and forensic psychiatry. In April 2014, two of our three subspecialty programs underwent their first on-site internal review, conducted by the Internal Review Committee (IRC). Both Geriatric Psychiatry and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry were granted accreditation approval by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons Canada Accreditation Committee in November 2014. The Forensic Psychiatry review will take place in September 2015. Our Fellowship Program continues to attract outstanding trainees. We now have nearly 80 fellows – both international and Canadian enrolled. In addition, substantial numbers of students are enrolled and have completed graduate degree training through the Department. Continuing Professional Practice Development (CPPD) courses and events are designed for a variety of health professionals including family physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists and other health care providers. Each year, the Department of Psychiatry delivers more than 80 CPPD courses involving more than one hundred teachers each year. I would like to thank our Education Directors, Raed Hawa, Mark Fefergrad, Arun Ravindran, Sanjeev Sockalingam, Benjamin Goldstein and our Vice-Chair, Education, Susan Lieff, for their dedication, enthusiasm and effectiveness. I would like to express my appreciation for Jon Hunter who very ably assumed the position of Acting Vice-Chair, Education during Dr. Lieff ’s administrative leave.
CREATIVE PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITY Creative Professional Activity (CPA) is a growing aspect of academic scholarship with clear pathways established to document impact and excellence within the Department. Creativity, innovation, excellence and impact on the profession and
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
beyond are emphasized as important elements of CPA. These activities contribute to a faculty member’s function as a role model and a recognized expert in the field. In the coming years, the Department will ensure that CPA will be introduced at an early stage of training, with a focus on community-engaged scholarship.
RESEARCH This past academic year the department attracted $112,942,422 in total research funding, the majority of which is peer reviewed. Our faculty continued to be active in publications, with over 896 peer-reviewed journal articles, 114 book chapters and 19 books produced. For a full report of our research activities, please read the report of the Vice-Chair, Research
AWARDS AND HONOURS One of the great pleasures of being part of a world-class department is acknowledging the numerous achievements our members have earned. Naming each award and honour received would be a report in and of itself. Instead, I will highlight just a few of the external and internal awards our faculty members have received, which are truly outstanding, and ask you to see the detailed listing later in this report:
External awards Branka
Agic
Fred Fallis Award for Online Learning
Lisa
Andermann
Social Responsibility Award, University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine
A. George
Awad
Andrew C. Leon Distinguished Career Award
Ian
Dawe
Chair, OHA Task Force for Ontario Hospitals on Suicide Prevention Standards
Mark
Fefergrad
Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy and Mentorship in Postgraduate Medicine
Kenneth
Fung
Social Responsibility Award, University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine
Dr. Amy Cheung has been appointed the Bell Canada Chair in Adolescent Mood and Anxiety Disorders for a 5-year term, effective January 1, 2015.
Sonu
Gaind
Canadian Psychiatric Association PresidentElect
David
Goldbloom
Officer, Order of Canada
Dr. Sidney H. Kennedy has been appointed the Arthur Sommer Rotenberg (ASR) Chair in Suicide Studies for a 5-year term, effective July 1, 2014.
Raed
Hawa
Award for Excellence in Education, Association of Chairs of Psychiatry in Canada
The Clinician Scientist Training Program launched in 2003, and is now under the leadership of Dr. Benjamin Goldstein. This year, the program had 29 students. It continues to grow in reach, impact and public recognition of the excellence of its trainees.
ENDOWED CHAIRS At present time, there are 23 Endowed Chairs and one Endowed Professorship in the Department. Newly Endowed Chairs and renewals for the 2014-15 academic year include: Dr. Robert Levitan has been appointed the Cameron Wilson Chair in Depression Research for a 5-year term, effective July 1, 2014.
Dr. Russell Schachar’s term has been renewed for a second 5-year term for the TD Bank Financial Group Chair in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
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CHAIR’S MESSAGE
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Brian
Hodges
2014 Association for the Study of Medical Education’s Gold Medal Award
Andrea
Waddell
2015 Canadian Association for Medical Education Certificate of Merit
Jon
Hunter
Postgraduate Individual Teaching Excellence Award
Lesley
Wiesenfeld
John
Langley
Canadian Psychiatric Association Paul Patterson Innovation in Education Leadership Award
Award for Excellence in Postgraduate Medical Education in the category of Teaching Performance, Mentorship and Advocacy
Catherine
Zahn
Member, Order of Canada
Roger
McIntyre
World’s Top Scientific Minds, Thomson Reuters
Kwame
McKenzie
Fred Fallis Award for Online Learning
Jeffrey
Meyer
Samarthji Lal Award
Ghabbour
Nagi
Excellence in Clinical Teaching Award
These are but a few of the many achievements our faculty members have received in recognition of their work. A complete list can be found towards the end of the annual report.
Internal Department awards include: AWARD
WINNER(S) Patricia Cavanagh
Clare
Pain
Honorary Doctorate of Science, Addis Abbaba University
Mary Seeman Award for Clinical Excellence in the Department of Psychiatry
Tony
Pignatiello
Champion of Telemedicine Award, Ontario Telemedicine Network
Best Paper in Community Consultation Danielle Baribeau for the Division of Child Psychiatry
Paula
Ravitz
Colin R. Woolf Award Long Term Contributions to Continuing Education
Ivan
Silver
2014 Ian Hart Award for Distinguished Contribution to Medical Education
Donna
Stewart
Member, Order of Canada
Adrienne
Tan
Postgraduate Individual Teaching Excellence Award
John
Teshima
2015 Helen P. Batty Award for Excellence and Achievement in Faculty Development
Paul Steinhauer Award for Best Postgraduate Teacher in Child Psychiatry
Marcia Zemans
Fred Lowy Award in Psychosomatic Medicine, Resident or Fellow: Greatest contribution to research in Psychosomatic Medicine by a Resident or Fellow
Kathleen Sheehan
Max Alexandroff Award
Paul Benassi
Donald A. Wasylenki Award for the Best Sociocultural Psychiatry Grand Rounds
Crystal Pinto & Dana Ross
Division of Geriatric Psychiatry Resident Award
Kathleen Bingham
Mary Seeman Award for Achievement Eloise Ballou in the Area of Psychiatry and Humanities
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Psychotherapy Award for Excellence in Supervision
Michael O’Mahony & Adrienne Tan
Robin Hunter Postgraduate Teaching Award
Resident Psychotherapy Award: Best clinical case report submitted by a Resident
Emma Hapke & Kathleen Sheehan
PROMOTIONS
The Psychotherapy Award for Academic Excellence
Jan Malat
Award for Resident Teaching in Undergraduate Education
Devina Wadhwa
Abraham Miller Undergraduate Teaching Award
Chloe Leon
The Resident Award for Social Justice in Mental Health
Ryan Todd
Ivan Silver Award for Excellence in Continuing Mental Health Education
Shelley McMain Carmen Wiebe Michelle Leybman Shira Green Carolyn Whitty Alexandra Smith Paula Ravitz
Paul E. Garfinkel Caversham Booksellers Prize for Excellence in Resident Leadership
Jacqui Holiff and Rosalie Steinberg
Robin Hunter Memorial Award
Hiroyoshi Takeuchi
Marie Mara Award for Residents Advocacy
Justin Weissglas
Award in Addiction Psychiatry: Outstanding Resident in Addiction Psychiatry
Ketan Vegda
Dr. Arun Ravindran was appointed as Chair of the Senior Promotions Committee, effective July 1, 2014.
Paul E. Garfinkel Award for Best Fellowship Supervisor
Daniel Blumberger
Dr. Simone Vigod was appointed as Head of Harvey Stancer Research Day, effective July 1, 2014.
Best Accomplishment by a Fellow, Research
Shraddha Pai
Best Accomplishment by a Fellow, Clinical
Soham Rej
Dr. Molyn Leszcz was appointed Interim Chair Department of Psychiatry , effective October 1, 2014
Donald A. Wasylenki Award
Kwame McKenzie
Dr. Benoit Mulsant was appointed Interim ViceChair, Research, effective November 1, 2014.
The Henry Durost Award for Excellence in Creative Professional Activity in the Department of Psychiatry
Anthony Levitt
Dr. Jon Hunter was appointed Interim Vice-Chair, Education, while Dr. Susan Lieff was on sabbatical, effective December 1, 2014.
Allan S. Kaplan Graduate Award
Daphne Voineskos
Dr. Benjamin Goldstein was been appointed the
Juveria Zaheer
Senior Promotions Janet Durbin, Joanna Henderson, Sean Kidd, Sam Law, Paul Kurdyak, Jorge Soni and Aristotle Voineskos have all been promoted to the rank of Associate Professor, effective July 1, 2015. Catherine Classen has been promoted to the rank of Full Professor, effective July 1, 2015.
Junior Promotions Neely Bakshi , Kamlesh Balchand, Ilan Fischler, Alicja Fishell, Jason Joannou , Maged Kodsi, Victoria Lee, Matthew Levy , Nancy McCallum, Hoa Pham, Stephen Stokl and Marcia Zemans have all been promoted to Assistant Professor, effective July 1, 2015.
LEADERSHIP POSITIONS A noteworthy number of leadership changes took place this year. We are grateful for the outstanding leadership provided by these colleagues.
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new Director of the Clinician Scientist Program (CSP), effective January 1, 2015.
IN CLOSING U of T Psychiatry is world class in depth and breadth, on any dimension one would measure. Our members are dedicated to carrying out the research and educational missions of the University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine. We were very pleased to highlight our department in a video that was prepared for the APA conference in May, 2015 and is now on our website. I’d like to extend my gratitude to the Department’s Executive and Senior Advisory Committees, and all other faculty members who have demonstrated their dedication to our Department. Together, we are achieving our vision of keeping the Department a centre of excellence for psychiatric care and discovery.
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Many members of the Department deserve accolades, and not all are mentioned in the pages of this report. I would like to thank all who contribute to our Department being an exceptional place to work and study, and a source of pride to us all. I have enjoyed my time as Interim Chair this past year, and am grateful for the opportunity to serve the Department in this role. I hope you will be invigorated by what you learn in the pages that follow, and I thank you for your interest and support.
Regards, Dr. Molyn Leszcz Department Chair, Interim
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Vice Chair Annual Report 2014-2015 Overview The Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto is home to an extraordinary broad and diverse spectrum of research pursuits across the wide range of clinical psychiatric disorders as well as research in basic sciences, including molecular genetics, neuroscience, neuroimaging and animal models of psychiatric illness. There is also a large research focus on the determinants of mental illness from a public health perspective. These research activities are embedded in a complex Departmental matrix that consists of 25 affiliated teaching hospitals/institutions and 8 Divisions.
This increase reflects both better data collection, primarily because of the introduction of the introduction of the WebCV, and increased success in attracting research funding by an increased number of our faculty engaged in research. The total amount of PI peer reviewed funding for this past year is $98,024,533. The total Tri-council PI funding for 2014-15 was $47,294,203, an increase of nearly 7% from last year.
Table 1: Investigator Type
2014-2015
Investigator Type
Grant Value
Psychiatry Principal Investigator (PI)
$69,958,872
Psychiatry Co-Investigator
$32,894,151
Each of the 927 faculty members has an appointment in one of the teaching hospitals and at least one of the academic divisions; approximately 39% of these faculty are engaged fulltime in academic pursuits, including research. There are currently 23 endowed chairs in the Department.
Cross Appointed Investigator (other Home Department)
$10,089,399
Totals
$112,942,422
Research Funding
Investigator Type
Unique PIs
The total research funding for the Department of Psychiatry has increased every year for the past four years and for 2014-15 is $112, 942, 422.
Psychiatry Principal Investigator (PI)
215
Psychiatry Co-Investigator
22
Cross Appointed Investigator (other Home Department)
10
Totals
247
Table 1 shows total number of grants, and total grant funding by investigator type (Principle Investigator, Co-Investigator or Cross Appointed Investigator). Table 2 shows total funding by category of grant (peer reviewed, non-peer reviewed, and total fellowship awards).
Note: Sources Dept Database, WebCV, TAHSN Site Data 2014-2015: Total 2,227 records (not all are used)
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CHAIR’S MESSAGE
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Table 2:
Funding Breakdown by Category (Peer, Non-Peer, Fellowship)
Non-Peer Reviewed Funding
2014-2015
1. Federal Agency
$182,647.00
2. Provincial Agency
$1,320,143.00
3. University or Hospital
$2,552,800.00
4. US Agency
$255,994.00
5. International Agency
$26,500.00
6. Industry Agency
$8,262,132.00
7. Miscellaneous Agencies
$723,462.00
Total Non-Peer Reviewed Funding
$13,323,678.00
Fellowship / Personal Award
2014-2015
$10,003,730.00
Fellowship / Personal Award
$1,594,211.00
5. International Agency
$1,413,238.00
Total Fellowship / Personal Award
$1,594,211.00
6. Industry Agency
$ -
Total Funding
$112,942,422.00
7. Miscellaneous Agencies
$564,315.00
Total Peer Reviewed Funding
$98,024,533.00
Peer Reviewed Funding
2014-2015
1. Federal Agency (2014-2015: Total Tri-Council Funding = $27,812,475) (2013-2014: Total Tri-Council Funding = $31,097,629) $47,294,203.00 2. Provincial Agency
$26,453,986.00
3. University or Hospital
$12,295,061.00
4. US Agency (2014-2015: Total NIH Funding = $7,633,011) (2013-2014: Total NIH Funding = $14,188,606)
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CHAIR’S MESSAGE
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IV Publications
CSS
Kathleen Sheehan
PGY5
In the academic year 2014-2015 members of the Department published 896 peer reviewed journal articles, 19 books and 114 book chapters. (See “Publications” at the end of the Annual Report).
CSP
Rachel Ptashny
PGY5
CSP
Angela Golas
PGY5
CSP
Kathleen Bingham
PGY5
CSP
Nicole Kozloff
PGY6
IV Clinician Scientist Stream/Program
CSP
Daphne Voineskos
PGY6
The Clinician Scientist Stream/Program (CSS/CSP) continues to thrive. In the 2014-2015 academic year there were 29 trainees registered in the CSS/CSP. A complete list of CSS/CSP residents is shown in Table 3.
CSS
Rachel Mitchell
PGY6
Table 3 : Residents currently enrolled in CSS/CSP CSS
Justine Giddens
PGY1
CSS
Tyler Kaster
PGY1
CSS
June Lam
PGY1
CSS
Joshua Rosenblat
PGY1
CSS
Lucy Barker
PGY2
CSS
Nick Neufeld
PGY2
CSS
Araba Chintoh
PGY2
CSS
Tanya Hauck
PGY2
CSS
Eric Brown
PGY2
CSS
Deborah Kahan
PGY2
CSS
Paul Kudlow
PGY2
CSS
Danielle Baribeau
PGY3
CSS
Nourhan Mohamed
PGY3
CSS
Karen Wang
PGY3
CSS
Suze Berkhout
PGY3
CSS
Paul Benassi
PGY3
CSS
Amy Gajaria
PGY3
CSS
Benjamin Rosen
PGY3
CSS
Amanda Sawyer
PGY3
CSS
Emma Hapke
PGY4
CSS
Laura Lachance
PGY4
CSS
Jonathan Lee
PGY5
41st Annual Harvey Stancer Research Day The Office of the Vice Chair, Research, is responsible for organizing and coordinating the annual departmental Research Day, under the capable leadership of Dr. Simone Vigod. This year’s Keynote Address was given by Dr. Katherine Wisner, Professor of Psychiatry at Northwestern University. The winners of the Research Day Awards are listed in Table 4, and should all be congratulated for their achievements.
Table 4:
Research Day Awards
Recipient
Best Overall Poster Presentation
Yekta Dowlati
Best Presentation/Paper by a Fellow
Soham Rej
Best Presentation/Paper by a Resident
Paul Kudlow
The John M. Cleghorn Newly Established Researcher Prize (Best Presentation/Paper by a New Investigator) Peter Giacobbe The Heather Munroe-Blum Award for Best Presentation/Paper by a Graduate Student Christie Burton
Respectively submitted, Benoit Mulsant, MD MSc FRCP(C), DFAPA Vice Chair Research, 2014-2015 Professor of Psychiatry
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Vice-Chair and Education Reports
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Vice Chair, Clinical Overview A central component of the responsibilities of the Vice Chair, Clinical is to foster alignment, collaboration 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. An important vehicle for this is the Mental Health and Addictions Acute Care Alliance.This past academic year, the Vice Chair, Clinical also served as the Interim Chair for the University Department. 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 through improving access to care and reducing stigma.
Division Structure This academic year marked the fourth year of the newly aligned Divisional structure of the University Toronto, Department of Psychiatry, in a complement of 8. Each Division is led by a Director(s) as noted below and each Division has significantly advanced integration within and across Divisions through the academic year. The Eight Divisions include: Child and Youth Mental Health: Director, Dr. Peter Szatmari Forensic Psychiatry: Director, Dr. Sandy Simpson Geriatric Psychiatry: Director, Dr. Bruce Pollock Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: Director, Dr. Jon Hunter
Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems: Director, Dr. Vicki Stergiopoulos. The Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship: Director Dr. Susan Lieff and Associate Director, Dr. Paula Ravitz Equity, Gender and Population: Co-Directors Dr. Valerie Taylor and Dr. Kwame McKenzie Brain and Therapeutics, Co-Directors, Dr. Jim Kennedy and Dr. Tony George
The Division structure expands on historic strengths and facilitates growth in new areas of scholarship, as well as supports the sub-specialty training programs in Forensic Psychiatry; Child and Adolescent Psychiatry; and, Geriatric Psychiatry. As we move forward in implementing our University Department of Psychiatry strategic plan, the Divisions are integrating their academic activities into the key foci of the strategic plan. This includes four key pillars that will shape the Department over the next several years: Integration; Development; Brain and Dialogue. This past year, the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry changed the Division name to Child and Youth Mental Health, reflecting both the expanded focus to encompass young adults through the transitional age period to 25 years and also the centrality of interprofessional leadership and collaboration within this Division. During the past year, Susan Lieff- the Director of The Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship took a sabbatical leave and Paula Ravitz did an excellent job as Interim Director.
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VICE CHAIR AND EDUCATION REPORTS
Each Division provides leadership in the areas of: education at all levels including undergraduate, postgraduate, fellowship and continuing education; research; creative professional activity and public policy where appropriate; and, in the provision of exemplary clinical care. Each Division will also seek to establish an endowed Chair(s). Our new fundraising activities are prioritizing the establishment of a Chair in Forensic Psychiatry and a Chair in Consultation Liaison Psychiatry Each Division serves 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 Department. We have been successful in realigning Divisional membership with hospital appointments and establishing greater clarity about primary and secondary appointments. We have established guidelines for the use of the financial support provided by the University Department to each Division.As the host city for the American Psychiatry Association annual meeting this year, some of the Divisions hosted special events tied to the conference and contributed to a very positive profile for the University Department at the conference. A series of Divisional retreats, lecture and continuing professional development events were held over the year to promote engagement amongst the Divisional interprofessional membership and establish clinical, educational and research agendas. Regular updates are presented at both the Senior Advisory Committee. The Council of Divisions is another important forum for the Division leadership and will resume meeting after a hiatus due to the added responsibilities of the Vice Chair, Clinical as Interim Chair.
The Mental Health and Addictions Acute Care Alliance One of the central integrative clinical programs in
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the University Department is the Mental Health and Addictions (MHA) Acute Care Alliance focused on improving access and quality of care across the broad continuum of 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 along with the University of Toronto. The Alliance was established to improve the quality and efficiency of care with which care is 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 senior representatives of each of the hospitals and the university, The steering committee is led by a management committee co-chaired by Dr. Molyn Leszcz representing the University; and Linda Mohri as the administrative lead. Dr. Susan Abbey succeeded Dr. Stephen Sokolov as the hospital lead on the executive and Dr.Vicky Stergiopoulos is an ex-officio member of the executive as the Division Director of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems, the Division in which the Alliance is supported and located. The Alliance Executive includes Adair Roberts as Administrative Director and Dr. Don Wasylenki as Medical Director.We have also added a project manager in light of the growing clinical integrative projects the Alliance is developing. Core activities of the Alliance include maintaining a central bed registry and interhospital bed access daily review 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, the TCLHIN 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
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
fostering a spirit of stronger collaboration regarding bed access and utilization. This forum has been expanded this year into an interprofessional Quality of Care Committee designed to support and advance best practice care in the acute inpatient setting. This past year marked significant advances for the Alliance in operationalizing its memorandum of understanding .We have also developed a three year strategic plan with what we anticipate will be a broad reach and impact. The key elements of the Strategic Plan include: Accelerate development of the culture of collaboration within the MHA acute care system Continuous improvement of the quality of MHA acute care in the TCLHIN Promoting a recovery oriented and evidence based MHA acute care system Create and share knowledge to influence the MHA acute care system Ensure value for resources entrusted to the Alliance Strengthen the Alliance organization to implement the strategic plan
Notable achievements this past year have included, presentations on the Alliance at both the APA and CPA meetings and a local conference for the Alliance hospitals and partners. This outstanding meeting addressed quality of care; best practices and issues of key concern to providers of acute mental health care. Dr. Wendy Levinson presented the key note on “Choosing Wisely. The Alliance has played a key role in supporting the development of a parallel focus on the acute care of children and youth with the development of CAYACC – The Child and Youth Acute Care Collaboration. Under the leadership of Amy Cheung, in her role as co-lead of the Development Pillar of the University Department Strategic Plan, Alice Charach (HSC) and Krista Lemke(TEGH) this collaboration has been launched successfully with
Alice Charach serving as the inaugural medical lead for the program. Engagement with providers of mental health acute care across Toronto is underway including a scan of resources and identification of chief concerns and system requirements A daily bed call has been established and flow of patients across sites has begun. New projects are currently being identified. We have also productively engaged the TCLHIN and TCLHIN CEOs’ table, with the leadership of Dr. Catherine Zahn, CEO of CAMH, to secure a commitment for stable funding for a 3 year period for jointly supported infrastructure for the Alliance.This commitment is supported by the TCLHIN; the partner hospitals and the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry Funded ongoing projects include: a pilot project of Collaborative Care Planning lead by Dr. David Gotlib, St; Joseph’s Hospital, focused on creating across hospital interprofessionally based care plans for high need patients; a pilot project to improve and coordinate access to Urgent Psychiatric Services; a newly formed university-community collaborative focused on training frontline clinicians in evidence based mental health treatments; and Coordinated Access to Care from the Hospital – Emergency Department (CATCHED), a research trial lead by Dr. Stergiopoulos and Alliance partners focused on frequent users of the Emergency Room. This is a program that responds to people who are frequently visiting Emergency Departments (EDs) assisting them in accessing health resources in the community with the goal of reducing preventable ED visits and improving access to communitybased care. The sites include St. Michael’s Hospital, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and St. Joseph’s Health Centre, UHN and TEGH 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,
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specifically South Riverdale, Regent Park, Central Toronto, and Parkdale Community Health Centres. CATCH-ED Transitional Case Managers (TCMs) provide direct service to people who use Emergency Departments frequently and work with the hospital Emergency Department sites and Toronto community agencies to help connect frequent users to appropriate health, mental health, addictions, physical health and other services. This research project has been supported through funding awarded through a competitive process from BRIDGES, a joint MOHLTC and University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine initiative to evaluate fidelity of the delivery of the intervention across providers and as well as the outcome of the intervention. This evaluation, led by Dr.Vicki Stergiopoulos will compare the CATCH-ED intervention with care as usual in a randomized control trial. Analysis of the results of the trial and series of publications are imminent and plans are underway to utilize the knowledge gained and maintain a clinical focus on this population beyond the funded research period which has concluded.
University of Toronto Department of Psychiatrxy Strategic Plan The past academic year has seen significant implementation of our Strategic Plan. All of the Divisions are engaged with the four pillars of the plan. The Vice Chair Clinical is the executive lead for the Pillar 4 Dialogue component of the Strategic Plan which is led by Drs. Ken Fung and Lisa Andermann. The Dialogue Pillar is coordinating working groups charged with revising the social responsibility teaching and training curriculum; improving access for
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marginalized populations; extending our global mental health reach and reducing stigma. A new postgraduate award for outstanding achievements in social responsibility was established and awarded this year after a robust competition. Planning is underway for our third annual MindFest event coinciding with Mental Illness Awareness Week after a very successful second event. In collaboration with the University of Toronto Hart House and a number of UT organizations that support mental health advocacy including the leadership of Health & Wellness, Student Life Programs and Services, MindFest will be a full day of presentations and panels by consumers, advocacy groups and professionals; contact education; videos; and a mental health fair fostering dialogue and education aimed at reducing stigma and improving mental health awareness.This year we have expanded to partner with Ryerson and OCAD as well. We expect to continue to build on these larger scale clinical and academic partnerships to improve knowledge, education, quality and access within the systems of care we provide within mental health and addictions. Additionally, as a component of our advocacy mandate we work closely with the newly appointed University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry Communications Director, Lindsay Curtis to mobilize and coordinate media and public communication responses that advance understanding of important contemporary mental health issues.
Molyn Leszcz, MD. FRCPC Professor of Psychiatry Vice Chair, Clinical University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Mount Sinai Hospital
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Vice Chair, Education Overview Throughout the 2014-15 academic year, the Education Portfolio has continued to foster, encourage, and facilitate education and training relative to the mission, vision, and goals of the Department of Psychiatry.
increased spots and help us improve our program over the coming years. Our residency program has seen a number of new developments over the past year. Our residency-led on call group advocated for an additional overnight resident at CAMH which has led to dramatically improved satisfaction on the part of the residents.
The Undergraduate Program (UG) has made great strides under the direction of Dr. Raed Hawa. Priorities for our UG program include expanding the preclerkship program, enhancing psychiatry integration within our four year UME curriculum, expanding recruitment, and increasing our involvement within the medical school locally as well as within the national and international educational bodies.
Consultation Liaison Psychiatry was modified to become a 6 month rotation based on resident feedback. This allows for elective time during a crucial developmental period. The collaborative care rotation is now a longitudinal 12 month experience in the PGY5 year. In addition, residents now have a longitudinal neuroscience experience for the first 3 years of training, with plans to add integrated seminars to the PGY4/5 years.
This year, our UG Program launched an online interactive tool - the Psychiatry Hub- which was created in response to the student need for up to date, relevant and distilled resources to use for clinical reference and study during their Psychiatry rotation. Our UG program has been the first Canadian program to collaborate with ADMSEP in creating clinical scenarios/e-modules that will provide a national database for use in Psychiatry curricula nationwide. In addition, our UG program played a critical role in implementing a longitudinal integrated clerkship (LInC) that was piloted in 2014 for a pod of 7 third year medical students at the Fitzgerald Academy.
The Continuing Professional and Practice Development (CPPD) portfolio has experienced a successful year under Dr. Sanjeev Sockalingam. The CPPD committee launched a 2015-2017 strategic direction document that outlines four strategic directions with the goal of enhancing the alignment of continuing professional development (CPD) and QI as part of a systems-based approach to education and practice improvement. As an official AAMC ae4Q site, the Office of CPPD completed a national study identifying a framework for aligning CPD and QI in mental health. Using this framework, the department is leading a series of initiatives to increase the number of QI trained faculty. There have also been pilots of Psychiatry Morbidity and Mortality (M&M) Rounds, and the committee is supporting the growth of M&M Rounds for Psychiatry across affiliated hospital sites. In the upcoming year, the CPPD Committee will continue to strengthen the
Our Postgraduate program continues as the largest Psychiatry training program in North America. We have secured 5 new positions for each of the next 5 years that will increase our complement of psychiatry residents. Substantial funding will support these
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alignment between CPD and QI in our department.
and Child and Adolescent Subspecialty training programs this year.
Dr. Arun Ravindran continues to develop and expand the Fellowship Program, which is now one of the largest in the Faculty of Medicine. In 20142015, there were 79 new Fellows in the Department, a continuation of the strong enrolment seen in recent years. A recent evaluation of the current cohort indicated that our fellows come from a diversity of contexts which include Canada, Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and South America. Approximately two-thirds of Fellows are MDs and one-third PhDs.
Having a clear direction and identifying opportunities for cross-fertilisation and collaboration across the continuum of education for our department have guided the work of the Education Council which is comprised of all of the above Directors, myself and the lead of the RISE stream. In the past academic year the Education Council has continued to identify faculty members for educational awards with some success and has implemented a semi-annual review of faculty teaching performance by the Chair and Vice-Chair, Education.
Dr. John Teshima and the Faulty Development Committee have successfully implemented many new and recurring initiatives over this past academic year. Recurring events include an Orientation Day for new Faculty, which provides overviews of several important considerations for new faculty; a Promotions Bootcamp which outlines the senior promotions process; and the Donald Wasylenki Education Day which focused on competency-based education this year. Special initiatives include the Building Resilience workshop which was designed to help attending faculty adapt to stresses and challenges; as well as the STACER Examiner Training, a program designed to improve the reliability of the examination process. All events were highly rated by participants. Within our three fully accredited Subspecialty Programs, the Geriatric and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry programs successfully passed the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (RCPSC) mandated internal review of their programs in April of 2014. Congratulations to Drs. Rob Madan and John Langley and their PRPCs for their wonderful work. We are also delighted to acknowledge the first graduates of the Geriatric
The Education Development Fund Committee (EDF) reviews grant submissions from Department of Psychiatry applicants to the Faculty of Medicine’s EDF on an annual basis, under the direction of Drs. Sophie Soklaridis and Shelly Brook. This year we are pleased that two of our committee members were selected and approved for funding: Drs. Sophie Soklaridis and Carrie Bernard for their project “The Health Advocate Role in Family Medicine and Psychiatry Residency Curricula” and Drs. Sanjeev Sockalingam and David Wiljer for their project “Developing a Lifelong Learning Curriculum to Prepare Psychiatry Residents for Continuing Professional Development”. I would like to express my gratitude to all of our faculty members and administrative staff for their dedication and commitment to education in our Department over the past year.
Best wishes, Susan Lieff MD, MEd, MMan Vice-Chair, Education
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Undergraduate Medical Education Overview My commitment as Director of Undergraduate Medical Education in the Department of Psychiatry continues to be to improve our preclerkship program, enhance psychiatry integration within our four year UME curriculum, expand recruitment, and increase our involvement within the medical school locally as well as within the national and international educational bodies.
PRECLERKSHIP BRAIN AND BEHAVIOUR and MMMD As a result of the collaboration between Dr. Albert Wong, the Brain and Behaviour Psychiatry Coordinator, and Dr. Nikola Grujich, the Coordinator for the Psychiatry section in MMMD, we were successful in integrating the psychiatry curriculum between first year’s Brain and Behavior and second year’s MMMD. This resulted in in enhancement of psychiatry exposure to our preclerkship students. Our psychiatrists now co-teach along paediatricians and family physicians in areas such as eating disorders, addiction and childhood developmental/behavioural disorders. The feedback from the students has been very positive.
ASCM I/ASCM II/DOCH 2 Our staff continues 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. As we move ahead with new innovation in preclerkship years, DOCH will be replaced with a new program that enhances student engagement with community agencies. Dr. Adrian Grek will co-lead our efforts to continue to be at the forefront of this preclerkship innovation.
Making Every Encounter Therapeutic- MEET Dr. Adrienne Tan continues to lead MEET - an innovative program for second year medical students to experience how therapeutic communications can be an effective skill to engage patients in a collaborative relationship. This year 13 students have participated in four sessions including two patient interactions under the supervision of Drs. Khan, Wasserman, Burra, Ravitz, Weissglas, Weinroth, Sheehan, Laidlaw,Vatsya, Roy, Hapke, Marlborough, and Charach. This innovative program has been a huge success among the medical students.
PSYCHIATRY LONGITUDINAL EXPERIENCEPsycLE and PsycLERs Under the leadership of Drs. Alan Fung (faculty lead) and Dr Richard Yanofsky (resident/fellow lead) the success of the PsycLE program continues with the participation of 53 students and over 30 faculty members. The expansion of the program to include 15 residents as supervisors has also proven very successful. The first year medical students continue to
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report very positive experiences and rate their supervisors – both faculty and residents - as excellent.
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core specialties who they work with longitudinally. Thanks to all the preceptors at SMH and CAMH who have made this initiative possible.
ADVOCACY MENTORING INITIATIVE- AMI This initiative is being co-lead by Drs. Mitesh Patel and Philip Berger. By collaborating with Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Toronto, this mentoring program enables matching youth at risk with interested first year medical students. Residents from Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Adolescent Medicine programs provide group supervision and education to the medical students in order to support the matches and foster positive relationships based on secure attachment principles. Staff physicians provide overarching support and education to residents and medical students. For this academic year, 4 students have volunteered for this initiative.
RECRUITMENT The Recruitment Committee, under the guidance of Drs. Kien Dang and Nik Grujich, continues to host Psychiatry Interest Group nights, medical student dinners, and movie nights. The Summer Institute continues to be a success with over 70 applicants from across the country for 25 positions. For this year, we had 15 University of Toronto students selected to participate in the Institute. As part of reaching out to our community psychiatrists, we continue to engage members of the APA – Ontario Branch to take on Institute students for half-day electives.
CLERKSHIP LONGITUDINAL INTEGRATED CLERKSHIPLInC Our UG program played a critical role in implementing a longitudinal integrated clerkship (LInC) that was piloted in 2014 for a pod of 7 third year medical students at the Fitzgerald Academy. Expansion in 2015 involves a pod of 7-8 students in 3 Academies. In the LInC, students are assigned to a small number of preceptors from the
CENTRALIZED CORE CURRICULUM The centralized core teaching, under the leadership of Drs. Kien Dang and Chloe Leon, 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 that prepares our students to the complex and yet exciting world of psychiatric care.
Mini ACE/CBD The mini-ACE/CBD forms are used to plan an encounter, pick a focus of assessment, assess performance on the planned activity and provide brief focused feedback. These modified forms will provide a more valid and reliable assessment tool compared to the previously used interview forms.
NARRATIVE REFLECTIVE COMPETENCY During the psychiatry clerkship rotation, clinical clerk have the opportunity to develop the skills of constructing and interpreting complex narrative communications as part of the Narrative and Reflective Competence (NRC) curriculum. NRC is a new innovative program that has been running for the last 2 years under the coleadership of Dr. Debra Hamer.
UTM and OS INVOLVEMENT/ EXPANSION TO NYGH and TEGH The psychiatry leads at Mississauga Hospital (Drs. Sashi Senthelal and Ariel Shafro), Credit Valley Hospital (Dr. Mandeep Singh) and Ontario Shores (Dr. Hoa Pham) continue to work with their faculty members to improve our students’ experiences at their respective sites. Dr. Shafro will take on the role of the THP psychiatry education lead in mid 2015.
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
As the longitudinal integrated clerkship expands to new sites, NYGH and TEGH will each host 4 students for their clerkship rotation starting the new academic year.
ELECTIVE/SELECTIVES Dr. Oshrit Wanono has been coordinating our Psychiatry electives offering local, national, and international students electives in various psychiatry specialties in our department. Dr. Monica Scalco has been coordinating our undergraduate program selectives offered through the Transitions to Residency (TTR) block.
RESIDENT AS TEACHER CURRICULUM An innovative new program introducing residents to different approaches of teaching has been implemented. It borrows from the Teaching for Learning and Collaboration (TLC) program that has been successfully introduced in multiple hospital sites and adapts it to residents’ needs. Dr. Adrienne Tan is the faculty lead and Dr. Nate Charach is the resident lead for this program.
PSYCHIATRY HUB In collaboration with Dr. Marcus Law and the contribution of our residents (Drs. Roy, Charach, Rostas, Woodward, Leung, and Silverman) and Dr. Suneeta Monga an online interactive tool - the Psychiatry Hub- has been created in response to the student need for up to date, relevant and distilled resources to use for clinical reference and study during their Psychiatry rotation. This resource contains essential topics that a clinical clerk is expected to encounter during their sixweek Psychiatry rotation as well covers topics that are relevant for second year medical students.
CSI- CLINICAL STIMULATION INITIATIVE and ADMSEP Our UG program has been the first Canadian program to collaborate with ADMSEP in creating clinical scenarios/e-modules that will provide a
national database for use in Psychiatry curricula nationwide. We have created three modules: one on sleep disorders (in collaboration with Dr. Michael Marcangelo from Chicago); one on binge eating disorder (in collaboration with Drs. Jessica VanExan and Sanjeev Sockalingam); and one on parasomnias (in collaboration with Dr.Victor Likwornik). The insomnia module has been published through MedEdPortal. The BED module has been submitted to MedEdPortal.
COUPE Our program, along with the COUPE members, has recently published a manuscript in Academic Psychiatry on recruitment based on a national survey of all Canadian medical schools. The finding of this report has already been shared through a number of conferences and UG education bodies.
OUR OSCE GOES INTERNATIONAL We were pleased to host an international delegation of five representatives from the Universities of Tromsø and Trondheim in Northern Norway, who wished to observe our OSCE processes to aid in implementation in their program. After observing our OSCE, they also met with members of our faculty who serve on our core curriculum committee, evaluations committee, and co-lead UG teaching initiatives to exchange ideas and gain a comprehensive overview of our teaching and evaluations systems.
SPECIAL THANKS My sincere thanks extend to all members of the UG committee, the UG administrative support team, as well as to our faculty and residents who continue to contribute to the UG mission and provide excellent role models to our students. Respectfully submitted, Raed Hawa MD FRCPC DABSM DABPN Director, UG Medical Education, Department of Psychiatry
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Postgraduate Medical Education Overview The 2014-2015 academic year was another wonderful one for our residency program. We continue to maintain the outstanding training for which we have been known for many years. This was highlighted by our residents achieving a 100% pass rate on the Royal College examinations this year. We also successfully lobbied to increase the size of our program on the basis of the profound need for more mental health professionals. We have successfully secured 5 new positions for each of the next 5 years that will increase our total complement of trainees by 25 over that span. These new spots came with substantial funding that will help us improve our program over the coming years. We continued in our role as the largest Psychiatry training program in North America and filled all 37 Canadian Medical Graduate and International Medical Graduate positions in the first iteration of the 201 CaRMS match. Despite these successes, we have not sat back on our laurels. A series of initiatives have begun that will radically transform our program over the next few years while keeping us at the forefront of innovation in postgraduate education.
PRPC Subcommittee Activities 20142015 The PRPC continued to function effectively
through the strong efforts of its subcommittees with the Resident Evaluation, Resident Selection, Site Feedback and Safety Subcommittees all being extremely busy over the past academic year. Dr. Lori Wasserman took over and effectively chaired the Site Feedback Subcommittee. She has continued the tradition of ensuring multiple opportunities for resident feedback over the course the year. She has also continued to modify and refine many of our processes, including those around dissemination and confidentiality. 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, 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. We also welcomed Ms. Sandra Caswell to the postgrad admin team. She is the point contact person in the postgraduate office. This single point of entry for all questions is intended to improve customer service and response times. She is also responsible for the 3 sub-specialty training programs and for our transition towards competency-based education. The Safety Subcommittee has come under the able leadership of Dr. Jason Joannou. He is well respected
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
for his sensible, resident-centred, direct approach to safety. Together with thoughtful resident input, his group was extremely active in continuing to revise and enhance the Department of Psychiatry safety process in order to ensure that there is increased attention to safety during community visits. He has also capably managed critical incidents when they occur. This has helped to improve our support of residents while improving safety for their colleagues in a timely fashion. Dr. Joannou who is already busily putting together a new and enthusiastic team to continue to carry out the important work of maintaining safety across numerous training sites as many of our senior residents are “graduating” from the committee. Dr. Alpna Munshi continued in her role of Director of International Medical Graduate training. She has been heavily involved in reforming their orientation and working closely with the residents to make sure their needs are met in a way that will help encourage success. The Resident Selection Subcommittee coChaired by Dr. Lesley Wiesenfeld and Dr. Susan Abbey together with Dr. Alpna Munshi, held another extremely successful CaRMS Match. Our residency filled “more spots than ever” with extremely competitively candidates.
Changes in Faculty Involved in Residency Education Dr. Julie Maggi continues her hard work supporting residents with a wide variety of issues including evaluation disputes, family problems and wellness issues through her resident advisor role. Dr. Stephen Gelber capably covered for Dr. Judy Lin as postgraduate site coordinator at North York General Hospital during her maternity leave. Dr. Ilana Shawn took over as the PGY1 site coordinator at St. Michael’s Hospital. Dr. Marijana Drandic took on the role of site coordinator at St. Joseph’s Hospital from Dr. Andrew Howlett. Dr. Gail Robinson continued to act as interim site coordinator for the University Health Network.
Dr. Sian Rawkins became the inaugural “STACER Czar” with responsibilities for faculty development and resident support in relation to that examination. Dr. Rajeevan Rasasingham covered as head of the child program during Dr. Daniel Gorman’s parental leave. We were also joined by Dr. Ariel Shafro as the new site coordinator at Trillium Health Partners. Dr. Benjamin Goldstein assumed stewardship of the clinician scientist stream/program from Dr. Jeff Daskalakis. We welcome all the bright, enthusiastic new additions while thanking all of our outgoing faculty for their contributions.
New Developments in Residency Education Over the past year there have been a number of important new developments within the residency program. A residency-led on call group continues to modernize our call allocation processes. They successfully advocated for an additional overnight resident at CAMH which has led to dramatically improved satisfaction on the part of the residents. Based on resident feedback and concern about fragmentation during PGY-4 training, Consultation Liaison Psychiatry was modified for to become a 6 month rotation. This allows for elective time during a crucial developmental period. In addition, Dr. Nadiya Sunderji has worked hard to make the collaborative care rotation a longitudinal 12 month experience in the PGY5 year. This will better meet the needs of our trainees, while allowing them to form strong affiliations with other teams and community agencies. It will also allow for the development of new experiences. The program again held a highly rated neuroscience week with a keynote talk from U of T’s own Dr. Min Zhuo on “novel synaptic mechanisms for chronic pain and anxiety”. In addition, the residents now have a longitudinal neuroscience experience for the first 3 years of training, with plans to add integrated seminars to
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the PGY4/5 years. The program continued it’s “transition to PGY2” June month for all our PGY1s. This month spearheaded by Dr. Mary Preisman was delivered for the first time in June of 2014. We also delivered a series of workshops around teaching that are meant to enhance the effectiveness of our residents as teachers as they enter PGY2 and work on general psychiatry teams. The incoming PGY2s will also had the opportunity to shadow the outgoing PGY2 residents so as to learn firsthand the ins and outs of their new role which should help to ease their transition. Dr. Sacha Agrawal has continued his leadership with Ms. Pat Cappone with the ongoing development of a program of patient advisors. These are carefully selected, trained and paid people who have had lived experiences with mental illness. They are able to provide a unique and valuable perspective to our residents on our Chronic Care rotation that may be unavailable to faculty. This project continues to explore and push the boundaries of knowledge that can be useful to future clinicians and their patients. Finally, Dr. John Teshima and his group led two STACER standardization ½ days. 60 faculty members participated and have helped to increase the fairness and consistency of this examination. 2014-2015 Faculty of Medicine/Department of Psychiatry Teaching/Education Awards
List of PGY-1 Residents Last Name Abdalla Alkhawashki Alldred Bacon Chertkow Cohen Dias Eid
First Name Amina Samah Tracy Sarah Laura Gregory Joshua Laeticia
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Elias Fage Flor-Henry Gandhi Giddens Grewal Hunda Kaster Kalkat Krakowski Kuk Kurji Lam Malick Matthews Rosenblat Sonley Smith Sukhu Tau Wang Wang Weiglein Yang
Rayanne Bruce Sophie Samir Justine Lauren Smrita Christopher Tyler Harkiran Aneta Dorothy Ayaz June Sing Hong Arfeen David Joshua Anne Sarah Michelle Michael Andrew Le (Lele) Geneva Jinghao
List of PGY-2 Residents Last Name Abadir Al Sanad Abate Alderbas Barker Braidek Brown Bunker Chintoh DeGraff Donald Fong
First Name Anna Maria Yazeed Amanda Sarah Lucy Jessica Lynne Eric Andrea Araba Scott Alicia Yin
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Franchuk Garcia Hauck Kahan Kaplansky Kennedy Kim Kosta Kudlow Lee-Evoy Leung Mansfield Massey Meng Morita Neufeld Poukhovski-Sheremetyev Shyamal Silverman Tasca Toma Viljoen Wright Zhu
Susan Claudia Tanya Deborah Chelsea Laura Hun-Tae Jacqueline Paul Janet Joanne Julia Kiran Hanna Jody Nicholas Ivan Gayathri Aaron Adam Simina Jeanetta Elisabeth (Elise) Katie
Hoppe Howarth Jeyarajan Khanna MacGillivray Martinovic Mohamed Orlando Quinn Reynolds Rosen Rostas Silver Slade Steinberg Todd Tse Virani Wadhwa Waisman Wang Wong Woodward
Tamara Briana Gaiathry Robin Lindsey Jovana Nourhan Laura Jason Katelyn Benjamin Aviva Mara Laura Rosalie Ryan Carol Sabah Devina Darcy Karen Benedict Elizabeth
List of PGY-4 Residents List of PGY-3 Residents Last Name Alderbas Al Fakeh Ballou Alasiri Baribeau Berkhout Byrne Cristian Drandic Ettie Gajaria Hartfeil Hawkins
First Name Sarah Sulhi Ali Eloise Rahaf Danielle Suze Roisin Alexandra Ana Suzanne Amy Misha Michael
Last Name Ah-sue Bai Bahathig Benassi Boyle Broad Charach Gabilondo Haggith Hapke Harrigan Hayer Holiff Karas
First Name Sheri Shari Ali Paul Matthew Kathleen Nathaniel Cedric Yevgeniya (Gina) Emma Claire Lovneet Jacqueline Alexandra
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Khanna Kitamura Klein Klein Krishnan Lachance Marlborough McIntyre-Stewart Mills Mumtaz Neszt Nica-Graham O'Brien Richards-Bentley Riva-Cambrin Sawyer St. Jacques Strasburg Uy Williams Wilson-Ewing
Robin Christopher Avital Hannah Uday Laura Renee Michelle Sarah Mishelle Rosanne Soraya Michael Elena (Irina) Jonathan (Darcy) Christopher Jeremy Amanda Arianne Kate Paul Laura Tessa
List of PGY-5 Residents Last Name Alenezi Bingham Chapman Chen Crookall Citynski Fantus Fergusson Fink Fleiman (nee Friedman) Golas Hamer Holdar Hosseini-Tabatabaei Jovanovic Knox
First Name Shuliweeh Kathleen Elizabeth Anna Jake M Hollie Claire Mary Ellen (Ellen) Jennifer Meri Kinneret Angela Debra Mohammad Mehr-Afarin Marijana Matthew
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Kozloff Laidlaw (nee Ford) Lee Lentz Lynch Nixon Park Petrovic Pinto Ptashny Ross Roy Rudolph Sadler Sheehan Strasburg Sum Sutton Swartz Thoma Twose Vegda Vukin Walton Weizenberg Yuen Zamir Zhou
Nicole Jennifer Jonathan Vanessa Marie-JosĂŠe Andrea Joseph Vera Crystal Rachel Dana Anvesh Kaila Dafni Kathleen Kate Denise Wesley Shari Jessica Richelle Ketan Iva Georgia Evan Gloria Orit Yanying
List of PGY-6 Residents Last Name Al-Humoud
First Name Abdulmohsen
Bhattacharyya (Ravi) Monidipa Bond Jason Choptiany Maxym Crepeau-Gendron Cyr
Gabrielle Gabrielle
De Oliveira
Roberta
Subspecialty Forensic Subspecialty CAP Subspecialty CAP Subspecialty Forensic Subspecialty Geri Subspecialty Forensic Subspecialty CAP Subspecialty
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Jaques
Alayna
Lopez de Lara
Catalina
Mitchell Nicolici
Rachel Diana
Ooi Pacione
Cara Laura
Geri Subspecialty mat leave from Dec 15, 2014 extended to Feb 28, 2015 Geriatric Subspecialty ends Dec 31, 2014 CAP Subspecialty Geriatric Subspecialty ends Dec 31, 2014 CAP Subspecialty CAP Subspecialty
List of Clinician Scientist Stream and Program Residents PRAT Executive 2014-15 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 leadership demonstrated by the 2014-2015 PRAT co-Presidents Dr. Jacqueline Holiff and Dr. Rosalie Steinberg. Mark Fefergrad, MD, FRCPC, MEd. Director, Postgraduate Medical Education
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Fellowship Program Annual Report July 1, 2014 – June 30, 2015
Events and Achievements in 2014-2015
The Fellowship Program of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, is diverse, unique and wide-ranging. About two-thirds of Fellows are MDs and one-third PhDs. 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. In addition, the University of Toronto’s Department of Psychiatry supports and integrates the CIHR-funded postdoctoral program, the Social Aetiology of Mental Illness (SAMI) program directed by Dr. Kwame McKenzie, into the Fellowship Program.
Awards Available to Fellows and Supervisors
A significant number of Psychiatry Fellows nationwide are enrolled in the University of Toronto Psychiatry Fellowship Program. Since 2010, the annual number of new fellows has grown significantly, and the range of their countries of origin has also broadened notably. In 2014-2015, there were 79 new fellows in the Department, a continuation of the strong enrolment seen in recent years. The current cohort comes from across six continents including North America, Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and South America.
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. Daniel Blumberger. 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 we offered two awards in this category, one to a research fellow and another to a clinical fellow. The recipients were Shraddha Pai and Soham Rej, respectively. We were also pleased to offer several travel awards this year to Fellows who were presenting their research at scientific meetings. This year’s recipients were Christie Lynn Burton, Lai Gwen Chan, Shinichiro Nakajima, Elaine Beverly Setiawan, Hiroyoshi Takeuchi and Ellen Van Der Plas.
Events Members of our fellowship program attended the 41st annual Harvey Stancer Research Day, which was hosted by the Department of Psychiatry on June 18, 2015. This year’s theme was “Moving psychiatry research
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forward: enhancing capacity for high quality discovery and dissemination”. Faculty, students, trainees and and early investigators had the opportunity to present their research findings. There was also a Mentorship Breakfast where postdoctoral trainees could attend to meet other fellows and distinguished researchers in the Department of Psychiatry to discuss their work and research aspirations. About 15 trainees from the fellowship program presented at this year’s event, with 2 receiving awards for their outstanding presentations. The award for ‘Best Presentation by a PhD’ was won by Christie Burton and the award for ‘Best Presentation by a MD’ was accepted by Soham Rej.
which has been successful. Priorities moving forward include limiting application process to two windows of opportunity during the year, setting up an orientation process, implementing an online application submission, increasing the number of seminars, facilitating attendance of Fellows in Resident education programs, introducing more integrated rotation programs across affiliated hospitals and implementing greater involvement of community teaching hospitals.
Fellows Please refer to tables below for a listing of Fellows by Program or Division. There were 79 registered Fellows this academic year.1
Works in Progress The Director of the Fellowship Program, Dr. Arun Ravindran, has recently been appointed Interim VP of Research for the Department. He continues as Chair of the Senior Promotions Committee and as a member of the SAMI administrative committee. He is also a member of the Faculty of Medicine PGME Fellowship Educational Advisory Committee, which continues to provide standard guidelines for Fellowships across the Departments in the Faculty of Medicine, such as for setting learning objectives and evaluating performance. The administrative processes of the Fellowship program of the Department of Psychiatry are continually reviewed to ensure alignment with these guidelines. The Fellowship Program continues to emphasize the importance of consistent and effective evaluation and report procedures throughout this academic year. To better evaluate the fit of a candidate to our program, we have instituted on face to face group interviews. When this is not possible, a group interview is held over Skype. We are currently working towards instituting a mandatory research report and/or publication for all fellows. Improving the gender balance in fellows and trainees from the Middle East and Far East is a top priority. We have made a conscious effort to increase the number of female fellows,
Fellows Enrolled in the Program: Academic Year 2014/2015 Last Name
First Name
Division/Program
Abdulkader
Sayed
Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Abi-Jaoude
Elia
Neurosciences
Al Difa’l
Zakia Ali Salim Women’s Mental Health
Al Hashemi
Tharaya Abdulla Brain & Therapeutics Mohammed
Al Ibrahim
Noor Reyadh
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Al Mosyab
Nemer
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Al Nuumani
Rahma Ali
Mood & Anxiety Disorders
Al Salmi
Muna Abdullah Mood & Anxiety Khalfan Disorders
Al Zaabi
Asila Abdullah Said
Addiction Psychiatry
Al Ozairi
Abdullah Sadad Sabri
Neuropsychiatry
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Fellows (continued) Last Name
First Name
Albanna Alghamdi
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Fellows (continued) Division/Program
Last Name
First Name
Division/Program
Ammar Humaid Child & Adolescent Abdulkader Psychiatry
De la Fuente Sandoval
Francisco Camilo
Research Imaging Centre
Waleed Ahmad Child & Adolescent Ghanem Psychiatry
Dham
Pallavi
Geriatric Psychiatry
Fazeli
Zhila
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Flanders
Corey
Addiction Psychiatry
Gauthier
Lynn Rollande
Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Alnaami
Ahmed Abdullah M
Geriatric Psychiatry
Alqahtani
Yasser
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Alsayegh
Daniah Omar M. Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Alshammari
Nuha
Alshehri
Ahmed Salim G Addiction Psychiatry
Alshehri
Youssef Faiez
Alzahrani
Ahmad Saad M. Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Alzahrani
Gebreyohannes Miheret
Equity, Gender & Population
Gerretsen
Philip
Geriatric Psychiatry
Ghazala
Zaid
Geriatric Psychiatry
Hassan
Ahmed Nabeel Brain & Therapeutics
Hensel
Jennifer
Adult Psychiatry & Systems
Abdullah Bakhit Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Isserles
Moshe
Mood & Anxiety Disorders
Ambusaidi
Aamal Abdullah Brain & Therapeutics Suleiman
Iwata
Yusuke
Brain & Therapeutics
Atsariyasing
Wanlop
Kelkile
Teshome Shibre Cognitive Disorders
Kirkham
Julia
Brain & Therapeutics
Geriatric Psychiatry
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Geriatric Psychiatry
Bagadia
Ashlesha Jitendra
Equity, Gender & Population
Knyahnytska
Yuliya General Psychiatry Oleksandrivana
Beyraghi
Narges
Addiction Psychiatry
Kronenberg
Sefi
Child & Adolescent
Bingeliene
Arina
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Kronick
Rachel
Child Psychiatry
Kumar
Sanjeev
Geriatric Psychiatry
Lagzdins
Dina Yurievna
Addiction Psychiatry
Lee
Cheolsoon
Equity, Gender & Population
Lee
Jimmy Chee Keong
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Mankoo
Ravinder Singh Neuropsychiatry
Mansur
Rodrigo
Brain & Therapeutics
McInerney
Shane
Brain & Therapeutics
Bohra
Miqdad Hussain Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Brown
Hilary
Equity Gender & Population
Burton
Christie
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Chan
Lai Gwen
Brain & Therapeutics
Chan
Yuen Sze
Geriatric Psychiatry
Curran
Genevieve
Brain & Therapeutics
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Fellows (continued) Last Name
Fellows (continued)
First Name
Division/Program
Last Name
First Name
Division/Program
Medina Alvarez Ana Beatriz
Child & Adolescent
Tomas
Angela Milan
Mousa
Hanan Mohammed
Brain & Therapeutics; Geriatric Psychiatry
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Tseng
Michael
Neuroscience
Nakajima
Shinichiro
Geriatric Psychiatry & Schizophrenia
Yanofsky
Richard Joseph Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Nazeri
Arash
Brain & Therapeutics
Zaheer
Juveria
Obadia
Maya
Consultation Liaison Psychiatry
Adult Psychiatry & Health Systems
Zai
Gwyneth
Brain & Therapeutics
Pai
Shraddha
Brain & Therapeutics
Pink
Deborah
Consultation/Liaison Psychiatry
Ray
Ipsita
Forensic Psychiatry
Rej
Soham
Geriatric Psychiatry
Roostaei
Tina
Geriatric Psychiatry
Rotem
Amit Yosef
Addiction Psychiatry
Rouwenhorst
Willya Maaike
Early Psychosis
Setiawan
Elaine Beverly
Neuroscience
Shlomi Polachek Inbal
Equity, Gender & Population
Sin
Gwen Li
Geriatric Psychiatry
Soltan
Aurelia
General Psychiatry
Spassiani
Natasha
General Psychiatry
Takeuchi
Hiroyoshi
Schizophrenia
Tan
Pei Lin (Lynnette)Geriatric Psychiatry
Thus far, 13XX new fellows are expected to begin training in the next academic period (July 2015June 2016). We continue to receive and process a high volume of applications from Canada and beyond, which further confirms the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, as among the top choices for postdoctoral training by young psychiatrists worldwide.
Arun V. Ravindran, MBBS, MSc, PhD, FRCPC, FRCPsych
Director, Fellowship Program 1
Due to open enrolment and varied completion dates, the Fellows listed above reflect all those registered during the 2014-2015 year.
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Global Mental Health
SECTION OVERVIEW The Global Mental Health (GMH) section is the global health arm of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, and is an active partner in the University of Toronto’s global health initiatives. Its primary role is to collaborate with international academic centres, non-governmental organizations and other international agencies to build mental health research, academic training, and treatment expertise around the world, particularly in developing countries. It strives to increase public awareness of mental health issues and influence governmental policy and support for mental health resources, at a global level. GMH draws on the rich expertise and interests of Departmental members in such collaborations and also works actively to develop a culture of enthusiasm for global health work among trainees and young faculty in the Department. It works closely with the Office of Transformative Global Health at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), as well as with international health groups within both UTPsychiatry and the University of Toronto. Humanitarian endeavours are also in its purview.
YEAR IN REVIEW In 2014-2015, the GMH section continued to develop and implement activities to meet its goals. These included collaborative training with partner institutions in Asia and the Middle East, and the
creating of a wide range of learning opportunities for students and trainees. Funding applications for global health work have also been successful, a tribute to the caliber of Departmental faculty.
Education Training programs The Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration, under the leadership of Dr. Clare Pain, continues to progress well. The psychiatry residency program is well in place, and programs in other specialties, from family medicine and dentistry to surgery and radiology, are in development. As well, Akwatu Khenti from the Dalla Lana School of Public Health leads several global mental health education initiatives in which UTPsychiatry faculty are involved, including training in addictions research for health professionals from Latin America and the Caribbean, training in addictions treatment for health professionals in the Caribbean, and training for decision-makers from Central America in integrating mental health care into primary care. Similarly, the inter-university funded research collaboration led by Dr. Trevor Young between the University of Toronto and the University of Sao Paolo, Brazil, is also continuing well. The collaborative clinician-scientist training program between the GMH section and the Universities of Colombo and Kelaniya in Sri Lanka continued to develop. Three trainees’ projects are underway and
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two other projects are in development. In addition, a psychologist has now joined the clinician-scientist program, and has begun her own project. A similar program is Malaysia, in collaboration with the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM; National University of Malaysia), is also underway. One trainee has been recruited and in currently in the process of applying for funding for her research project. MOUs are also currently under discussion with two universities in Latin America to help build mental health research and treatment capacity.
Capacity building initiatives Training seminars in mental health research continue to be held. Planning is currently underway for the next set, which will take place in the Middle East in Winter 2016, under the sponsorship of academic institutions from several regional countries. There will be considerable focus on development of research questions and protocols by the attendees, who have been selected by their institutions for their potential as researchers. As previous, the teaching faculty will come from the Department of Psychiatry and the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.
Learning opportunities Medical students International research placements have been offered to 1st and 2nd year medical students through the Comprehensive Research Experience for Medical Students (CREMS) program of the Faculty of Medicine. The placement postings have generated considerable interest among medical students for other opportunities for international experience. In Summer 2014, two 2nd year medical students travelled to Sri Lanka for 8 weeks, to conduct a small research project on psychiatric morbidity among spinal cord injury patients at the Ragama Rehabilitation Institute, affiliated with the University of Kelaniya teaching hospital. This year (Summer 2015), two 1st year
students have already travelled to Sri Lanka to conduct an 8-week project on psychiatry morbidity and cognitive dysfunction among thalassemia patients in the Thalassemia Unit in the University of Kelaniya teaching hospital, the only treatment unit for this illness in Sri Lanka. Separate from the CREMS program, a 7-week Transition to Residency clinical selective in psychiatry was organized for a fourth-year medical student from February to April 2015, at the National Autonomous University of NicaraugaLeon and the Centre for Demographic Health Research in Leon, Nicaragua.
Clinician-scientist trainees Since July 2013, a PGY2 psychiatry resident, Dr. Amy Gajaria, has been part of the clinicianscientist program in the Faculty of Medicine, to develop expertise in global mental health. She is participating in a project to enhance mental health literacy among young adults in Leon, Nicaragua, and her particular component, in line with her interests, is in qualitative research on teachers’ and youths’ perceptions of mental health needs of youth and resource requirements. As part of her training, in 2014-2015, she was involved in qualitative data analysis and knowledge sharing related to the project.
Graduate students Since January 2013, a graduate student at the Institute of Medical Science is also focusing on global mental health, in the Canadian context. In Summer 2014, the student successfully transferred from the Masters to the PhD stream, based on a project that utilized secondary analysis to identify preliminary predictors of drop-out among immigrant and non-immigrant students at a single academic centre. The student’s PhD project will prospectively investigate psychosocial and academic influences on academic success or failure among local, immigrant and international students, an area in which there is no published Canadian data. Ethics approval has been received and data collection will begin in Fall 2015.
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Fellows in global mental health Due to many expressions of interest from trainees and young faculty, a fellowship in global mental health is currently under development.
Humanitarian Endeavours Faculty continued to be involved in several global mental health projects during the 2014-2015 period. These projects have been peer-funded by such agencies as Grand Challenges Canada and the Li Ka Shing Foundation, and take place worldwide - Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Europe, South America, the Caribbean, and even the Arctic/circumpolar region.
Key examples are: •
Belize and Guyana: Train primary care practitioners to treat alcohol abuse (Dr. Jurgen Rehm, Dr. Michael Roerecke)
•
Ethiopia: Increasing psychotherapy capacity by training psychiatrists in IPT (Dr. Clare Pain, Dr. Paula Ravitz)
•
Kenya: Training school counselors, psychologists and consultants in early intervention for children with mental health or neurodevelopmental issues through training (Dr. Kwame McKenzie)
•
China: Enhancing community psychiatry capacity by training clinicians in Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) (Dr. Sam Law)
•
India: Improving standards of care and awareness of mental health rights of patients (Akwatu Khenti, Dr. Arun Ravindran)
•
Nicaragua: Improving mental health literacy among youth and creating schools as a hub for mental health information and access to care (Dr. Arun Ravindran, Dr. Joanna Henderson)
Though this is by no means a comprehensive list, other faculty collaborations include: Dr.Yvonne Bergmans – Ireland Dr. Peter Collins – South Africa Dr. James Deutsch – Palestine
37
Dr. Tim Gofine – Israel Dr. Mark Halman – WHO Dr. Michael Kral – Arctic/circumpolar regions Dr. Katharina Manassis – Ireland and Norway Dr. Ebenezer Okyere - Africa Dr. Michael Seto – Sweden Dr. Jose Silveira – Brazil Dr. Rob van Reekum – Thailand Additional applications to GCC and international agencies are in the plans for the next year.
Clinical Programs Observerships and Fellowships in Psychiatry The active international observership program, hosted jointly with the Office of Transformative Global Health at CAMH, welcomed 8 international clinician observers to CAMH in 2014-2015, from Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North America. There were also over two dozen clinical fellows from Asia, Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and the Americas.
Subspecialty training There are few specialists in law and mental health, child and youth psychiatry and addictions medicine, in developing countries. Work is underway to develop training seminars in these areas, and recruit expert faculty. Dr. Sandy Simpson has already been engaged to deliver training in forensic psychiatry.
Knowledge Sharing In May 2015, the GMH section and the Office of Transformative Global Health at CAMH jointly hosted a global mental health conference titled: Going ‘Glo-cal’ for Mental Health: Global Lessons for Local Benefit. Key speakers were director and screenwriter, Deepa Mehta, and mental health advocate, Margaret Trudeau. Interest in the conference was strong and seats were sold out for all conference days. Attendees were a diverse mix of global mental health clinicians and researchers,
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public health workers, consumers and community members. Over 2 ½ days, local and international speakers from Canada, South America, Asia and Africa led talks, panel discussions and interactive sessions. Learners were also highlighted through oral and poster presentations. The conference ended on a high note with interactive discussions on the need to create a Canadian Global Mental Health Network as a resource and guide for global mental health work by Canadians. Post-conference, and based on expressions of interest from attendees, there are plans to build a permanent website for public access to the speaker presentations, and the steering committee is also considering making the conference an annual event. Work also continues on next steps from the final conference session to progress with building a Canadian Global Mental Health Network. As part of this, the steering committee sent formal letters to the national leaders of the 3 leading political parties to put forward the need for Canada’s continued and active involvement in global mental health work, the considerable public and academic interest and support for this, and the need to fund a national network to support, guide and advocate for such work. The letter asked for their support for this initiative. Two of the leaders’ offices
responded, including the Prime Minister’s Office, which noted that our letter had been forward to the Minister of Health’s office for further follow up. Our next steps will be to contact Minister Ambrose’s office and provide any additional information they may wish, and to connect with other government bodies linked to public health and global health initiatives, to keep up the momentum on the work begun during the conference.
CONCLUSION Over the next year, the GMHA will continue to focus on establishing linkages with international academic centres, particularly those in emerging countries, and on seeking grant funding for mental health projects both within Canada (with ethnic or immigrant populations) and around the world. As with all its initiatives, the GMHA will continue to work collaboratively with local partners and to put in place sustainable processes and infrastructure to support the maintenance and expansion of initiatives by local stakeholders. Dr. Arun V. Ravindran
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Faculty Development
Overview The Department of Psychiatry has over 800 talented faculty members pursuing a diversity of academic pathways. Facilitating their academic career development has been an important priority for the Department. Accordingly, the Faculty Development portfolio plans activities that facilitate faculty members’ growth and success in their academic roles, activities, and career trajectory. In 2014-2015, faculty development events drew over 200 attendees, with 80-90% indicating that the programs were relevant, interesting and engaging.
Year in Review Orientation Day for New Faculty This is a relatively new event, geared towards all new faculty joining the Department. Presentations included overviews of the 3-year review process, roles and responsibilities as a faculty, tips for undergraduate and postgraduate teaching, and tips from other junior faculty about launching successful careers in research, education, and (new this year) creative professional activity. During lunch, the Department’s Vice-Chairs introduced themselves and their roles, and faculty were encouraged to speak with them according to their interests. The afternoon session focused on core teaching skills: establishing the educational climate, setting goals and objectives, and providing feedback. Forty-seven faculty attended the Orientation Day.
All the components of the program and the presenters were highly rated by the participants. Comments indicated that the participants found the day to be highly relevant and practical for their needs. There were also a number of suggestions for improvement, which we hope to incorporate into future iterations of this event. For example, more material targeted towards non-MD faculty should and will be included.
Senior Promotions Boot Camp Assisting faculty in the senior promotions process had been identified as a key priority by the Department’s senior leadership. This half-day event included presentations on: the overall promotions application process; documenting one’s research productivity; assembling a teaching dossier; and assembling a creative professional activities dossier. Based on last year’s feedback, this event was scheduled much earlier in the academic year to allow faculty even more time to prepare for their promotion applications. Feedback from participants indicated that the Boot Camp was highly relevant to their needs and helped to clarify their plans in proceeding for promotion.
Building Resilience This workshop was led by Dr. Mamta Gautam, a psychiatrist from Ottawa who is a national leader in physician wellness programs. It was designed to help faculty adapt successfully to stress and challenges.
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Participants were given pre-readings on the topic of resilience and completed a self-assessment of their own resilience. Dr. Gautam outlined key components of resilience, and invited participants to explore which components they already had and could further develop. Attendees were also asked to identify key sources of stress in their lives and to subsequently develop specific plans to address them in healthy and productive ways. Participants were very engaged throughout the workshop and rated the experience very highly.
Donald Wasylenki Education Day Now in its second year as a Department-wide event centered on education, this year’s Donald Wasylenki Education Day featured a focus on Competency-Based Education (CBE). After keynote speaker Jason Frank (from the Royal College) had to bow out shortly before the event, we were lucky enough to get Jonathan Sherbino (also from the Royal College) to pinch hit. His presentation fostered an engaged discussion about the challenges and opportunities for implementing CBE in the Department’s training programs. This kind of dialogue between Department members was one goal for the day (based on feedback from the previous year’s evaluations). Another change introduced to the Day was extending the poster session to a full 2 hours, which provided more opportunity for attendees to explore the innovative teaching initiatives and education scholarship that is occurring across the Department. The afternoon concluded with two concurrent workshops – one on the flipped classroom model of teaching (featuring the opportunity to make balloon animals), and the other on applying for promotion at the junior level.
Over 70 participants attended the Day, including faculty, residents, fellows, and education researchers. All sections of the day were highly rated, particularly the afternoon workshops. Comments included a wide variety of intentions to change practice, based on both the morning and afternoon sessions.
STACER Examiner Training All psychiatry residents must complete oral examinations (STACERs) in PGY-4. The Postgraduate Director requested the development of a training session for STACER examiners to improve the reliability of the examination process. Two workshops were held this academic year. Each featured an overview of the STACER exam procedure, a review the factors that contribute to the reliability and validity of oral exams, and the use of video vignettes to spark discussion about what constitutes a passing performance. Participants were so engaged during the first STACER workshop that we ran out of time to complete the agenda. The second workshop was thus doubled in length, and included much animated discussion and contributions. Fifty-three faculty attended in total. We plan to train more examiners in this coming academic year.
Closing Thanks to the strong support of our Chair and our Vice-Chair of Education, Faculty Development continues to expand and break new ground in the Department. I am looking forward to more adventures in 2015-2016. John Teshima, MD, FRCPC, MEd Director, Faculty Development
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Continuing Professional and Practice Development Overview The Office of Continuing Professional and Practice Development (CPPD) in the Department of Psychiatry was formed in September 2013. The aim of this CPPD Office is to address the growing need for continuing education and related interventions for improving practice and the mental health system.
Organization The Office of CPPD has Divisional representation including members with expertise in quality improvement (QI) and health systems research. Committee membership also spans the learner continuum and across a range of health professions. Members of the CPPD committee include: Dr. Paul Benassi (Resident member), Dr. Leslie Buckley (Brian and Therapeutics), Dr. Tara Burra (Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems), Dr. Adriana Carvalhal (Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry), Dr. Alan Fung (Interprofessional Education), Dr. Diana Kljenak (CPPD Member), Dr. Matt Knox (Resident Member), Dr. Chetana Kulkarni (Child and Adolescent Psychiatry ), Dr. Paul Kurdyak (Health Systems Member), Dr. Lisa Levbre (Addictions Member), Dr. Joanna Mansfield (Equity, Gender, & Population), Dr. Andrea Waddell (CPPD Member – Performance Based Programming), Dr. Lesley Wiesenfeld (Geriatric Psychiatry), Dr. David Wiljer (Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship), and Ms. Evelyn Yu (Interprofessional Education).
Year in Review Launch of 2015-2017 CPPD Strategic Plan Following a retreat in November 2015, the CPPD committee launched a 2015-2017 strategic direction document entitled, “Working Wisely – A Plan to Improve Quality of Care through Innovative and Outcomes Based Continuing Professional Development.” The document outlines four strategic directions with the goal of enhancing the alignment of continuing professional development (CPD) and QI as part of a systems-based approach to education and practice improvement. The CPPD retreat informed a manuscript on the “Working Wisely” perspective that was accepted by the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry.
Developments and Achievements The Department of Psychiatry was the first mental health department to join the Association of American Medical Colleges Aligning and Education for Quality (AAMC ae4Q) network. As an official AAMC ae4Q site, the Office of CPPD completed a national study identifying a framework for aligning CPD and QI in mental health. Using this framework, the department is leading a series of initiatives to increase the number of QI trained faculty. Some initiatives include the creation of an online repository for QI training opportunities across North America, and the development of a job description for a Clinician in Quality and Practice Innovation for the department.
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In an effort to incorporate quality improvement into departmental CPPD activities, the Office of CPPD has piloted Psychiatry Morbidity and Mortality (M&M) Rounds. It isalso supporting the growth of M&M Rounds for Psychiatry across affiliated hospital sites through committee involvement and development of an M&M Rounds toolkit. The department continues to grow its CPD activities with an increase from 86 to 92 University of Toronto accredited CPD events, making the Department of Psychiatry the leading provider of continuing education amongst Faculty of Medicine departments. The department has continued its leadership and innovation in mental health CPD activities. In collaboration with the Canadian Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine (CAPM), the Department of Psychiatry CPPD Office co-led the delivery of a national Maintenance of Certification Section 3 performance assessment continuing education activity on capacity and consent in medical psychiatry, and will deliver the second national performance assessment activity focused on improving delirium care this year. The Office of CPPD and the Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems also launched a successful monthly International Psychiatry Twitter Journal Club in 2014-15. Several faculty were recognized for the excellence in CPD in our department. Drs. Shelley McMain, Carmen Wiebe and colleagues received the
prestigious 2015 Department of Psychiatry Ivan Silver Award for Excellence in Psychiatry CPPD for their novel training program on dialectical behaviour therapy. Dr. Mark Rapaport was awarded the 2014 Joint Canadian Psychiatric Association and Council for Continuing Psychiatric Continuing Education award for the most outstanding continuing education activity in psychiatry in Canada for his leadership in online Geriatric Psychiatry continuing education. In the upcoming year, the CPPD Committee will continue to strengthen the alignment between CPD and QI in our department. The launch of ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) Ontario Mental Health at the University of Toronto and Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in October 2015 will support the growth of the department as a provincial CPD mental health and addictions resource for Ontario. Collaborative efforts with the Medical Psychiatry Alliance will also provide additional opportunities to expand the department’s CPPD initiatives in simulation, team-based training and education technology. Moving forward, the CPPD committee will continue to provide mentorship in advancing CPD in quality and systems-based areas. Sanjeev Sockalingam, MD, MHPE, FRCPC Director, Continuing Professional & Practice Development
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Divisions
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Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems Overview
Major sites include:
With over 190 faculty members, the Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems is the secondlargest division within the Department of Psychiatry. The Division focuses on fostering the many roles of academic general psychiatrists, mental health clinicians and health services researchers to improve the patient experience and the quality, effectiveness and cost effectiveness of our “system” of mental health and addictions care. It is the academic home of acute care psychiatry, involving the continuum of care between psychiatric emergency services, inpatient services, and outpatient care. The Division provides core training in psychiatry for medical students and residents and a framework for clinical and academic coordination across a range of sites within the City of Toronto.
• • • • • • • • • • •
Organization The Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems, born out of the union of the Division of General Psychiatry and the Health Systems Program in 2011, is currently led by a Director and a small executive committee that meets at alternate months with the Division Steering Committee, including representatives from each hospital site. The Division is supported financially by the Department of Psychiatry and by contributions from the main site practice plans, which support administrative costs, faculty retreats and protected time for Divisional activities.
Mount Sinai Hospital North York General Hospital Ontario Shores Mental Health Centre St. Joseph’s Health Science Centre St. Michael’s Hospital Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Surrey Place Centre The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health The University Health Network Trillium Health Partners and Women’s College Hospital
A Divisional retreat in May 2013 identified key directions in education, clinical innovation / quality and research for the next three years, to align with our Department’s strategic plan, including efforts to advance collaborative care, telemedicine and interprofessional care, in addition to striving for equity in access and the recovery orientation of academic programs and services.
Year in Review The Division’s commitment to education, clinical excellence, scholarship, and innovation is demonstrated by the wide array of educational activities, the pursuit of policy relevant research and the dissemination of scientific information to improve the delivery of mental health and addiction services locally, nationally and internationally. This past year the Division continued efforts for faculty
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engagement across sites, including our scientists, and the creation of an academic home for general psychiatrists and health services researchers.
Education With regard to education, the Division sponsors academic lectures and colloquia and trains medical students, residents, clinical and research fellows. The Division Education lead is Dr. Andrea Waddell, while on the postgraduate front the Division is represented by Dr. Andrea Berntson. Dr. Jared Peck leads the Physician Manager curriculum, introducing psychiatry residents to quality improvement, leadership and teamwork. The Division is working closely with the Directors of Undergraduate, Postgraduate and Continuing Professional and Practice Development to improve training opportunities and Faculty Development in academic generalism, evidence based planning and quality improvement. In addition to core rotations in general psychiatry and collaborative care, a range of training opportunities for undergraduate, graduate and postgraduate students and fellows are offered by our faculty. Seminars for psychiatric residents are presented in the departmental core curriculum, including training in dual diagnosis service delivery. Our faculty are actively involved in the development of a competency framework for postgraduate training and the dissemination of research evidence using social, media.
Research Research in diverse areas such as Epidemiology, Inner City Health, Suicide, Developmental Disorders, Clinical Treatments, Population Health, Ethics, and Integrative Psychotherapy/Medication models is pursued. 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 and implementation research. Members are also extensively involved in activities
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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. This past academic year faculty events showcasing local innovation and external speakers included presentations by Drs. Drs. Jurgen Rehm and Benjamin Druss. This academic year saw the continuation and growth of the Mental Health and Addictions Research Program at the Institute of Clinical and Evaluative Sciences, led by Dr. Paul Kurdyak, -who also leads the evaluation of the Medical Psychiatry Alliance, and co-leadership in Building Bridges to Integrated Care (BRIDGES), an incubator supporting the design, implementation and evaluation of interventions that promote integration of care across medical disciplines and the continuum of care through Dr. Stergiopoulos. The Division is delighted to have over $10,757,374 in 2013-14, which is 9.47% of the Department’s funding.
Clinical Programs The Division exemplifies inter-professional and collaborative practice and is proud to advance and disseminate knowledge that informs these important domains of modern health care delivery. Our members support the development of programs which are community-focused, which target individuals with severe mental illness and/ or substance use disorders and which are integrated into a continuum of care. Furthermore, the Division is extremely proud to host the Toronto Mental Health and Addiction Acute Care Alliance (MH&A ACA) as part of its mandate to improve clinical coordination and quality of care across the Toronto Central LHIN. The Alliance is a partnership of seven (7) Toronto Central LHIN hospitals (i.e., The Centre for
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Addiction and Mental Health, Mount Sinai Hospital, St. Joseph’s Health Centre, St. Michael’s Hospital, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, Toronto East General Hospital and University Health Network), and is devoted to improving the management of psychiatric and behavioral emergencies as well as inpatient and ambulatory care in TCLHIN Hospitals. The goal of the MH&A ACA is to provide the right acute mental health and addictions care, in the right place, at the right time, in a respectful, clientcentered 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 and the uptake and dissemination of evidence based practices. The TC-LHIN’s Emergency Departments are conceived of by the Alliance not only as emergency response centers, but as a key point and opportunity for connecting people with acute mental health and addictions needs to timely and appropriate alternatives and follow-up care through related inpatient, outpatient and/or community-based services. Over the past two years, the Alliance has begun to guide research efforts and hypothesis generation for the field, in part, by standardizing data collection across sites. Such large scale, standardized data collection activities provide massive structured databases that will greatly assist our efforts to advance and transfer knowledge about the assessment, management and outcomes of psychiatric emergencies and guide further evidence-based system improvement activities, in partnership with ICES. Examples of Alliance activities this past year include a randomized controlled trial, testing the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of CATCH-ED, an intervention addressing the needs of frequent ED users. Furthermore, the Alliance is leading the development of several TCLHIN funded projects, including a collaborative care planning process for frequent ED users, and a model to coordinate access to Urgent Psychiatric Care across TCLHIN hospitals. Finally, a major Alliance accomplishment has been the launch of an ambitious strategic plan, including metric for its evaluation.
This past year the Division hosted a presentation by Dr. Hugh MacLeod former CEO of the Canadian Patient Safety Institute, and well as cosponsored with the Alliance a well-attended symposium on acute care.
Leadership Several of our faculty members hold senior administrative positions at their home hospital sites and several are cross appointed to the Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, the Institute for Medical Science and the School of Graduate Studies The Division is building strong relationships with other Divisions and Departments as follows: •
Is working closely with the Consultation Liaison Division in the redesign of Collaborative Care rotations, competencies, and quality indicators
•
Is co-leading with the Department of Family and Community Medicine a cross Departmental Collaborative Mental Health Care Working Group focused on advancing collaborative mental health care practice, education and scholarship.
•
Is co-leading, with the Department of Medicine and the Department of Family and Community Medicine, BRIDGES, with opportunities to contribute to the quality agenda of the MOHLTC, HQO, and IDEAS.
•
Is building relationships with senior planners from the US, UK and Australia to support evidence based planning and international trials.
•
Our residents are recognized by the Divisional Dr. Peter Prendergast Ontario Shores Prize in Quality Improvement, while our faculty are recognized by the Dr. Mary Seeman Award in Clinical Excellence.
Vicky Stergiopoulos, MSc, MD, MHSc, FRCPC Director, Division of Adult Psychiatry and Health Systems Associate Professor, University of Toronto
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Brain & Therapeutics Overview The Division of Brain and Therapeutics integrates the clinical, educational and research activities of its four component subspecialty areas: Neuroscience; Addictions; Mood and Anxiety Disorders and Schizophrenia. The division is co-directed by Drs. Tony George and Jim Kennedy, and is comprised of more than 225 full- and part-time faculty across eight Toronto teaching hospitals, with eight new faculty members appointed in the 2014-15 academic year. These outstanding areas of academic, educational and clinical foci are clearly 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 achievements in the past year is given below in the areas of research, education, clinical care and leadership:
Organization The Division is organized into four subcomponents in the areas of Neurosciences, Mood and Anxiety Disorders, Addictions and Schizophrenia. Assignment of faculty to the Division is based on their subspecialty expertise and interests. As a result of this widespread faculty expertise, a number of our faculty have secondary appointments in other Departmental Divisions, and we routinely cross-appointment other faculty with primary appointments in other Divisions to Brain and Therapeutics. We also have a
Steering Committee comprised of junior and senior faculty with clinical and non-clinical backgrounds which assists the Co-Directors in setting the vision and detailed agendas for the Division.
Year in Review Education The Division plays a major role in the training of undergraduate and graduate students in the Institute of Medical Sciences (IMS) and other medical school graduate departments (e.g., Pharmacology, Psychology), and for medical students, psychiatric residents and post-doctoral fellows in the Department of Psychiatry. In fact, over 75% of residents in the Clinician-Scientist Stream (CSS) and Clinician-Scientist Program (CSP) (lead by division member Dr. Ben Goldstein since January, 2015, and prior to that by division member Dr. Jeff Daskalakis) have faculty members as supervisors based in the Division of Brain and Therapeutics. Dr. Arun Ravindran (Mood and Anxiety Section) is Director of the Department’s Fellowship Program. Faculty from the Schizophrenia, Mood and Anxiety and Addictions components within the Division also play important teaching roles with the UofT Psychiatry Residency, including in the PG-4 Chronic Care Rotation. In addition, there are more than 40 postdoctoral fellows working with Division faculty. The Division hosted a reception at the Biological Psychiatry meeting which was held in Toronto in May, 2015 at the University of Toronto Faculty Club.
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Over 150 guests were in attendance including division members, trainees, and many colleagues attending the meeting from all our the world. We certainly were able to show what a powerhouse in Biological Psychiatry we are on the world stage!
& Therapeutics faculty and As an example of how hospitals can partner with the private sector to improve clinical care, CAMH has partnered with Assurex Health Inc. to establish the first clinical pharmacogenetics testing company to provide services from a psychiatric hospital.
b) Research The faculty of the Division of Brain and Therapeutics brought in nearly 40% of the external funding generated by the Department of Psychiatry in 2012-13. Division faculty published over 350 peer-reviewed papers, and were highly successful in recent grant competitions for CIHR, NIH, NARSAD, Ontario Mental Health Foundation (OMHF), the Schizophrenia Society of Ontario (SSO) and the Ontario Ministry of Health.
d) Leadership: In the past year, Drs. John Vincent and Albert Wong were promoted to Full Professor, Dr. Vincenzo Deluca to Associate Professor, and Drs. Neely Bakshi and Kam Balchand to Assistant Professor. Division members also hold senior leadership positions in many federal and international funding agenices, and on Editorial positions in major journals in the field of psychiatric neurosciences.
c) Clinical Programs:
4. In Closing:
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, Humber River Hospital, Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences, and Sunnybrook Hospital. Brain
A priority for the Division is the mentoring of the next generation of translational and clinical psychiatric neuroscientists. Our Division has a wealth of faculty expertise in basic and clinical brain sciences and experimental therapeutics which is known worldwide, and helps take our Division and Department to new heights.
Tony P. George, M.D., FRCPC James L. Kennedy, M.D., FRCPC Co-Directors, Division of Brain & Therapeutics
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Child and Adolescent Psychiatry A brief summary of education, research, clinical programs and leadership updates from the academic year for the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (2014-15).
Overview: The Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is composed of child and adolescent psychiatrists, academic clinicians and scientists all working towards improving the mental health of children, youth and their families. The Division encompasses ten academic affiliates (SickKids, CAMH, HinksDellcrest,Youthdale, George Hull Centre, Toronto East General, North York General, Ontario Shores, St Josephs, Humber River). Dr Peter Szatmari became head of the Division in March 2013 as part of his position as Head of the Child and Youth Mental Health Collaborative. The responsibilities of the Division are to 1) ensure excellence in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching and in continuing professional development; 2) to facilitate research across the Division, and 3) to foster clinical collaboration across sites.
Organization: The Division executive meets monthly to address the mission of the Division. The membership list is updated regularly and new members (especially Health Scientists with an interest in child and youth mental health) are invited to join to further their
own academic aspirations. Sub-committees reporting to the executive include Undergraduate Education (Chair Dr Suneeta Monga), Postgraduate Education (Chair Dr Daniel Gorman and Dr Raj Rasasingham while Dr Gorman in on paternity leave), Research (Chair Dr Amy Cheung), Integration (Chair Dr Alice Charach) and Continuing Professional Development (Chair Dr Able Ikowitz). Two new sub-committees were established this year. Dr. Russell Schachar led a committee of junior faculty developing a new vision and mission for the Division. Dr Alice Charach (along with Drs. Krista Lemke and Amy Cheung) established the Child and Youth Acute Care (CAYAC) group to bring the in-patient units in the greater Toronto area together and communicate about the availability of beds for high risk adolescents.
Year in Review a. Education; the Division maintains a very productive program in education at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Over 30 slots for psychiatry residents in PGY3 are trained for their core child and adolescent rotation across the various sites. There are four residents in the sub-specialty this year and four next year. Dr Gorman took over as Chair of post graduate education in CAP and is conducting a thorough review of the educational mandate and curriculum.
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b. Research The Division was very productive in research funding for another year. Provincial, federal and internationally funded research in CAP is conducted at CAMH, Sickkids and Sunnybrook with high impact at several levels. Highlights of the year include the establishment of a research committee which is dedicated to research productivity within the department and a Division wide research day to allow members to network, and to allow students to present their work. A retreat was also held to allow Division members to become more familiar with each other and to build possible collaborations. The Division although smaller than many of the other divisions within the department, ranks 2nd in terms of funding per faculty member among the 8 divisions. The Hospital for Sick Children obtains roughly 8% of the research funding in the department and Sunnybrook and Centre for Addiction and Mental health are also very successful in obtaining research funning and contain many Child and adolescent psychiatrists. Major funding opportunities within the division include the Province of Ontario Neurodevelopmental (POND) Network funded by the Ontario Brain Institute and located within the division at the Hospital for Sick Children. The Hospital for Sick Children also supports major Genome Canada grant on the genetics of autism spectrum disorder. Roughly 20% of the physicians in the child psychiatry department at the Hospital for Sick Children and CAMH are Clinician scientists. A major gift of 6 million dollars to the Hospital for Sick Children will support research in medical psychiatry. The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health also has funds to support young investigators from the O’Brien funds as well as from the Slaight fund. New Clinician Scientists have been recruited to Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. The McCain Centre for research into child and youth mental health was launched this year at
CAMH. c. Clinical Programs; Several of the Division sites initiated renewal projects for their clinical programs including SickKids, CAMH and Hinks-Dellcrest. The George Hull Centre moved to a new site as did the CAP services at North York General. Services for children and youth at Humber River will also be moving shortly. An increasing pressure was felt across the system in accessing in-patient beds for adolescents and the Division initiated a plan to improve communication and cooperation to ensure that those beds are used to their full potential. Through CAYAC there is now regular communication between sites as well as a better understanding of service needs and inpatient bed use. d. Leadership; As head of the Division, Dr Szatmari regularly meets and engages with the many different mental health organizations in the greater Toronto area and with the many government organizations and ministries responsible for child and adolescent mental health. The main goals of this last year were to 1) develop a strategic plan for the Division; 2) facilitate activities that foster cohesion and collaboration across the Division; 3) improve research productivity and collaboration across the sites; and 4) promote academic excellence at all levels including inter-professional education. A new mission and vision was adopted by the Division and supported by the Department of Psychiatry. The most important change was to change the name of the Division to the “Division of Child and Youth Mental Health” to reflect the importance of including youth (15-25 years of age) in our academic mandate and to ensure that all health professionals with an interest in children and youth are made to feel welcome in the Division. We are the first Division in North America to explicitly embrace youth in our mandate.
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Closing: I am very excited about the potential of the Division as we move into the next academic year. The Executive is energized to accomplish its important goals and there seems to be a renewed sense of commitment and cohesion to the concept of the Division as an “academic community of scholars and academic clinicians�. As the subspeciality program continues to develop and evolve, the identity of the Division as a leader in Canada is assured. Our goal is to ensure that all the other important goals of the Division are achieved in the next few years, especially implementing the new vision and mission.
Peter Szatmari, MD, FRCPC Chief of Child and Youth Mental Health Collaborative The Hospital for Sick Children and Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Professor and Head of the Division of Child and Youth Mental Health, University of Toronto Patsy & Jamie Anderson Chair in Child and Youth Mental Health
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Consultation Liaison Overview The Consultation & Liaison Division (CLD) 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 provide consultation to patients and liaise with their treatment teams, to optimize the biopsycho-social care of patients. We also train undergraduate and postgraduate students in the psychiatric care of patients with medical, surgical, psychosomatic and medically unexplained conditions; develop and promote research; establish and communicate standards of care; and provide and support continuing education in the interface between psychiatry and physical health. The CLD draws the attention of physicians and members of the community to the often undetected and untreated psychiatric morbidity and psychosocial distress in medically and surgically ill populations, and enhances the services and treatment available for such problems. The CLD is based at several general hospitals and one paediatric hospital, with additional research staff located at other institutions and universities. CL teaching services, and specialized clinical and research programs, are distributed across these sites as follows, with leadership as noted:
The University Health Network • •
Consultation-Liaison (CL) Psychiatry & Transplantation: Susan Abbey, Raed Hawa Bariatric Surgery: Sanjeev Sockalingam, Raed
• • • • •
Hawa Eating Disorders: Marion Olmsted, Pat Colton Neuropsychiatry and Sleep Disorders: Colin Shapiro Behavioural Cardiology: Robert Nolan Psychosocial Oncology & Palliative Care: Gary Rodin The Toronto Rehabilitation Institute: Dr. Abe Snaiderman
Mount Sinai Hospital • • • • • • • •
Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: Jon Hunter, Ellen Margolese, Mary Preisman Psychosocial Oncology: Jon Hunter Gastrointestinal Disease: Ellen Margolese HIV Psychiatry: Peter DeRoche Palliative Care Psychiatry: Bill Mah Pain: Peter Moran Diabetes and Obesity: Barry Simon CL Research: Bob Maunder
St. Michael’s Hospital • • •
Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: Adriana Carvalhal, Kien Dang, Shree Bhalerao Obstetrics: Julie Maggi Neuropsychology: Sean Rourke
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre • •
Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: Robert Jaunkalns, Nick Grujich Neuropsychiatry: Anthony Feinstein
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•
Psycho-oncology: Janet Ellis
Women’s College Hospital •
Medical Psychiatry:Vivian Sapirman
The Hospital for Sick Children •
Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry: Claire De Souza
Year in Review Members of the CLD continued their active academic productivity in 2014-2015. The Princess Margaret Cancer Centre Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care program continues to make impressive strides in supporting cancer patients. Dr. Jennifer Jones and her team acquired over 2.6 million dollars in 11 new grants, examining a wide range of issues including a lifestyle activity intervention for female cancer survivors, how cancer survivors return to work, a novel electronic patient-directed knowledge translation tool to improve smoking cessation, and pre-consultation education groups to improve shared decisionmaking for post-mastectomy breast reconstruction. Dr. Gary Rodin established the Global Institute for Psychosocial Palliative and End-of-Life Care (GIPPEC) with a moving opening on October 6, 2014 featuring international speakers from within the field and with life experience of cancer. This unit aims to generate knowledge and debate to inform public policy, health care delivery, and clinical practice, and to diminish stigma and barriers to psychosocial and palliative care for those with life-threatening and advanced disease. Members of the CLD also continued to contribute substantial international work. As examples, Dr. Graeme Taylor presented in Switzerland and Italy, in addition to providing the plenary address at the 59th annual meeting of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry. Dr. Saul Marks was one of eight individuals from around the world that was invited to the International Olympic Committee meeting on harassment and abuse in sport in Lausanne, Switzerland. Dr. Blake Woodside
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presented a number of projects from the group in eating disorders at Toronto General Hospital in Singapore at the 1st International Brain Stimulation conference, and Dr. Marta Novak continued to publish in both North American and European journals with an extensive team on her ongoing work on sleep apnea and psychonephrology. Dr. Ned Shorter published another book (What Psychiatry Left Out of DSM-5), along with an editorial in the British Journal of Psychiatry. Dr. Shorter’s unique historical perspective on issues related to psychiatry, and in particular, its overlap with somatic presentations, provides a unique perspective within the CLD. Provincially, Dr. Evan Collins is now chairing a multidisciplinary working group under the auspices of the AIDS bureau of the Ontario Ministry of Health to look at centres of care for over 16 provincially funded HIV clinics. This parallels a program of ongoing psychosocial research into the experience of having HIV infection in Ontario. At UHN, Dr. Marion Olmstead graciously accepted the Anne Rogers Chair in Eating Disorders for a transitional term, while Dr. Pat Colton assumed medical leadership for the Eating Disorders program. Notably, the Medical Psychiatry Alliance (MPA) moved from being a potential program to soliciting projects. The overlap between the MPA and consultationliaison psychiatry is high, particularly in settings such as the Hospital for Sick Children, where additional staff has been hired to support the development of new programs. This parallels a reorganization of the HSC consultation-liaison program under Dr. Claire DeSouza’s energetic leadership to better serve the needs of the hospital, and improve continuity of care. To this end, Dr. Pam Mosher has joined the CL staff at HSC with an anticipated focus on palliative care. This academic year was exceptional for the recognition via awards of the substantial educational scholarship and expertise within the CLD. Dr. Raed Hawa received both the Association of Directors of Medical Student Education in Psychiatry MedEdPORTAL Award in recognition of the best scholarly undergraduate
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psychiatric publication for 2014-2015, and the Association of Chairs of Psychiatry in Canada Excellence in Education Award. Dr. Adrienne Tan received the Association of Academic Psychiatry Early Career Development Award, a WightmanBerris postgraduate teaching award, and the Psychotherapy Award for Excellence in Supervision. Jon Hunter also received a Wightman-Berris Postgraduate Teaching Award. As further evidence of novel educational efforts and knowledge translation, Dr. Rebecca Pillai-Riddell was featured in a 2015 TEDx talk, “Why infants in pain are allowed to think adults sometimes suck”. These local, national and international awards serve to emphasize the commitment of members of the CLD to educational scholarship and innovation. One mark of a generative academic program is the graduation of colleagues to new settings. Dr. Adrienne Kovacs has created a highly effective transitional program for children with congenital heart disease moving into the adult hospital system at UHN, and is responsible for much of the research on this topic. In January 2016 she will be moving to the Knight Cardiovascular Institute at Oregon Health and Science University to establish
and be the Director of their Behavioral Cardiovascular Program. The Divisional retreat in January of 2015, focusing on Quality Improvement (QI) in the CLD, was well-attended by members from multiple sites and disciplines. Dr. Tara Burra from St. Joseph’s Hospital gave an excellent summary of basic concepts in quality improvement, and Drs. Carvalhal, Wiesenfeld, Hawa, and Sockalingam spoke to specific QI projects in which they have engaged. Furthermore, a brainstorming session about future directions for QI within the Division took place and is being used to direct intradivisional activities ongoingly. Thus, notwithstanding a very wide base of activities, and a geographically distributed membership, the CLD continues to share common mandates and work together to improve our understanding of the biopsychosocial demands of patients with physical illness and hospital admissions.
Respectfully submitted, Jon Hunter, MD, FRCPC Director, Consultation-Liaison Division
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Equity Gender and Populations
Equity Gender and Population (EGP) is a new Division which has now been in place for four years. It was created by merging divisions which focused on Women’s mental health and Culture Community Psychiatry. The thematic link underlying this amalgamation was a focus on access to care and the treatment of special populations, in accordance with the new strategic plan of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. The Division is led by Dr Kwame McKenzie and Dr Valerie Taylor. It is supported directly by the Department of Psychiatry, though in kind support is offered by hospitals by way of administrative support to the co-Directors.
1) Development of a University of Toronto accredited diploma in health equity and psychiatry.
The division of Equity, Gender and Population continues to grow and during 2014 its membership increased to over 100 participants. The division was well represented at local, national and international conferences and highlights include the creation of a Spirituality conference, the Harvey Stancer Research Day key note address that focused on Women’s Mental Health and a myriad of presentations from EGP members at the American Psychiatry Association Conference.
4) The addition of a focus on improving the services for diverse population as one of 7 main directors for the first Mental Health Strategy for Canada came about through research and advocacy by members of the Division.
The Division continues to be very active in advocacy, especially though a close relationship with Pillar 4, the Department of Psychiatry Pillar focusing on dialogue and community engagement, and scholarship in research and education. A number of major milestones have been achieved over the last few years, including (but not limited to):
2) Development of cultural psychiatry day that has moved from a local Toronto event to a cross Canada, web-based teaching initiative for residents in psychiatry. 3) Standards for the teaching of cultural psychiatry the Canadian Psychiatry Association has adopted the standards for teaching cultural psychiatry developed by a coalition of experts prominently including cultural psychiatrists in this Department
5) The first RCT of an ethno-specific mental health services was devised and executed as part of the largest homelessness mental health research project in the world. 6) The development of the first Canadian training on recovery in mental health. 7) The development of standard questions on sociodemographic status which are now included as part of the data collected by all Toronto Hospitals. 8) The development of training in health equity
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impact assessment which is now approved and promoted by the Ministry of Health and Long Term care, Ontario 9) Creation of a Trauma Talks Conference 10) The expansion of the role of spirituality in the division and engagement with a Spirituality Conference. 11) Creation of a lecture series on women for trainees 12) Implementation of a across hospital series of trauma rounds A number of faculty are involved in undergraduate medical education however, there is no clear core teaching on equity, gender and population psychiatry. Within the population health module of community medicine there is one half day which looks at populations approaches to psychiatry. This includes an equity lens, and is undertaken by one of the Directors of EGP. There are also a number of lectures directed at the unique aspects of health care in women. The Department of Psychiatry oversees a 5-year Royal College residency training program. Within that program there is specific teaching on EGP psychiatry in years 1 and year 3. This includes work on attitudes towards diversity, knowledge about the epidemiology, presentation and outcome of mental health problems in different marginalised populations. It also includes information on illness models and possible service approaches. Lectures on specific aspects of care in women are dispersed through the curriculum and are augmented by as lecture series. Teaching is in combination with service providers from community organizations. Other forums for teaching include cultural psychiatry day, advocacy day, social determinants of health seminars at St Michaels, a Resident run seminar/ reading group on cultural psychiatry, a trauma talks conference, two lecture series, Women’s College Hospital and one lead by CAMH One initiative underway in EGP is to streamline these different offerings.
Within CAMH, EGP has developed the University Diploma in Equity and Mental Health. This is a full diploma course including face to face and web-based modules. With the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care and the Local Health Integration Networks, we have developed training for health equity impact assessment tools and the community of interest to support this initiative. Members of EGP have developed a Citizen and immigration Canada funded on-line course on refugee mental health which graduates 500 people a year. Research in EGP is vibrant. The foci are health equity, gender issues and LGBTT mental health. There are almost 100 faculty members with primary affiliations to EGP: 12 full professors, 9 associate professors, 35 assistant professors, 33 lecturers and 1 emeritus professor. There is an equivalent of over 30 full time faculty. The total research funding brought in by the Division in 2014-15 was $1, 842, 136. Health equity research has been funded in the last 4 years by CIHR, NIMH, PHAC, CHSRF, OMHF. It has included operating grants, successful applications for national fellowship schemes and a grant to train post-doctoral researcher for the CIHR. A research webinar series developed by members of EGP reaches over 1000 people and has participants in every continent. The Division Directors work in CAMH. Women’s College Hospital and the Wellesley Institute. Members of EGP sit on the boards of community organizations offering mental health care such as CMHA Toronto, Hong Fook and Across Boundaries. Some are cross appointed to Ryerson University,York University and McMaster University. Within U of T OSEI and the school of law PhD candidates are supported by EGP members.
Valene Taylor, MD, PhD, FRCPC
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Forensics Division
Overview The Division of Forensic Psychiatry is the smallest of the new divisions within the Department with 53 members. It includes 4 professors, including one Emeritus, and six Associate Professors. The Division includes psychiatrists and psychologists and four lawyers, and other interdisciplinary colleagues. We are active contributors to Pillar 4 of the Department’s Strategic Direction. The group currently has a total amount of $2,504,731 in active grants from all sources. We published 7 chapters, 2 monographs and 44 refereed publications.
Organization The Division has three major bases: at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, at Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences and at the Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Sciences. Each centre has a major clinical program in forensic psychiatry and they provide high quality venues for teaching and research activity. Research has four major teams: •
•
Cantor, and in relation to issues of mental illness, mental disorders and offending behaviour at CAMH, headed by Assoc Prof Sandy Simpson and Dr Stephanie Penney. •
Dr. Nathan Kolla, MD, PhD, FRCPC was recruited in 2015 as a Clinician Scientist in the CAMH Forensic Service and is the inaugural Head of the Violence Prevention Neurobiological Research Unit (VPNRU). The mission of the VPNRU is to advance our understanding of biological mechanisms of impulsivity and aggression and to identify novel biomarkers of risk, resilience, and treatment response in forensic and personality disorder populations.
All groups have significant international and national links, holding SSHIRC, CIHR and US research grants as well as institutional and provincial grants. We are increasingly seen as the centre for forensic psychiatry in Canada, for professional leadership, policy contributions, teaching and research. Teaching development has focused on the establishment of Canada’s first sub-specialty program in Forensic Psychiatry, now in its 3rd year [see below].
at Waypoint, Professor Howard Barbaree is Executive Vice President for academic affairs at the Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care with a long and successful history in risk related research; and
Year in Review
at the Sexual Behaviors Clinic at CAMH where a research program has been headed by Dr James
i) Subspecialty and graduates: the major initiative over the last 4 years has been the successful implementation of the Subspecialty Training
Education
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Program in Forensic Psychiatry under the leadership of Dr Lisa Ramshaw. Three residents graduated this last year (Drs.Abdul Alhumoud, Maxym Choptiany and Gabrielle Cyr) The program now has 4 PGY 6 candidates this current year, 2 from within U of T and 2 attracted from other universities. One of these, Dr Georgia Walton, was successful in gaining a Rappaport Fellowship of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law in 2014. ii) Also of major note is the publication of Dr Hy Bloom and Justice Richard Schneider’s coedited text: Law and Mental Disorder: A Comprehensive and Practical Approach, Irwin Law, 2013. This text book running to over 50 chapters is a comprehensive work about the practical craft of forensic psychiatry. It formed the basis for the Training Course in Forensic Psychiatry, convened by Drs. Hy Bloom, Lisa Ramshaw and Treena Wilkie which continues annually.
Research i) Research activity is rising in each centre noted above. A few highlights are now listed below. ii) In discussion with Drs. Howard Barbaree and Phil Klassen representing Waypoint and Ontario Shores, we have decided that henceforth we will hold U of T Forensic Research Days. The first of these meetings was held for 2 days at Waypoint on April 29-30 2015. The Keynote speakers were Dr. Karl Hansen of Public Safety Canada and Dr. Sandy Simpson (a late replacement for Dr. Anne Crocker). We also had training opportunities in parallel with the meeting. We were pleased with the level of attendance from within the group, and also from colleagues working in the correctional sector iii) The epidemiological research program is being developed at CAMH by Drs Simpson and Penney to explore a series of studies of patterns of mental illness and violence in Ontario. This work is linked to colleagues such
as Dr Michael Seto, and promises to expand our knowledge of system impacts as well as developing case cohorts for study within certain populations including the first publications from the case register based studies derived from the CAMH population. iv) Correctional Psychiatry: the problem of serious mental illness in prison and jail settings is a major issue of public policy concern. The Division has been involved in public discussion regarding this theme, and a developing line of publications and now CIHR funded research on the longitudinal course for inmates with mental distress during incarceration. This work is linked to clinical service development.
Clinical Programs After some years of recognition that forensic mental health services have been underfunded, the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care have commenced funding increases to forensic programs across the province, but particularly in the GTA to improve access and address wait times within the forensic system, as well as developing alternate pathways of care. The three clinical programs all benefitted from such funding increases this last two years. We are also addressing joint approaches to care and service policy development, including joint benchmarking or key performance indicator programs and the development of evidence based practice standards most recently for policies in relation to being absent without leave. Waypoint completed the redevelopment of its forensic program with its new $474 million facility opening on February 21 2014. The new centre provides a visionary setting for secure forensic care with effective use of interior and exterior space and a wide range of therapeutic and recovery based programs within a secure envelope. It provides 120 secure forensic and civil beds for Ontario. Interesting research is emerging regarding how facilities are experienced by patients and staff.
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A further new domain of involvement will be the enhanced model of early interventions for remand inmates at the Toronto South Detention Centre, where CAMH services and U of T Faculty will together provide clinical assessment and treatment services for inmates with mental illness.This program commenced in January. Two new physicians, Drs. Kiran Patel and Graham Glancy were joined the Division to expand our expanding our clinical and education programs in the Corrections area.
Advocacy and policy influence: Forensic Division Faculty have contributed significantly to Pillar 4 of the Department’s Strategic Plan. There are also three major areas where Faculty have been involved with advocacy or sector influence of national and international impact. i) Not Criminally Responsible and Bill C 54/C14 campaign: concern arose in relation to a series of high profile cases of persons found NCR, resulting in a Bill from the Federal Government to amend Part XX.1 of the Criminal Code. In partnership with a series of national organisations, U of T staff contributed to or led the public debate and submission production to Parliament opposing aspects of this legislation, giving evidence before the Commons and Senate committees. ii) International Forensic mental is underdeveloped in large parts of the world. We have a responsibility to assist in the development of forensic mental health if we are able to assist. Recent initiatives include the work of Dr. P. Klassen and Justice R. Schneider to assist the Toronto-Addis Ababa project in Ethiopia in both teaching forensic psychiatry and assisting in the development of the mental health court in Addis Ababa. Second, Drs. Klassen and Simpson and Justice Schneider
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support the development of international networks through the IAFMHS, which is attempting to support wider African development, and supporting Saudi Arabian initiatives in forensic development through both the Fellowship of Dr. Alzahrani and encouraging his future work plan. iii) Sexual behaviours area: Dr Cantor has been frequently called on to discuss public policy issues in understanding sexual offenders, particularly sexual offenders against children. iv) Correctional mental health services: service responses to the needs of mentally ill persons in detention centres and prisons became a major discussion point this last year, in tandem with public concerns around a high profile suicide in custody and related concerns, Dr Simpson was involved in public debate and media response to these issues and planning future service enhancements for mentally ill prisoners.
Closing The Forensic Division faces an exciting future of clinical growth and development, Royal College sub specialty status for Forensic Psychiatry and building research and policy influence. We are also contributing to the Global Health program and new areas such as Child and Adolescent forensic psychiatry. This coming year will see increased research had policy influence and major new clinical enhancements promoting Toronto as a major clinical and academic centre in forensic psychiatry.
Assoc Prof Sandy Simpson Chief of Forensic Psychiatry, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Head, Division of Forensic Psychiatry, University of Toronto
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Geriatric Psychiatry
MISSION The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry strives for excellence in research into mental disorders in latelife 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, Tarek Rajji), Sinai Health System (Mount Sinai Hospital, Bridgepoint and Circle of Care; Head, Joel Sadavoy), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre (Head, Nathan Herrmann), the University Health Network (UHN; Head, Alastair Flint with Ron Keren assuming this role in May 2015) and St. Michael’s Hospital (SMH; Head, Corinne Fischer).
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 Petal Abdool. Division members are active in all aspects of the undergraduate curriculum, which includes the preclerkship, 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.
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, outpatient services, day hospital, community psychogeriatric services providing domiciliary visits, and consultation liaison services to both acute-care and long-term facilities. Corinne
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.
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Tarek Rajji serves as Research Coordinator for the Division. Graduate advisors within the Division are available to those enrolled in the Clinician Scientist Program. Public Policy: 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, Employment and Social Development Canada, and the U.S. Food & Drug Administration.
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENTS 2014/2015 Clinical Division members continue to be actively involved in a number of exciting clinical initiatives. Dr. Carole Cohen and Dr. Joel Sadavoy remain active in the Behavioural Support for Seniors Program in the Toronto Central LHIN (TCLHIN). Dr. Carole Cohen continues to lead the long-term care (LTC) sector and the community sector of this strategy. Dr. Joel Sadavoy continues to chair the Toronto Central LHIN Education Consortium. Dr. Cohen continues to be active in the North East Health Link as a member of the Advisory Council and has been chairing the Better Care Committee that oversees the development of a tracking system that identifies patients who are high users of ED or inpatient services at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. Dr. Cohen and Dr. Sadavoy are members of the North West Toronto Health Link Partners Council. Dr. Sadavoy heads the Reitman Centre, which has seen significant expansion over the past year. The Centre focuses on training caregivers of patients
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with dementia and has now expanded into several community settings (West Toronto House for the Portuguese community, SPRINT, Alzheimer Societies of Brant and Waterloo regions, Calgary Chinese seniors services and centres in Israel) in addition to providing formal training for all care coordinators in the Toronto Central CCAC. The Centre also remains actively involved in both research and policy development, leading the 5 year ESDC (Employment and Social Development Canada) funded national initiative ‘Working Carers’, an intervention program for employed family members providing dementia care at home.
Education Division members are active in all aspects of the undergraduate curriculum. This academic year saw the launch of new and exciting undergraduate education initiatives. The Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LInC) designed to provide flexible, integrated, longitudinal, patient-centered opportunities for guided deliberate practice in achieving the University of Toronto clerkship goals and objectives across all of the CanMEDS roles was launched in October 2014 with great success. 8 students completed this boutique learning experience and the LInC will be expanded to the other academies in 2015-16. PsycLE (the Psychiatry Longitudinal Experience) provides an opportunity for first year medical students to get a sense of what it is like to specialize in the field of psychiatry by shadowing a psychiatrist for an afternoon. ‘The Psychiatry Hub’ an online resource and study guide for second and third year medical students was created in response to the student need for up to date, relevant and distilled resources.This online interactive tool covers essential topics and presenting complaints that a medical student is expected to encounter during their exposure to psychiatry and will launch in Fall 2015. In postgraduate education, the Division trained residents in mandatory training positions, geriatric psychiatry subspecialty residents, and fellows. For the PGY3 core geriatric psychiatry rotation, in
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each 6-month block a monthly centralized seminar series was led by various faculty members in the Division. Newer training sites include Trillium Health Partners (comprised of Credit Valley Hospital, Mississauga Hospital, and Queensway Health Centre) and St. Joseph’s Health Centre. 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. An internal review was conducted in April 2014 and the program was successful. Our program graduates have acquired employment at fully affiliated and partially affiliated academic health sciences centres across Ontario. Members of the Division that participated in the Geriatric Psychiatry Residency Program Committee were Corinne Fischer, Ilan Fischler, Peter Giaccobe, Robert Madan (Chair/Program Director), Tarek Rajji, Mark Rapoport, and Lesley Wiesenfeld. The Geriatric Psychiatry Subspecialty residents were also represented on this committee. Kathleen Bingham received this year’s Division of Geriatric Psychiatry Resident Award.
members received several highly competitive awards from CIHR, US-NIH, Brain Canada, the Weston Brain Institute, and others. The Division continues to be active member of the Toronto Dementia Research Alliance (TDRA) established by the Toronto Academic Health Science Network. The thematic highlights of Division collaborative projects include: cognitive impairment in late life bipolar disorder, depression and schizophrenia; depression and coronary artery disease, depression and development of dementia; genetic and therapeutic studies in traumatic brain damage; imaging of brain inflammation as well as 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; psychotic depression; the relation between affective disorders and balance and mobility; and neuroplasticity studies across the lifespan using brain stimulation techniques.
Bruce G. Pollock, MD, PhD, FRCPC, DFAPA, DFCPA
Research Substantial progress continues to be made in many areas of research. This past year, our Division
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Psychotherapies, Humanities and Education Scholarship Organization & Financial Structure The Psychotherapy, Humanities & Education Scholarship (PHES) Division’s mission and vision are to foster innovation, excellence and a community of academic scholarship that promotes relationshipcentred healthcare, relationship-centred teaching and learning, and reflective capacity. The PHES Division is led by director, Dr. Susan Lieff and associate director, Dr. Paula Ravitz with an Executive Committee representing the stream leads of psychotherapy, health humanities and education scholarship. Dr. Sophie Soklaridis PhD leads the Education Scholarship stream, Dr. Allan Peterkin leads the Health Humanities stream, and Paula Ravitz leads the Psychotherapy stream with associate lead Dr. Jan Malat. Dr. Adrienne Tan was the former associate lead of the psychotherapy stream. Under Dr. Peterkin’s leadership, the Health Arts Humanities Program has acquired Edu-D status as an interdepartmental program within the University of Toronto. The PHES Division is supported by the University of Toronto, Department of Psychiatry. The Psychotherapy Stream is additionally supported through the Mount Sinai Hospital, Department of Psychiatry practice plan and the Morgan Firestone Psychotherapy Chair. The Humanities Stream receives funding from the Mount Sinai Hospital, Department of Psychiatry practice plan, in part supporting the literary journal ARS MEDICA, and from the University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine
and Postgraduate Medical Education Office for resident wellness and arts-based initiatives. The Education Scholarship Stream and RISE (Research, Innovation & Scholarship in Education) Program’s fellowship are funded by the University of Toronto, Department of Psychiatry and the Office of Education of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). The Executive meets five times per year with three divisional city-wide meetings and grand rounds curated by PHES members that are held at differing university-affiliated hospitals. The Psychotherapy Stream is administered by a committee comprised of hospital-based postgraduate psychotherapy faculty coordinators and modality-specific experts. These include Rex Kay for psychodynamic psychotherapy, Diana Kljenak for cognitive behavioural therapy, Jan Malat for group therapy, Dianne Phillip for child psychotherapy, Leo Chagoya for family/couples therapy, Steven Selchen for Mindfulness Based Psychotherapy, and Paula Ravitz for interpersonal psychotherapy. The psychotherapy committee meets five times per year, and coordinates psychotherapy education activities including: centralized and hospital-based post-graduate education core curricular seminars, clinical supervision, faculty development, electives, and a department-wide psychotherapy academic day. The Humanities Program has an Advisory Board comprised of multidisciplinary, interdepartmental leaders from psychiatry, family medicine, nursing, English
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literature, the Jackman Humanities Institute, film studies and bioethics that meets three times per year. The Education Scholarship Stream hosts five RISE-WIIPS (Works, Innovations and Ideas-inprogress) meetings per year and stewards the Dean’s Fund Education Development grant competition of the Department of Psychiatry and a yearly academic, Don Wasylenki Education Day.
Strategic Planning and Long Range Planning The PHES Division’s vision is to advance the understanding of relationship-centredness and reflective capacity (“RCRC”) in learning and health and to enhance the capacity of patients, clinicians, faculty, learners, families and community members to engage with one another in addressing the experiences of individuals living with mental illness. The division also aims to support the development and activities of each of its streams - psychotherapy, health humanities, and education scholarship. Our identified priorities are: •
To shape the “RCRC” field through research and innovation;
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To become an essential resource for education scholarship and faculty development in RCRC across the Faculty of Medicine; and
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To contribute to public understanding & knowledge exchange about mental health.
Milestones and Accomplishments Achieved Over The Past Year Milestones over the past year include creative professional activities, publications, research, education scholarship, and faculty development aligned with the division’s priorities. Dr. Allan Peterkin, inaugural Humanities Lead for the Faculty of Medicine (UME), and the Humanities Program was promoted to full professor of psychiatry and was invited to become a member of GAP-The Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry (US). Dr. Clare Pain received an
honorary doctorate from Addis Ababa University in recognition of her long-standing capacitybuilding work through the Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration. Dr. Brian Hodges,Vice President of Education at University Health Network (UHN), Richard and Elizabeth Currie Chair in Health Professions Education Research, leader of the AMS Phoenix Project was awarded the Gold Medal for Outstanding Contribution to Medical Education, from the Association for Studies in Medical Education (UK). Dr. Jan Malat was appointed as the new associate lead of the psychotherapy stream. Dr. Ivan Silver,VP Education at CAMH In 2014, and director of the CAMH Office of Education was recognized by both the Royal College Physicians and Surgeons and the Canadian Association of Medical Education for his long standing contributions to medical education and related scholarship nationally. Dr. Diana Kljenak, President-Elect of the Ontario Psychiatric Association was appointed as the new UHN psychotherapy site coordinator and CBT expert lead. Dr. Andrea Waddell received the 2015 CAME/ACÉM Certificate of Merit Award from the Canadian Association for Medical Education (CAME), in recognition of her exceptional commitment to medical education in Canada. Dr. Molyn Leszcz, Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Mount Sinai Hospital, Interim Chair, and ViceChair of Clinical affairs for the Department of Psychiatry, co-chairs the Mental Health and Addictions Acute Care Alliance among seven TAHSN hospitals in collaboration with community partners and the ongoing support of the University of Toronto and the Toronto Central LHIN. Dr. Dawit Wondimagegen Gebreamlak, Director of Graduate Programs for the Addis Ababa University College of Health Sciences and co-lead of the Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration, has become a faculty member of our department within the PHES Division with plans for a visiting professorship at University of Toronto next academic year. Finally, the PHES Division’s Psychotherapy Stream conducted a strategic planning process to define priorities that will be announced during the next academic year.
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Within the PHES Division’s Strategic Priorities Priority number one: To shape the “RCRC” field through research and innovation; Dr. Sophie Soklaridis led a scoping review on relationship-centred care, funded by the Arnold P. Gold Foundation. She and Dr. Ivan Silver are working on a multicenter funded trial (PI: Joan Sargeant, Dalhousie Universiy) on a reflective performance feedback model with psychiatry residents. The AMS Phoenix Project continues under Dr. Brian Hodges leadership to advance the balancing of compassionate health care with technical competence. Dr. Ivan Silver is working with the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeon of Canada with Craig Campbell, lead of the Maintenance of Certification Program, on several projects - to define “scope of practice” and competency based education in a CPD context, and to examine the use of portfolios in medical education. He is also part of research teams that are conducting a Royal College funded scoping review of self-directed learning in CPD and the representation of CanMEDS competencies (PI: Karen Smith and Simon Kitto). Drs. Clare Pain and Dawit Wondimagegn are conducting a 3-year global mental health project (The Biaber Project. 2012-15, Grand Challenges Canada) to scale up mental health screening and modified IPT treatment in primary care in Ethiopia that includes public education to decrease stigma. Dr Ravitz has been a key content expert in this endeavor. Dr. Peterkin conducted a scoping review with colleagues from three other universities on humanities-based teaching in Canadian Medical Schools and has commenced a similar project within Canadian psychiatric residency programs
Priority number two: To become an essential resource for education scholarship and faculty development in RCRC across the Faculty of Medicine City-wide divisional meeting and rounds were
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held at University Health Network, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and Hospital for Sick Children Along with Dr Anna Skorsweska, Dr. Allan Peterkin is implementing with PGME, the CPD office and divisional members a faculty development program on leadership in professionalism. Dr. Susan Lieff directed the 2nd New and Emerging Academic Leaders (NEAL) CPD program. Don Wasylenki Day, co-led by John Teshima and Sophie Soklaridis focused on competency based education and education scholarship in the department.
Priority number three: To contribute to public understanding & knowledge exchange about mental health. An initiative to engage patients as educators and teachers is in development with the Office of Education at CAMH of which Drs. Sacha Agrawal and David Wiljer are the appointed leads. A capacity-building, knowledge exchange project in mental health care co-sponsored by the Mental Health Addictions Acute Care Alliance, Mt. Sinai Hospital (Psychiatry), and CAMH was funded by the Menu-Courey Family to train front-line health workers to help clients with emotional dysregulation and Borderline Personality Disorder. The PHES Division participated in MINDFEST through numerous activities: to provide public education about psychotherapy treatments for mental health and information about the Health Humanities program; a screening of the film William Kurelek’s The Maze at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) Lightbox Theatre, co-sponsored by the Rendezvous with Madness; and a poetry booth with writer-inresidence Rona Bloom
Education RISE-WIIPs rounds were held to foster collegial discussion and mentorship in education scholarship. The Education Stream also initiated a teaching skills curriculum co-taught by faculty and senior residents for junior psychiatry residents.
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The Psychotherapy Stream coordinates the postgraduate psychiatry education curriculum in the required proficiencies of evidence-supported psychotherapy treatments. Centralized seminars and clinical supervision in differing psychotherapy treatments are provided across the PGY2-5 years. Accredited continuing education/professional and faculty development (CE/CEPD) and public education events were sponsored by CAMH, UHN, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and Mount Sinai Hospital to disseminate awareness and skills-teaching in psychotherapy treatments, treatment of psychological trauma, and Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction, with targeted capacity-building outreach with community based clinicians and agencies. This year’s Psychotherapy Day, on “Psychological Trauma,” course directed by Dr. Clare Pain, featured invited keynote presentations from Drs. Catherine Classen and Anthony Feinstein . Drs. Carmen Wiebe and Shelley McMain at CAMH taught and coordinated training with other faculty, to MHAACA community based clinicians in Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for patients with Borderline Personality Disorder. This training program, course directed by Paula Ravitz, was funded by the Menu-Courey Family. International education initiatives include Dr. Molyn Leszcz providing training in group psychotherapy in China, and The Biaber Project led by Drs. Clare Pain, Dawit Wondimagegn, Mesfin Araya, Sue Carey, Paula Ravitz, Atalay Alem and others at Addis Ababa University to integrate mental health care into primary care with culturally adapted Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Ethiopians through the Toronto-Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration, funded by Grand Challenges Canada. The Humanities stream, in its mission to humanize health care, has created and disseminated curricular projects for learners across the academic continuum from undergraduate medical students to faculty and staff. A companion curriculum in the humanities for undergraduate medicine was created with psychiatry residents and now “pulses” to students on ARTBEAT, their humanities blog.
In the Postgraduate Psychiatry core curriculum is a seminar series that fosters reflective capacity. In the work-place, a group of interprofessional clinicians called “Team Narrative” lead narrative seminars to foster wellness, mitigate burnout, and renew compassion for a patient-centred approach. The Humanities program has also generated artistin-residence placements in health settings, the ARS MEDICA journal (now in its 11th year) and the programming of many multidisciplinary artsbased events for health learners and practitioners including a yearly Creating Space Conference, produced in conjunction with the Canadian Conference on Medical Education. Students from across the 11 health disciplines at the University of Toronto can now receive a Certificate of Competence in Interprofessional Health Humanities that involves participating in a variety of arts-based learning activities.
Research & Scholarship Our faculty engage in a diversity of research programs that span great breadth. Within psychiatry, these include: learning from patients and families affected by mental illnesses, gender and leadership in psychiatry, mentorship programs for residents, training in telepsychiatry and collaborative care, the use of social media for updating evidence-based guidelines and a study of facilitated performance feedback in residency education, therapeutic communication, humanities-based teaching in medicine, and residents’ psychotherapy adherence with supervision. Additional foci beyond the psychiatric realm include simulation, mentorship, academic leadership development, performance feedback for practice improvement, self-versus peer-directed physician assessment and audit for practice-based learning and practice guideline implementation, the determinants of knowledge use in a medical education context, intersections between the domains of CE, knowledge translation, patient safety and quality improvement, and the testing of an interprofessional care assessment tool for healthcare teams. In the Humanities, funded research projects include
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medical student reflective writing, post-graduate medical education portfolio assessment and collaborative projects on resilience and wellbeing in LGBT communities. Additional international team projects included developing ER clinical services and training in partnership with Addis Ababa University, and an international symposium based on Canadian and Taiwanese experiences to develop guidelines for culturally sensitive and equitable globalization projects in medical education. Dr. Clare Pain, Brian Hodges and Dawit Wondimagegn co-direct the Toronto-Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration (http://www.taaac.ca) with over 20 partnerships out of over 6 different faculties at University of Toronto: medicine, nursing, pharmacy, dentistry, engineering, arts and sciences, library science, and The Michener InstituteThrough these education partnerships, faculty from the University of Toronto travel to Addis Ababa University to teach for one month three times a year. By effectively strengthening the training of post graduate training programs a critical mass of health and human resources for service expansion, delivery and training results.
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portfolios. These along with sample CPA portfolios are now online. A creative department is a healthy department, and this year, as a wellness and cohesion building activity, the PHES Division hosted “Performing Psychiatry,” a well-attended celebratory evening held at Hart House that featured the creative talents of members of the department including a visual art exhibition and live performances of music, dance, poetry and prose. Plans are underway for next year’s event in a larger venue.
Faculty Our Division encompasses a diverse group of faculty, many of whom are cross-appointed to other divisions and we welcome expansion of our membership across clinical disciplines. In addition to the divisional rounds, and RISE-WIIPs, faculty development for psychotherapy clinical supervisors includes educational retreats, a yearly academic day for faculty and residents with invited guest speakers, and hospital-based grand rounds and peer-supervision meetings.
Relationships Novel Innovations & CPA PHES faculty have published books and journals on narrative medicine, psychotherapy, trauma, and innovative models of teaching and evaluation. The ARS MEDICA journal has moved to an online platform (www.ars-medica.ca). As well, there are three artists-in-residence: at Mount Sinai Hospital, a Poet-in-Residence; through Undergraduate Medical Education, an Illustrator-in-Residence; and at Massey College, an Editorial Fellow. Finally, psychiatry residents, with the support of the Health Humanities Program, have curated a new medical student humanities and creative interface blog called ARTBEAT. A CPA committee led by Melanie Barwick has articulated Creative Professional Activity guidelines for faculty seeking promotions. Dr. Mary Jane Esplen led in the creation of CPA templates for faculty and reviewers of CPA
Our Division receives core financial support each year both through in-kind and funding support of administrative staff and funds for expenses including divisional meetings, development of the web-site, post-grad, under-grad and faculty education activities, and strategic planning from the Department of Psychiatry. Leadership, salary support and stream activities are further supported by TAHSN hospitals where faculty are on staff. The psychotherapy and health humanities streams have their academic home at the Mount Sinai Hospital, Department of Psychiatry and Morgan Firestone Psychotherapy Chair, and the RISE stream has its home at the CAMH Office of Education. Several of our faculty have leadership and administrative positions both within the Department of Psychiatry, at their respective hospitals, and the University of Toronto, Faculty of
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Medicine including Vice Chair of Education, Vice Chair of Clinical Affairs and Interim Chair for the Department of Psychiatry, Lead for Health Humanities for the Faculty of Medicine, the Morgan Firestone Psychotherapy Chair, the Richard and Elizabeth Currie Chair in Health Professions Education Research, Co-Project directors of the Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration,Vice Presidents of Education (at UHN, CAMH and Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre), writing workshops at Massey College and Director of Academic Leadership Development for the Centre for Faculty Development. They are
active as teachers of courses, curricular and evaluative planners, and supervisors of graduate students. In addition, extending beyond the University, several of our faculty are leaders in global mental health initiatives and international associations.
Prepared by Paula Ravitz, MD, FRCPC
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Fully Affiliated Sites
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Baycrest Health Services
Hospital Overview
Organization
Baycrest Health Sciences is an academic health sciences centre that is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto. Baycrest provides a wide range of clinical services including inpatient palliative care, rehabilitation, chronic continuing care, inpatient behavioral neurology and psychiatry. Outpatient services include a variety of clinics including geriatric medicine, day programs, mood and memory clinics and a wide range of other services. Importantly, Baycrest has outreach teams that provide care within a geographical catchment area and is the home of a seven-floor long-term care facility. The Baycrest Rotman Research Institute is globally recognized for its research in the aging brain.
The Baycrest Centre for Mental Health has the following mission: to enrich the quality of life of the elderly and their families through the provision of exemplary multiple disciplinary mental health care, education, and research. The Baycrest values include passion, advocacy, respect, and excellence. The overall vision of Baycrest is to transform the experience of aging through leading innovations in brain health, wellness promotion, and approaches to care that enrich the lives of older adults.
In 2015, Baycrest received a total commitment of $123.5 million over the next 5 years to create The Canadian Centre for Aging and Brain Health Innovation (CC-ABHI). This will be a national hub and network of leading seniors care organizations dedicated to the development, validation, commercialization, dissemination and adoption of brain health and seniors care products and services. The support comes from the federal and provincial governments, fundraising commitments from the Baycrest Foundation and 40 leading industry, academic, public sector and not-for-profit partners, represents the largest such investment in brain health and aging in Canadian history.
The Baycrest strategic plan has a focus on brain health, and the Centre for Mental Health at Baycrest plays a very important role in achieving the strategic goals. The current strategic plan involves the development of a “Baycrest Model” of care which is centred on brain health, to introduce preventive strategies and technologies for brain health, expand service delivery, and to continue to be productive in the areas of research, scholarship, innovation, and dissemination. Baycrest and the Baycrest Centre for Mental Health are currently embarking on a 10-year clinical services plan based on these strategic priorities.
Year in Review Education Our program receives approximately 8-10 psychiatry residents per academic year for core geriatric psychiatric training at the University of Toronto.
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Baycrest has also been involved in the training of the Geriatric Psychiatry Subspecialty Residents with 2 trainees in the past academic year. Numerous students are trained from a variety of disciplines within our department including family medicine and COE, geriatric medicine, social work, nursing, and occupational therapy. Baycrest continues to provide training in geriatric care, including mental health care, to visiting students and faculty from the Peking Union Medical College in China. The Baycrest Geriatric Mental Health videoconferenced rounds have been well-reviewed and have expanded to a national audience. This has been supplemented with the GEMH.org website which provides interested participants with a community of practice via an interactive forum to discuss issues in this area. The Baycrest Centre for Mental Health has produced a Geriatric Mental Health Educational Website for patients and caregivers. This interactive website has been supported by the Geoffrey H. Wood Foundation, Evelyn BurnsWeinrib, and the AFP Innovation Fund. It has had national press and there is sustained donor funding for the next five years. A second module on dementia is to be launched this Fall 2015.
Research The members of the Baycrest Centre for Mental Health who are Rotman Research Scientists continue to be productive in the research area of brain health. Members of our Department have been very successful in acquiring AHSC AFP Innovation Funds Grants from the Ontario Ministry of Health. Scholarly work which has
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been disseminated in peer-reviewed journals and conferences.
Clinical Programs The Department of Psychiatry at Baycrest is one of the two centres of excellences. Our Department is now known as the Baycrest Centre for Mental Health. The clinical programs include a 20-bed Inpatient Unit, Mood and Related Disorders Clinic, Psychiatric Day Hospital Program for Depression, Geriatric Psychiatry Community Service (Outreach), Telehealth to Northern Ontario, and Consultation-Liaison within the Baycrest hospital, and nursing home facility. The composition of the psychiatrists is a combination of full and part time staff totalling 11 FTEs. All programs are team based and have a medical program director and manager. The entire Centre for Mental Health has undergone an extensive external review in 2014 and the recommendations are being adopted and implemented.
Leadership There have been no changes to the leadership this past academic year. The Centre continues to use a Program Management Model and involves a Mental Health Council and Family Council. Baycrest has been asked and has agreed to take on the coordinator role for the Northwest Health Link in Toronto. This Health Link will enhance the care of the population through improved coordination and alignment of services and communication supporting family physicians and the community.
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Centre for Addictionand Mental Health (CAMH) 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. In its new buildings and using its new administrative structure for clinical and academic services, CAMH is implementing the Vision 2020 strategic plan. One of the goals is to improve access to mental health and addiction care: in 2014-2015, CAMH fully implemented Access CAMH, a single point of access providing focused assessments and rapid referral to all CAMH specialized services with minimal restrictions. Another major goal of this strategic plan is to improve the quality of the care provided. The systematic design and implementation of Integrated Care Pathways will provide evidence-informed state of the art treatment to a growing number of patients. The CAMH-wide adoption of the I-CARE electronic health records (EHR) also supports this focus on quality of care.
OVERALL CLINICAL SERVICES Over the past year, CAMH served over 31,000 unique clients, accounting for over 8,000 Emergency Department visits and over 4,000 inpatient admissions. With almost 400 physicians on staff, a highly committed staff of more than 3,800 and close to 1,900 volunteers, CAMH met its aim to improve access to clinical services and decrease inpatient length of stay.
RESEARCH - VP Research: Dr. Bruce G. Pollock CAMH Research has three pillars: Brain Science within the Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute; Clinical Research; and Social and Epidemiological Research. This past year, CAMH launched two research-focused clinical centres for youth, the McCain Centre for Child,Youth and Family Mental Health and the Slaight Family Centre for Youth in Transition. CAMH scientists published 509 peer-reviewed articles and secured $44.4 million in external grant funding. Notably, CAMH was the only Canadian centre to collaborate on the landmark Nature study identifying 108 genetic variations associated with schizophrenia. CAMH also welcomed the inaugural Campbell Chair in Clinical Neuroscience, Dr. Etienne Sibille, who investigates the neurobiology of depression and aging. It spearheaded the Ontario Health Technology Assessment review of rTMS for treatment-resistant depression. The CAMH’s Temerty Centre for Therapeutic Brain Intervention continues to refine and develop brain stimulation therapies. The Research Imaging Centre (RIC) at CAMH has published research on neuroinflammation in connection with depression, Alzheimer’s disease, and schizophrenia. This was made possible by the development of a new radiotracer at the RIC. In addition, two new licensing agreements for genetic markers were secured between CAMH and Assurex Health. One set of markers may be used to predict
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suicide risk and another set to predict weight gain related to antipsychotic medications.
EDUCATION VP Education: Dr. Ivan Silver CAMH student numbers have continued to increase by 10% during the past year. Including electives, CAMH provided training for 168 residents, 179 medical students, 863 professional practice students, and 75 fellows; 45,437 other unique learners participated in CAMH education activities both online and in person. In collaboration with the Medical Psychiatry Alliance, CAMH Education has begun the development of a simulation program that will explore new teaching and learning methods to support medical psychiatry. In addition CAMH Education researchers continue to explore issues related to hospitals as learning organizations, notions of relationship centred care, and the impact of Integrated Care Pathways on organization learning and practice. CAMH Education also continues to support client and family education through a variety of initiatives including the development of a community resource centre, client information tools, and online and mobile resources. The development of the Client and Family as Teacher program investigates staff attitudes to enabling client teachers, understanding of the role of clients in residency education, and preparation of clients for their role in health professions education. While the development of the Portico network (a national mental health knowledge translation platform with over 1500 registered users) and mobile applications continues, a new mobile application was released: “ThoughtSpot,” is a crowdsourced platform for mapping mental health services for post-secondary students in the GTA.
CAMH SEVEN ACADEMIC DIVISIONS Addictions - Chief: Dr. Peter Selby This division has 30 physicians and 4 scientists. In 2014-2015, researchers received over $5,000,000
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in grants, published over 60 papers, and had over 30 research trainees in 2014 -2015. The division offered clinical training to 9 fellows and 55 residents from psychiatry and family medicine; an increase of 8.5% over last year. The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons has approved a diploma in Addiction Medicine based on a national application submitted via CAMH and the University of Toronto. There has also been an increased interest in Addiction Psychiatry by residents in the Department with at least two accepted into prestigious addiction fellowships in the US.
Child & Youth Mental Health CAMH provides a wide array of clinical services to children, adolescents and youth presenting with a range of mental health challenges. This division supports a wider range of learners including 12 core residents; 2 sub-specialty residents; 1 senior psychiatry resident; 4 pediatric fellows: 2 family practice residents; and 1 outside resident on elective. There is also a focus on clerks (on average, 4 at any one time and 48 over the year) and medical student electives. During the past year, an important focus has been the establishment of the Margaret and Wallace McCain Centre for Child, Youth and Family Mental Health. Dr. Joanna Henderson is the new Director of the Centre, which is now the “home” for child and youth research at CAMH. Three Clinician Scientists/researchers spend more than 50% of their time doing research; another six have protected time for research. Their work includes a clinical trial of children with disruptive behavior disorders, identifying aspects of developmentally sensitive services for youth with concurrent addictions and mental health problems, genetic factors underlying mood disorders, psychopathology in children with language disorders, a clinical trial of dialectical behavior therapy, and research into the longitudinal course and brain mechanisms associated with Autism spectrum disorders.
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General and Health Systems Psychiatry Chief: Dr. Valerie Taylor
Forensic Psychiatry Chief: Dr. Sandy Simpson
This division has been actively involved in education, research, program development, and policy/stakeholder relationships. Its membership includes medical staff from all 4 clinical programs and encompasses a broad scope of scholarly activities. The division is also active in teaching and members are sought after supervisors who consistently win awards for educational commitment. The program has a focus on telepsychiatry and is actively involved in new research and educational initiatives in this area, with a focus on project ECHO which is designed to improve care. The is also exciting work in the area of medical psychiatry and a focus on improving access to medical care for clients with major mental illness.
The scope of the division has continued to expand with new clinical services, research activities and furthering of the subspecialty training program in forensic psychiatry. A major highlight was hosting the 14th Annual meeting of the International Association of Mental Health Services in Toronto, a meeting with over 400 delegates. Two new physicians, Drs. Kiran Patel and Graham Glancy, were recruited with a particular focus on expanding clinical and education programs in the Corrections area. New clinical services opened at the Toronto South Detention Centre and consultancy work was performed for federal and provincial prison systems. External funding and research productivity continue to grow. Dr. Nathan Kolla joined the division as a clinician scientist. His work will focus on brain imaging in the field of personality disorders and violence. Following on from the successful first year of the Sub-specialty Training Program in Forensic Psychiatry, 4 new graduates completed the 20142015 program. The program was successfully reviewed and praised, especially the commitment of the founding Program Director, Dr. Ramshaw. Education scholarship is becoming a growing focus for a series of forensic physicians, including interdisciplinary work. Advocacy for system change and legislative reform, and public education on the needs of prison inmates with mental illness, those found not criminally responsible and sexual deviance have continued.
Geriatric Psychiatry Chief: Dr. Tarek Rajji This division is highly active in various research areas, including genetics, cognitive neuroscience, functional and structural neuroimaging, pharmacology, brain stimulation, cognitive and psychosocial interventions, pharmacological interventions, and epidemiology. The division is among the world leaders in studies of non-invasive brain stimulation and novel neuroimaging studies of the pathophysiology of late-life mental disorders including Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and schizophrenia.. It is also a key contributor for several studies that aim at identifying novel treatments and biomarkers for mood and psychotic disorders in late life. This division is also now leading the largest Canadian study in Alzheimer’s disease: this study will use the combination of brain stimulation and cognitive remediation to prevent dementia or mild cognitive impairment in older patients with depression or mild cognitive impairment. In total, this division has close to $20 M in external funding.
Mood & Anxiety Chief: Dr. Jeff Daskalakis In 2014-15, the division implemented its first integrated care pathway and expanded the day treatment program. This expansion will serve as a key clinical platform through which to evaluate a new major initiative at CAMH – clinical research redevelopment. It will support the development of new clinical care pathways and evaluation of ground-breaking new treatments while conducting genetic, molecular and imaging work
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in patients with severe and treatment resistant symptoms. The Division is also integrating more closely with the Temerty Centre for Therapeutic Brain Intervention that offers novel interventions for mood disorders including repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), theta burst stimulation and magnetic seizure therapy (MST). The investigation of these brain stimulation interventions and new pharmacological approaches is integrated within a platform of biomarker development. This innovative work is funded by provincial and national grants from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, Ontario Mental Health Foundation, Ontario Brain Institute, Canadian Foundation for Innovation, Grand Challenges Canada and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. The division has also expanded its educational rounds. Presenters are either members of the division or national and international visitors.
Schizophrenia Chief: Dr. Tony George The division comprises 18 clinician-scientists, 26 clinician teachers, and 1 education scholar. Its faculty members obtained over $1.0 million in research funding from national and international agencies such as CIHR, NIH, OMHF, NARSAD and the Schizophrenia Society of Ontario (SSO), and published nearly 250 peer reviewed articles and reviews in 2014-15. It was involved in the training of more than 10 research and clinical fellows, more than 25 graduate students, and more than 50 psychiatry residents and medical students. The division held a very successful Schizophrenia Research Day in October 2014, attended by over 100 staff and faculty.
CAMH FOUR CLINICAL PROGRAMS Access & Transitions Medical Director: Stephen Sokolov The program operates a small number of large clinical services. Access CAMH is the centralized
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intake service and live call line for all CAMH services. After being piloted for more than one year, it was launched publically at the beginning of 2015 and is now in full operation, processing about 4000 phone calls and 1700 referrals a month. The CAMH Gerald Sheff and Shanitha Kachan Emergency Department (ED; Head, Brittany Poynter) performs 40% of the TCLHIN mental health and addictions ED assessments and currently sees approximately 8,000 patients per year with an annual increase of about 12% per year. In response to this increasing demand, a new ED Psychiatrist shift has been added from 1300 to 2100h on weekdays and a fourth resident has been added to the on call team. Telepsychiatry (Head, Allison Crawford) continues to grow with over 1,000 telepsychiatry visits per year. The government of Ontario has funded CAMH to undertake a new ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) project that will deliver specialized addictions and mental health teleservices to outlying areas while building capacity through mentorship to clinicians in those areas. The Crisis Clinic sees referrals from the ED (700/ referrals/year) and the General Assessment Clinic assesses complex patients with significant comorbidity (1400 referrals/year).
Ambulatory Care and Structured Treatments Medical Director: Dr. Peter Voore The program further expanded the Integrated Care Pathway (ICP) for patients with Major Depression and Alcohol Dependence and launched a new ICP for patients with Bipolar Depression. The Major Depression/Alcohol Pathway was awarded an ARTIC grant to implement this Pathway in 9 hospitals and family health teams. In our Addictions Services we integrated our Brief Treatment and IGT services to enable the provision of more efficient access ambulatory addiction treatment for our patients. The new Urgent Mood Service expanded its services to intake more patients each week from the CAMH Emergency Department. Our Addiction Inpatient Rehabilitation Service,
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CAITS moved to a model of continuous intake which has improved access for a wider variety of patients, decreased wait times and permitted gender segregation for patients with trauma. The Program has embarked on a review of its assessment services to find opportunities for integration and simplification which will better match our 13,000 patients per year to the treatment resources which they require.
The Complex Mental Illness Medical Director: Dr. Tony George This program brings together the resources of the former Forensics and Schizophrenia Programs, and the Mood and Anxiety Inpatient Unit (MAUI) and College Street Acute Care/General Psychiatry Units (ACU/GPU). It includes 357 inpatient beds and a 20 bed Partial Hospital Program (PHP) and 16 clinics serving nearly 3,500 outpatients. Dr. Tony George serves as Medical Director, Gabriella Golea as Director of Interprofessional Practice, and Jim McNamee and April Collins as the Program’s Executive Directors. Drs. Justin Geagea, Andrew Lustig, and Treena Wilkie serve as Inpatient Heads, and Drs. Crystal Baluyut and Patricia Cavanagh as Outpatient Heads. We have seen significant development of our interprofessional teams in the past year, as well as significant improvements in patient flow into inpatient and outpatient services. The Slaight Centre for Transition Age Youth is the newest part of the Program under the direction of Dr. Aristotle Voineskos, and will provide significant development of clinical services, education and research directed to people aged 18-24 with early stages of chronic mental illness, with clear links to CAMH’s Early Interventions Services, as well as key external partners including student mental health services at UofT and other local universities.
The Underserved Populations Medical Director: Dr. Kwame McKenzie The program brings together three clinical services with significant potential for growth. Each of the Child Youth and Family, Dual Diagnosis and Geriatric Mental Health services has renewed its approaches to both inpatient and outpatient. Child and Youth services have significantly decreased wait-times; Geriatric services have doubled the number of outpatients seen and halved its Alternative Level of Care (ALC) rates; and Dual Diagnosis services have revamped their model of care, focussing now more on outpatient treatment. The program has 40 full time physicians, trains over 100 physician learners including medical students and residents. The Geriatric services have been the first to implement integrated care pathways at CAMH and, funded evaluations of these pathways in addition to a ground breaking Brain Canada grant, are further linking clinicians to researchers within the service. The launch of the McCain Centre in Child and Youth and other recent funding success are similarly helping the clinicians and researchers to work together for better patient outcomes. Similarly, the development of new research efforts in Dual and the launch of a neurodevelopmental outpatient clinic that will straddle children, youth and adults will be a catalyst for the development of more clinical research in this area.
Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, MS, FRCPC Physician-in-Chief, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Professor and Vice-Chair, Department of Psychiatry
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Hospital for Sick Children Hospital Overview The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) is recognized as one of the world’s foremost pediatric healthcare institutions and is Canada’s leading center dedicated to advancing children’s health through the integration of patient care, research and education. Its mission is to provide the best in complex and specialized family-centered care; pioneer scientific and clinical advancements; share expertise; foster an academic environment that nurtures healthcare professionals and champion an accessible, comprehensive and sustainable child health system. Our Department provides strong educational leadership by providing exceptional educational experiences for trainees at all levels. Members of our educational group led the educational curriculum teaching for the University of Toronto Undergraduate Program in Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. At all levels, members of our educational group are involved in creative curriculum development.
Hospital Department Overview The Department of Psychiatry at the Hospital for Sick Children expresses the vision of the hospital through a variety of services and programs addressing the mental health care and needs of children, youth and their families, aligned with its academic affiliation with the University of Toronto. Clinically, patient care is provided through a variety of hospital
based programs (Consultation-Liaison; Crisis; Inpatients and Day Hospital; and Eating Disorders), specialized outpatient programs and via videoconferencing with the TeleLink Mental Health Program. In the year 2014-2015, there were 6,843 Outpatient Clinic visits, and 96 admissions to the three 3 voluntary inpatient psychiatric beds. Working in collaboration with the Division of Adolescent Medicine, the Eating Disorders Program cared for 125 inpatient admissions in 2014-15, and 1, 338 ambulatory visits. SickKids is also actively sought after as a training site for local and international medical students, residents, observerships, and medical and post-doctoral fellowships. In this last year Sickkids trained three research fellows and two clinical/research fellows in the Department of Psychiatry. Six core PGY 3 residents are placed within the Department, and with the newly created sub-specialty designation of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry with the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, SickKids provides specialty training to two sub-specialty PGY 5 or PGY 6 residents, see below for numbers. Type of Trainee
Total Number for Year
Core Psychiatry Residents
6
Child Psychiatry Subspecialty Residents
2
Psychiatry & Psychology Fellows
4
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Elective Medical Students
16
Practice Plan Overview
Observers (e.g. medical students, physicians)
4
Paediatric, Neurology Residents and Development Peds Fellows
18
PedLe and PsychLE Srudents (e.g. 1st & 2nd year U of T medical students
4
The psychiatric staff at SickKids are compensated via an Alternate Payment Plan (AFP), disbursed via the Psychiatric Association. All members of the Associates are medical staff. The AFP provides protected time for education, research and academic compensation.
Medical staff cannot work in isolation, especially in child/adolescent psychiatry. The clinical and academic successes of the Department of Psychiatry could not been achieved without the active and passionate contributions of psychologists, registered nurses, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, child and youth councilors, , social workers, dietitians and skilled administrative support staff.
Governance and Leadership The Department is led by an Executive which consists of Dr. Szatmari, Dr. Pignatiello, Ms. Liz Ferguson Manager (Director, Centre for Brain & Mental Health, Trauma, Adolescent Medicine, and Inpatient Surgical Specialties), Dr Suneeta Monga (Director of Scholarship & Professional Development) and Dr. Paul Arnold (Director of Scientific Development & Innovation. The Department also has several committees which provide administrative leadership to the various clinical and academic activities of the hospital. These include: Executive, Centre for Brain and Mental Health; Sickkids Mental Health Advisory Resources Team (SMART); Executive, Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry; Canadian Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Executive, including Chairs of Research & Scientific Committee and Subspecialty review course committee; Coalition for Children & Youth Mental Health; Provincial Council for Maternal and Child Health; Advisory Committee for Telepsychiatry, Ministry of Child & Youth Services; Chair, TC LHIN task force on Transition Aged Youth.
Strategic Plan Overview The Department of Psychiatry is currently undergoing a review of its strategic plan and a “reimagining” of its clinical services. Our aim is to provide a single point of access for all mental health inquiries both inside and outside the hospital, and to provide developmentally sensitive, evidence based mental health care to children and adolescents with complex mental health challenges in collaboration with community partners (including primary health care providers). The Department will continue its strong focus on educating students from many health care disciplines and on promoting both basic and clinical research into the psychopathology of development. The implementation of the strategic plan is well underway with a significant change to ambulatory services, urgent care, consultation-liason and a new program to facilitate transitions to community and primary care. The plan contains a specific focus on improved access and transition into/out of our services, refocused attention of clinical services with greater flexibility of referrals, integrated teaching and research models that will enable increased productivity, active fostering of partnerships across the Division of Child/Adolescent Psychiatry and community service providers, and attention to positive patient experiences
Innovations and Major Accomplishments The Department supports several endowed chairs (Schachar, Szatmari). This year the Psychiatry
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Associates reformed their Endowment Fund to support research projects developed by members of the Dept. In addition, an Associate’s endowed Chair (name to be determined) and a health clinician scientist position have been created. The Medical Psychiatry Alliance at Sickkids continues through its various activities to improve clinical care among children and adolescents with combined physical and mental health challenges, to educate health care professionals on the specific challenges that this population faces and to encourage research into the complex interplay between mental and physical health. Recruitment for an endowed Chair to support the MPA also began this year. The Child Health Services Resource Group has been fully integrated into the Department, a new director has been appointed (Dr Melanie Barwick), a retreat was held to re-define the group’s mandate, and a decision was made to change the name to the Child and Youth Mental Health Research Unit, a name that more fully reflects their current activities. The research productivity of the Department remains high. Doctors Arnold, Schachar, Szatmari, and Crosbie are Lead Investigators for the Ontario Brain Institute POND study (Province of Ontario Neuro-developmental Disorders Network). Dr. Szatmari is also co-PI along with Dr. Steve Scherer in a Genome Canada grant studying the genetics of autism. Dr. Arnold received funding as a co-PI
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on two new international collaborative studies focused on the genetics of child neuropsychiatric traits, one from the National Institute of Mental Health in the US and another jointly funded by CIHR and the European agency ERA-Net Neuron. Dr Suneeta Monga was recently funded by OMHF to conduct a controlled clinical trial for selective mutism. Other world class research which has become synonymous with SickKids Department of Psychiatry includes Cognitive Behavior Therapy across ages and environment for anxiety disorders, neuro-imaging and genetics of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, neurobiology and genetics of ADHD, and Tourette’s Disorder, and the use of telepsychiatry as a viable venue for service delivery Link to Hospital Department Annual Report http://www.sickkids.ca/annualreport/index.html
Summary Through commitment to advocacy and excellence, the Department of Psychiatry at The Hospital for Sick Children is well poised to continue to be an international leader in service, scientific development and scholarship in child, youth and family mental health and to function as an important focal point for the Department of Psychiatry as it rolls out its strategic plan with its emphasis on “Human Development”.
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Mount Sinai Hospital INTRODUCTION 2014-15 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; Psychotherapies, Humanities and Educational Scholarship (PHES); Consultation Liaison Psychiatry and, Equity, Gender and Population. We are committed to outstanding clinical care; training, academic scholarship and research. MSH Faculty members provide leadership in a number of University Divisions. Jon Hunter is the Director of the Division of Consultation Liaison Psychiatry and served as the Acting Vice Chair of Education this past year; Paula Ravitz is the Associate Director of the Division of PHES, leading the Psychotherapies academic stream and Allan Peterkin leads the Health Arts and Humanities academic stream. Clare Pain is the Coordinator of the Toronto Addis Ababa Psychiatry Program (TAAPP) and the Toronto Addis Ababa Academic Collaboration. Lisa Andermann is co-lead of the Dialogue Pillar for the University Department of Psychiatry Strategic Plan. Lesley Wiesenfeld is the Associate Director of Postgraduate Education and Molyn Leszcz serves as the University Vice-Chair, Clinical and in this past year also served as the interim University Chair. The MSH psychiatry department has grown to 28 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. is the Psychiatrist-in-Chief and Lesley Wiesenfeld is the Deputy Psychiatrist-in-Chief. Sami Beth Kuchar is the Administrative Director. A key committee is the Psychiatry Advisory Committee which consists of the program leaders in the department, responsible for implementation of our operations and strategic plan. This past year has been highlighted by the MSH amalgamation with Bridgepoint Hospital and Circle of Care, creating Sinai Health System. This will provide an innovative model of clinical and academic integration bridging acute care, chronic care and home based community care. Our focus on the psychological care of the medically ill and seniors will grow further with this opportunity and we will grow in size and scope with Drs. Mark Lachmann and Seema Khan work at Bridgepoint Health and the emerging opportunities for integration and transformation.
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; along
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with shared care and collaborative mental health services. The Inpatient Unit lead by Greg Chandler is a 15 bed unit and the ambulatory department led by Sian Rawkins sees 1100 new psychiatry consultations, 220 crisis cases and provides 37,000 ambulatory visits annually, along with a very active collaboration with the MSH family health teams at MSH and at the Vaughan campus led by Mark Halman. Andrea Berntson leads our transitional care and day treatment programs supporting flow from our inpatient unit and providing an intermediate level intensive outpatient care. Emergency services are provided both directly to our ED and with CAMH in a joint emergency program. We are part as well of the growing Mental Health and Addictions Acute Care Alliance. Our psychological trauma work includes ongoing collaboration with the Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture. The Psychotherapies academic area has broad presence in practice, teaching and research in the contemporary psychotherapies and is led by , the Morgan Firestone Chair in Psychotherapy. The Health Arts and Humanities academic area is an interdisciplinary program with broad university wide collaboration addressing the reciprocal impact of the humanities and patient care, led by Allan Peterkin. In collaboration with community partners such as Hong Fook Mental Health Association and Yee Hong Centre for Geriatric Care 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 with innovative programs to improve access to care. 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
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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 professional caregivers. Lesley Wiesenfeld leads a comprehensive psychogeriatric consultation and liaison 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 15% of all patients receiving care in the hospital at any moment in time. HIV psychiatry, led by Peter Deroche is broadly engaged with community partners to deliver comprehensive psychosocial care. The Women’s Mental Health Program led by Ariel Dalfen provides ambulatory and inpatient consultation to 800 new referrals annually and has expanded its reach into the care of women along the reproductive life span along with a growing community perinatal mental health outreach. Active research collaboration is underway in each of these areas. directs the department’s research activities and Andrea Lawson is Senior Research Coordinator for the department. 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. We train 16 PGY 2-5 and 6 PGY 1 residents annually. Residents can train in core and selective rotations 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
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training to medical students through year I and year II of the Art and Science of Clinical Medicine. We train 36 clinical clerks each year along with a large number of elective students from the University of Toronto and across Canada. Two key committees meet regularly with broad department impact. The Quality Improvement Committee, chaired by Lesley Wiesenfeld focuses on development of improvements in clinical care and evaluation. This work is informed by the second committee, the Critical Incident Committee, chaired by Sami Kuchar, focused on comprehensive review of untoward clinical events. We seek to integrate the flow of information between these two committees to improve safety and quality.
program across the hospital. This innovative work in the early recognition/intervention program in the Safe Patient, Safe Staff initiative was recognized with the 2015 National Healthcare Safety Award by the Canadian College of Health Leaders. This program is garnering growing interest from the community sector interested in models of staff training that demonstrates improved quality of care and improved staff satisfaction in dealing with the difficult patient behaviors that at times accompany dementia and delirium. A generous donation from Southbridge Care Homes will continue to support and grow this work.
The department continues to grow in alignment with the hospital’s strategic plan which emphasizes patient centered integrative care in acute and chronic illness including mental illness. This shapes our programs with regard to emphasizing access, collaboration and community integration. This also affords opportunity to expand the reach of mental health within the hospital as we improve value and quality of patient care. The MSH strategic planning process includes a strong emphasis on mental health as part of its chronic disease management focus along with emphases on collaborative care; perinatal mental health and geriatric psychiatry. The recent amalgamation and creation of Sinai Health System will broaden that platform
The Reitman Centre has expanded its clinical and educational programs in collaboration with CCAC, the Ontario Behavioral Support Network and the Alzheimer’s Society. The Reitman team has provided intensive training workshops across Canada in culturally competent seniors Mental Health Care and caregiver training. Caregiver trainings have also been provided in community settings. This program has been awarded $2.8M in funding from the federal Department of Human Resources and Skill Development to develop an innovative, Working CARERS program partnering with Ceridian, an EAP provider and BMO to develop training programs to support employees caring for family members with dementia. This work has been recognized with leading awards in continuing professional education from both the Faculty of Medicine and the Department of Psychiatry. Lead by Joel Sadavoy and Mary Chiu, the Reitman team was awarded a large grant from the Canadian Coalition on Neurodegeneration and Aging addressing caregivers.
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. Advanced practice nurses in our department work closely with Lesley Wiesenfeld in advancing an early recognition/prevention
The General Psychiatry Program has made continuing strides advancing gains we have made in access, flow and quality. Our inpatient unit was recognized as the top inpatient acute mental health care unit in the province for 2013/14 based upon the NRCC Patient Survey results with regard to quality of care and patient satisfaction. This reflects well on our interprofessional teamwork led by Greg Chandler and Ping Rau. Peer support is a key component of that program. We have realigned our inpatient services with great
DEVELOPMENTS
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attention paid to improving patient flow and reducing length of stay and have improved flow and volumes by more than 20% while also improving patient satisfaction with continuity of care as reflected by recent CIHI data. Under the leadership of Andrea Berntson we continue to expand and improve transitional care and case management and build deeper community collaborations. We have also responded to flow pressures with the CAMH/MSH joint emergency psychiatry program with greater direct response to our ED and direct admissions to our inpatient unit advancing patient –centered care. Bob Maunder and Lesley Wiesenfeld are leading the development of our Patient Value Initiative, aimed at employing standardized measurement of each patient who enters the department for care, using the K10 and WHODAS as a standard of care as a way of tracking impact of care. Under the leadership of Sian Rawkins, Head of the Ambulatory Program and Jared Peck, the Associate Head, we have expanded our assessment and treatment capacity emphasizing focal biopsychosocial treatments, medication management and the brief psychotherapies. Led by Mark Halman the collaborative/shared care program has expanded with both indirect and direct care, formal training and supervision and a very well used “buddy” system for timely access to mental health input. Mark also completed the Educational Scholars program with a focus on Critical Consciousness in Health Care Education. The Mount Sinai Psychotherapy Institute lead by Paula Ravitz provided a series of intensive training opportunities addressing psychotherapy effectiveness; mindfulness; trauma; and narrative interventions. A related and very successful day was held focused on Psychological Trauma. A generous donation from the Berman family was provided to support psychotherapy training events. We also hosted the annual postgraduate Group Day and Family Therapy Day. Paula Ravitz and Bob Maunder have completed a series of instructional texts for frontline practitioners with the publication of Achieving
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Psychotherapy Effectiveness using the Psychotherapy Essentials to go model, co-authored with Molyn Leszcz, Clare Pain and Jon Hunter. We also collaborated with Hong Fook Mental Health Association and a number of community agencies to organize a very successful conference on CrossCultural Perspectives on Recovery and Resilience. Paula Ravitz was elected Vice President/President Elect of the International Society of Interpersonal Psychotherapy. Mark Halman 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). Clare Pain and Paula Ravitz, Dawit Wondimagegn and colleagues in Ethiopia continue to operationalize a $1M award from Grand Challenges Canada to fund The Biaber Project, a scaling up national project aimed at training providers in IPT and anti-stigma programs. The Health, Arts and Humanities academic area continues to develop 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 and the program established an EDU-D this year. Innovative programs including a literary companion for undergraduate medical students have been developed. Ars Medica, the journal published by the MSH psychiatry and humanities group continues to flourish and has moved to an electronic platform published by Simon Fraser University Press. Allan Peterkin continues as Humanities Lead for the Undergraduate Medical Education at the Faculty of Medicine. 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
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development, we have developed a number of programs to foster coping and reflection; and reduce stigma around mental health thru innovative multimedia and contact education. Rona Bloom has been appointed as Poet in Residence. Bob Maunder and Bill Lancee have created a health care worker online stress and resilience training program, tailored for the Ebola Virus threat, building upon the award winning The Stress Vaccine modeled after the successful Pandemic Influenza Stress Vaccine. The Women’s Mental Health group has established an urgent care clinic to expedite access. Sharon Szmuilowicz and colleagues are implementing an AFP Innovation Grant to develop community based reproductive mental health collaborations. Led by Ariel Dalfen and with the recruitment of Natasha Persaud, an advanced practice level nurse we have partnered with Public Health and community agencies to improve access to mental health care for marginalized pregnant women. This program also has received funding from the TCLHIN and nursing secretariat to develop an urban telepsychiatry program that will expand reach and access into the community and partner with community providers 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. Jennifer Hirsch has been recruited to the perinatal mental health team to expand our group and brief therapy capacity. Ariel Dalfen received AFP Innovation Funding to develop a social media/text messaging intervention to screen for perinatal mental illness. 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. Other investigations of the impact of relatedness on sarcoma and on diabetes are underway. 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 with new funded research. Bob Maunder and Jon Hunter have created a YouTube series of videos about attachment and health. Led by Jon Hunter Our department was very active within the around Ebola virus and staff resilience across multiple units. 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. Our research funding and support for PIs and Co-investigators exceeded $3M for the year. In addition to the research noted above Paula Ravitz and Molyn Leszcz are involved in the Psychotherapy Practice and Research Network, PPRN, led by George Tasca, University of Ottawa, and aimed at knowledge translation of evidence based psychotherapy across the country We continue research collaborations with colleagues in China, Japan and as noted Ethiopia. Nine of the department’s clinician investigators have also been recently appointed to the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute. This past year was a very productive year with regard to prominent hospital, university and national awards received by MSH faculty and programs noted elsewhere in this report. These awards include awards for academic excellence in creative professional activity, the psychotherapies, geriatric psychiatry, social responsibility, educational scholarship and teaching, and resident advocacy.
Molyn Leszcz, MD, FRCPC Psychiatrist-in-Chief Mount Sinai Hospital Professor and Vice Chair, Clinical University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry
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St. Michael’s Hospital Overview of the Hospital St. Michael’s Hospital, founded by the Sisters of St. Joseph in 1892, is known as Toronto’s Urban Angel, with a proud heritage and a distinct culture setting us apart from many other hospitals. We fulfill two distinct but complementary missions: As a teaching and research hospital, we provide training for 26 different health disciplines and conduct cutting edge research. The Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, the Applied Health Research Center, the Center of Excellence for Economic Evaluation, the Centre for Evaluation of Complex Interventions and The Knowledge Translation Program allow St. Michael’s to be a global resource for leading-edge research. We also have a continuing role as a community hospital serving the inner city. In addition to ground breaking research, our health-care teams have a unique ability to reach out to people with complex needs and social disadvantage throughout our community.
Organization of the Mental Health Service The goals of St. Michael’s Mental Health and Addictions Service are to contribute to the academic mission of the Department of Psychiatry and St. Michael’s Hospital and to lead the development of programs focusing on people with complex mental health and addictions needs. The Mental Health and Addictions Service has been restructured to
include five main components: Acute Mental Health Care, Addictions, Ambulatory Care, Medical Psychiatry / Consultation Liaison and Outreach Community Mental Health. Within Acute Care, the Psychiatric Emergency Service is a highly rated training site and includes an interdisciplinary Crisis Service, a three-bed Crisis Stabilization Unit and a Mobile Crisis Intervention Team. The 33 bed Inpatient Psychiatric Service serves individuals with complex care needs. More patients with psychotic disorders and more homeless individuals are admitted and discharged from St. Michael’s than any other Inpatient Unit in Canada. Roughly, there were 550 discharges this year with an average length of stay of 22 days. The Inpatient Service, a highly rated training site for residents, emphasizes general psychiatry and provides expertise in addiction psychiatry, HIV-related disorders, severe mental illness and multi-morbidity. The Addictions service, developed in partnership with the Departments of Family and Community Medicine, Medicine and Emergency Medicine, serves people with Addictions throughout the Hospital. Three Addictions Psychiatrists, a nurse practitioner, a community case manager and Addiction Medicine physicians participate in bot inpatient consultation and management, provision of Ambulatory Rapid Access Clinics and low access barrier Group Psychotherapy. The Ambulatory Care Service includes a General Assessment Clinic, an Urgent Care Clinic, the
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primary care based Collaborative Assessment Consultation and Treatment Program, the WREP program for people with chronic psychotic and severe mood disorders, and a range of group psychotherapy programs. The Medical Psychiatry / Consultation Liaison Service provides 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 provides inpatient consultations, a Memory Disorders Clinic and outreach to local nursing homes. The Outreach Community Mental Health Service carries a considerable volume of outpatient and outreach work. There is a strong emphasis on developing partnerships with front-line social service agencies in Toronto’s inner-city. This service includes several components: a Flexible Assertive Community Treatment Team (FOCUS), serving individuals in Mid East Toronto Health Link with complex mental health and addictions needs ; the Community Connections Intensive Case Management 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. 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. Finally St. Michael’s is home to Canada’s first Recovery College, the STAR Learning Centre, launched to support transitions and recovery for people experiencing poverty experiencing homelessness or housing vulnerability.
Year in Review Our ambitious new strategic plan, ‘Leading the Way to Recovery in Inner City Mental Health and Addictions’, is well under way, with a number of initiatives igniting scholarship, innovation, and
physician leadership at St. Michael’s. Furthermore, St. Michael’s new Strategic Plan places renewed emphasis on Disadvantaged Populations, drawing from and further building on the directions of the mental health and addictions initiatives.
Education The Mental Health Service trains students of all professional disciplines. The majority of psychiatric residency training focuses in general adult psychiatry, community and addictions psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry and consultation liaison. Career clinical and research rotations are available in a number of areas focusing on mood and suicide studies, dementia and cognitive disorders, HIV, social psychiatry and mental health services research. In the 2014/15 academic year we offered training to 9 PGY1 residents, 11 non-Psychiatry PGY-1 residents, 8 non-Psychiatry elective residents and 27 PGY-2 to PGY-5 residents pursuing core rotations, senior selective, career track and research rotations. On the undergraduate front we offered core rotations to 30 clinical clerks training at the Fitzgerald Academy and an additional 20 elective rotations for medical students. St. Michael’s was also the pilot site for the Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship (LInC) program at the University of Toronto and we had 4 LInC students over the course of the year. To continue advancing Academic Excellence, a working group focused on teaching and education excellence was developed and the department continued to develop an inter-professional Inner City Mental Health Curriculum. Furthermore, through the STAR Learning Centre, a comprehensive curriculum in support of wellness and social inclusion was co-developed with our peer specialists and people with lived experience of mental health and addiction challenges. St. Michael’s has remained a popular choice for training of psychiatry residents at the University of Toronto, offering a range of clinical and research electives opportunities, either hospital or community based.
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Research Scholarly activities are concentrated in a numbers of areas. St. Michael’s is home to the Arthur Sommer Rotenberg (ASR) Chair in Suicide Studies, focusing on research and clinical program development related to mood disorders, suicide and suicide prevention. This year saw the appointment of Dr. Sid Kennedy to the ASR Chair, pursuing cutting edge research on mood disorders and neuroscience. Dr. Sean Rourke continues to lead research in HIV psychiatry and neuropsychology and directs an extensive array of research activities in his role as Executive and Scientific Director of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. Additional areas of focus are Social Psychiatry and Mental Health Services Research. 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 and those who are frequent users of mental health services. In addition to our scientists, a number of our faculty is engaged in research. Dr. Corinne Fischer is an active member of St. Michael’s Neuroscience Research Program. Dr. Nadiya Sunderji pursues health services and educational research. Dr. Adriana Carvarhal focuses on HIV and neuro-cognition, while Dr. Arash Nakhost studies Community Treatment Orders and the effect of Community Mental Health programs. Three of our faculty are engaged in graduate degree programs, further building skills and capacity to pursue scholarship and innovation. Finally, two inter-professional research projects were launched, studying the experience of violence in the Acute Care Service and the experience of coercion in the Community Mental Health Service, led by frontline clinicians. St. Michael’s physicians and scientists held 17 ongoing research grants as principal or coprincipal investigator for a total value of $14,579,518. Our scientists and medical staff published 29 peer reviewed articles and 2 book chapters as principal or senior authors and co-
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authored 21 additional peer-reviewed manuscripts. Our major contributions to research include: •
The At Home/ Chez Soi Research Demonstration Project on Homelessness and Mental Health, informing national and provincial policy on how best to address the needs of the growing number of homeless people with complex health needs across the country. In response to study findings, the federal government invested over $600M over 5 years to the Housing First approach.
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The Coordinated Access to care for the Homeless and Coordinated Access to Care for Frequent ED users clinical trials, informing policy and practice nationally and internationally
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Our leadership at the Ontario HIV Treatment Network through Dr. Sean Rourke, its scientific and executive director. Dr. Rourke has been the recipient of several large research grants, including a $1,750,000 CIHR training grant in HIV/AIDS health research, a $1,500,000 CIHR operating grant for a national community based participatory center in HIV/AIDs and more recently a $2,498,494 CIHR operating grant to help advance primary care in HIV/AIDS across Canada.
Clinical Programs With regards to the Patient Experience, we undertook a major training and service improvement initiative to reduce restraints and restructured our Mental Health and Addictions Community Advisory Panel (CAP), to include 1/3 consumer members, both ongoing. Our CAP has prepared our patient Bills of Rights to invigorate our commitment to an outstanding patient experience as the cornerstone of our work and established awards for patients in our program who have contributed to leadership, innovation or community service. With regards to Clinical Innovation, the
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Department continued to work on improving access and quality of care to disadvantaged and underserved individuals with complex health needs. •
The Acute Care Service, led by Dr. Ken Balderson, helped design a self-contained Psychiatric Emergency Service (PES) as part of St. Michael’s ED redevelopment and renewed the collaborative model of care in the PES, better integrating care for people with mental health and addictions challenges presenting to the ED.
•
The Ambulatory Care Service, led by Dr. Nadiya Sunderji, continued to develop an urgent care program and is working with other Alliance and community stakeholders to advance access to and quality of urgent psychiatric care. Furthermore, additional collaborative care clinics were developed to meet primary care unmet mental health needs in our local community. Quality indicators for collaborative mental health care are under development and will help inform further program planning and delivery.
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The Medical Psychiatry Consultation Liaison Service, led by Dr. Adriana Carvalhal, continued to expand the number of dedicated outpatient medical psychiatry clinics and developed an integrated hospital community model of care for people with HIV/AIDS as well as quality indicators for medical psychiatry.
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The Addiction Service, led by Dr. Adam Quastel, enhanced our Rapid Access Clinics, contributing to an ARTIC winning project to advance access to addictions treatment, and continued working towards the development of a comprehensive addictions strategy at St. Michael’s, including inpatient and emergency department consultations, group psychotherapies and community addictions case management, in partnership with other hospital departments.
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The Outreach Community Mental Health service, led by Dr. John Langley, launched the first Flexible Assertive Community Treatment in the province, in partnership with a community mental health agency, and designed a model for hospital community integration, evaluated through BRIDGES funding to help inform provincial directions in this area.
Leadership Our department succeeded in attracting funds through both our local health network, our hospital and our foundation, including a $1M investment in our outreach community mental health programs, a $250,000 annual investment to support our newly developed addictions service, as well as two generous gifts, a $750,00 donation over five years to support the integration of peer support in our acute setting, and a $10M endowment, the Urban Angel Fund for Homeless People, to develop an incubator of innovation in inner city mental health. This year an additional investment was made by the TCLHIN to further support the development of STAR Learning Centre, the endowment’s first project. Finally, in terms of leadership, St. Michael’s physicians continue to offer system leadership recognized by a number of local, national and international awards and distinctions, giving St. Michael’s national leadership in inner city mental health and facilitating the creation of a local incubator of innovation to develop and disseminate evidence based practice for disadvantaged groups.
Vicky Stergiopoulos, MSc, MD, MHSc, FRCPC Psychiatrist-in-Chief, St. Michael’s Associate Professor, University of Toronto
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Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre OVERVIEW Integrating brain, mind and body, the Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry promotes discovery and learning and provides exemplary care to improve the lives of patients and their families. Within the brainmind-body continuum, the Department has two special areas of focus: complex mood and anxiety disorders across the lifespan and neurodegenerative disorders. The Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Department of Psychiatry has three Divisions:Youth, General Adult and Geriatrics. The Department has a 36-bed inpatient unit, which includes a six-bed Psychiatric ICU. The Youth Division has a special day treatment program in a classroom setting and an active ambulatory program. The General Adult Psychiatry Program includes the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program, The FW Thompson Anxiety Disorder Centre focusing on OCD spectrum illnesses, the CBT Clinic, the Women’s Mood and Anxiety Clinic, the Neuropsychiatry Program, SUNPACT (an ACT team), a Crisis team in the Emergency Department and Consultation/Liaison services to the inpatient services within the hospital. The Department has also developed an active Collaborative Care service to Family Practice. The Geriatric Program has a four-bed inpatient service, an extensive community outreach program (CPSE), a consultation/liaison program and an active outpatient program that works very closely with cognitive neurology and neuroimaging. The Department
currently has 35 Psychiatrists, three Fellows and two Research Scientists. The Executive Advisory Committee (Dr. Ayal Schaffer, Dr. Eileen Lacroix, Dr. Saulo Castel, Dr. Ben Goldstein and Dr. John Teshima) together with the Chief, have overseen the implementation of the 2013-2017 strategic plan as well as Year 2/3 objectives focusing on clinical quality, education and research http://sunnybrook.ca/content/?page=psychiatrystrategic-plan.
LEADERSHIP Dr. Anthony Levitt, Chief of the Sunnybrook Brain Sciences Program won the 2014 Rose Award from the Sunnybrook Foundation for excellence in fundraising and also won the 2015 Henry Durost Award for Excellence in Creative Professional Activity for his leadership in the Family Navigation Project. Dr. Ben Goldstein, Director of Research in the Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry was selected as head of the U of T Department of Psychiatry Clinician Scientist Program. Dr. Mark Fefergrad continues to provide outstanding leadership as the U of T Director of Postgraduate Education and was the winner of the 2015 Faculty of Medicine Sarita Verma Award for Advocacy in Postgraduate Medical Education. Dr. John Teshima, Director of Faculty Development for the University Department, has continued to design outstanding workshops on various topics such as senior faculty promotion, new faculty orientation as well as the
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Don Wasylenki Education Day. Dr. John Teshima was awarded the 2015 Faculty of Medicine Hellen Batty Award for Excellence in Faculty Development. Dr. Nik Grujich was appointed cochair of Department of Psychiatry Undergraduate Medical Education Recruitment Committee. Dr. Ari Zaretsky received the 2015 Learning Leader Award from the Canadian Centre for Training and Development.
DIVISONS & PROGRAMS YOUTH DIVISION The Youth Division treats youth ages 14-18 with complex mood and anxiety disorders. Dr. David Kreindler, the Medical Director of the Youth Division and has continued to provide strong leadership. The Centre for Youth Bipolar Disorder (CYBD) under the leadership of Dr. Ben Goldstein has continued to grow and flourish. It celebrated its fifth anniversary this year and Dr. Goldstein won the 2015 Department of Psychiatry Best Grand Rounds Award for his five year review of the CYBD’s achievements. In addition to receiving an OMHF operating grant, Dr. Goldstein was the lead author on a very influential American Heart Association scientific statement published in Circulation in August 2015, recommending that depression be added to cardiovascular risk reduction and prevention guidelines. In an article published in Circulation that attracted enormous media attention, Dr. Goldstein and colleagues reviewed existing literature and provided evidence that youth mood disorders, namely major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder, together affecting 11% of all youth, meet the criteria for moderate-risk conditions associated with increased and premature cardiovascular risk. Dr. Amy Cheung, the inaugural Bell Chair in Youth Mental Health has focused particular attention on community outreach and LHIN engagement as well as leadership within the University Child and Adolescent Division in developing a structure similar to the Mental
Health and Addiction Acute Care Alliance for youth psychiatry centres in Toronto. Dr. Sharon Reiter assumed the role of Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry Undergraduate Representative for U of T Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Dr. Elyse Dubo has moved to part-time status and Dr. Gili Adler-Nevo has moved to Toronto East General. In September 2014, the RBC Run for the Kids was held for the second year in a row with 7,000 participants, becoming one of the most successful charity runs in Toronto. This fundraising event for the Sunnybrook Family Navigation Project was organized by the Sunnybrook Foundation and over one million dollars was raised, with major support coming from the Royal Bank of Canada. The Family Navigation Project is an innovative program developed by families to assist other families of youth suffering from mental illness and addiction issues to effectively navigate the complex mental health system. Officially launched in April 2014, the Family Navigation Project has already served over 500 families and has received enormous attention from the media.
GENERAL ADULT PSYCHIATRY DIVISION The General Adult Psychiatry Division at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre continues to be strong as it works alongside interdisciplinary expertise in mood disorders, neuropsychiatry, CBT, and Psycho-oncology. The division has partnered with Women’s College Hospital to accommodate a PGY-2 resident who is part of a Sunnybrook/Women’s College rotation, spending six months at Sunnybrook for inpatients, and six months at Women’s College for outpatients. Experiences in General Consultation, Mood Disorders, and the CBT Assessment Clinic are essential elements of the PGY-2 year. All PGY-2s 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-1 residents, Family Medicine residents, and clinical clerks. There are opportunities for
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working with a full Crisis Team, a Crisis Followup Clinic, as well as a Mobile Crisis Team. PGY-4 Residents can complete their Chronic Care rotation in SUNPACT under Dr. Cliff Posel’s supervision. Ms. Nancy Gribben returned to Sunnybrook to oversee education coordination. Over the last year, the teaching excellence of Sunnybrook supervisors has been recognized by the dramatic increase in PGY-2 preferential rankings for Sunnybrook, the increased number of senior resident electives. It is noteworthy that seven out of 13 of the 2015 Robin Hunter Award nominees (Drs. Mark Sinyor, Nik Grujich, Lionel Gerber, Eileen Lacroix, Justin Weissglas, John Teshima and Ayal Schaffer) all came from Sunnybrook. Dr. Nik Grujich was nominated for both the Abe Miller Award for Undergraduate Teaching and the Robin Hunter Award for Postgraduate Teaching. Dr. Justin Weissglas, the Sunnybrook Postgraduate Coordinator, won the 2015 Marie Mara Award for Resident Advocacy. Under the leadership of Drs. Ari Zaretsky and Janet Ellis, the Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry Patient and Family Advisory Committee created an educational pamphlet for patients and families, and, in close collaboration with the Mood Disorder Association of Ontario, recently launched an inpatient peer-support volunteer program, which will become functional in early 2016. Denise Hill-Smid, a social worker in the Department was the winner of the 2015 Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry Clinical Excellence Award. Dr. Nik Grujich has continued to develop the Shared Care experience for PGY-4s and has initiated telepsychiatry consultations with northern rural Ontario communities. Dr. Janet Ellis has developed strong integration with the Odette Cancer Centre and has effectively championed patient and family education as well as trauma-informed psychotherapy for this emotionally vulnerable population. Dr. Ayal Schaffer won the Sunnybrook Department of
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Psychiatry Undergraduate Teaching Excellence Award and Dr. Lionel Gerber won the Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry Postgraduate Teaching Excellence Award. Psychiatry residents at Sunnybrook have won a number of impressive awards over this past year. Dr. Matthew Boyle, the Chief Resident for the Sunnybrook Department of Psychiatry, received the 2015 Faculty of Medicine Postgraduate Medical Trainee Leadership Award. Dr. Rachel Mitchell won the 2014 PSI Foundation Resident Research Prize. Dr. Nate Charach won the Best Poster Award at Canadian Psychiatric Association Annual Meeting and Dr. Nicole Kozloff won the 2014 Faculty of Medicine Postgraduate Research Award.
MOOD AND ANXIETY DISORDERS PROGRAM The Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre focuses on mood and anxiety disorders across the lifespan - to both inpatients and outpatients. The FW Thompson Anxiety Disorders Centre, under the outstanding leadership of Dr. Peggy Richter (Head), Neil Rector (Director of Research) has continued to build a strong research enterprise Together with Dr. Richter, Dr. Rector recently won a 4 year $1.4 million operating grant from CIHR prospectively examining neurodevelopmental risk for anxiety and mood disorder in pregnancy and the postpartum. Drs. Amy Cheung, Sophie Grigoriadis, Ben Goldstein, David Kreindler, Anthony Levitt, Neil Rector, Mark Sinyor and Ayal Schaffer have continued highly productive scholarly programs that merge clinical care, research productivity and education opportunities in mood and anxiety disorders. Drs. Schaffer, Sinyor and Goldstein chaired special research initiatives of the International Society of Bipolar Disorder devoted to suicide and youth bipolar disorder. Sunnybrook sponsored residents from the U of T Department of Psychiatry to attend the 2015 ISBD
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Conference. Dr. Amy Cheung was a coInvestigator on a large Ontario SPOR Support Unit IMPACT Grant for $1.8 million and Dr. Ayal Schaffer and Dr. Mark Sinyor won an OMHF Grant and were co-Investigators on an Ontario SPOR Support Unit Impact Grant for $1.5 million. Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis won a CIHR Synthesis Grant. Dr. Sinyor won a 2015 Department of Psychiatry Excellence Fund Award.
NEUROPSYCHIATRY PROGRAM Clinical work within the Neuropsychiatry Program focuses on multiple sclerosis, traumatic brain injury and conversion Disorder. Dr. Feinstein continues to chair the Medical Advisory Committee for the MS Society of Canada and has received both national and international attention for his special series of articles published in the Globe and Mail on war photojournalists and PTSD. Dr. Angelica Staniloiu, a newly recruited neuropsychiatrist, has provided exemplary care and teaching.
NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY PROGRAM The Clinical Neuropharmacology laboratory is co-directed by Drs. Krista Lanctôt and Nathan Herrmann. The research foci of the lab include optimizing the management of neuropsychiatric symptoms (e.g. apathy) associated with Dementia, Coronary Artery Disease and Stroke. The lab currently trains 3 PhD students, 4 MSc students, 14 Department of Pharmacology undergraduate students and during the summer also trains two other undergraduate students and a second year U of T medical student. Drs. Herrmann and Lanctôt have had another extremely successful year with regards to research, achieving almost $20 million in new grant funding. In addition to CIHR and the National Institute on Aging, funding has also come from Brain Canada and the Weston Brain Institute. Educational activities of this group have included the organization of the 2015 Brain Sciences Day
entitled “Understanding and Treating the Brain and Mind: Recent Advances”. This event, specially designed for both family physicians and community psychiatrists, was organized by Dr. Steve Selchen and was delivered through OTN. Other educational activities of this group have included organizing the Department of Psychiatry’s annual Psychopharmacology Crash Course for residents, organizing weekly interdisciplinary Brain Science rounds, and delivering an extremely popular undergraduate course in neuroscience at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough College entitled “Diseases of the Brain and Mind: A Clinical Perspective.”
GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY DIVISION The Division of Geriatric Psychiatry consists of five 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. The Division trains medical students, residents, fellows and graduate students. Dr. Carole Cohen has played a pivotal leadership role in the coordination of services for the elderly in the North East Health Link. Drs. Herrmann, Shulman and Cohen were all actively involved in teaching in the Canadian Academy of Geriatric Psychiatry’s Review Course for the Royal College certification examination for Geriatric Psychiatry, organized and overseen by Dr. Mark Rapoport. Dr. Rapoport won a 2015 CIHR Synthesis Grant and the 2014 Canadian Academy of Geriatric Psychiatry Award for Outstanding Contributions in Geriatric Psychiatry. Dr. Soham Rej, a Geriatric Fellow won a 2015 CIHR Fellowship Award (one of only six physicians in Canada).
Ari Zaretsky, MD, FRCPC Psychiatrist-in-Chief
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United Health Network (UHN) Overview The University Health Network (UHN) is comprised of four hospitals - Toronto General Hospital, Toronto Western Hospital, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and Toronto Rehab - spread across eight geographic locations –. TGH founded the first general hospital ambulatory psychiatric clinic in Canada in 1909 and established a department of psychiatry in 1967. It has grown since that time into a robust academic department with active clinical, educational and research programs. UHN prides itself on the spectrum of services it provides from primary care through to cutting edge tertiary and quaternary care. As part of the UHN Medical and Community Care Program, the UHN Centre for Mental Health provides service to the seven other UHN programs including the Arthritis Program, Krembil Neuroscience Centre, MultiOrgan Transplant, Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Surgery and Critical Care and Toronto Rehab in addition to primary care and community agencies.
Organization & Activities The UHN Department of Psychiatry has 47 fulltime psychiatrists and 49 part-time psychiatrists as well as over 200 staff in varied disciplines contributing to the care of our patients and families.
The UHN Department of Psychiatry has recently completed a strategic plan and renamed itself the UHN Centre for Mental Health. We chose this name to reflect the diverse scope of programs that we offer and to be more inclusive given our strong interdisciplinary teams. We undertook a robust strategic planning process that included interviews with internal and external stakeholders, a survey of all staff members, staff focus groups and a retreat. Our new vision is “Revolutionizing Care of Mind and Body” with a focus on both enhancing mental health care for those with major medical and surgical comorbidities and enhancing physical health care for those with primary mental health disorders. Our mission is “Transforming complex mental health and addictions care through innovation, integration and excellence in practice, research and education.” We have chosen four strategic directions: 1. Transforming Mental Health Care for Medically Complex Patients - including the frail elderly and individuals with neurodegenerative disease; as well as physical health care for individuals with severe mental illness. We will advance and invest in critical services where UHN’s Centre for Mental Health is an international leader and contribute mental health and addictions leadership to UHN corporate initiatives. 2. Integrating Care Through Innovation, Partnerships and System Leadership - by articulating a philosophy of care that maximizes opportunities to strengthen clinical alignment
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and enhances the patient experience; formalizing partnerships with CAMH and community partners to deliver seamless care across the continuum of need and meet the needs of primary care integration and Health Links; and developing a branding and philanthropy strategy to advance innovation. 3. Advancing Quality of Care Through Inspiring and Engaging Education – with a focus on developing interprofessional leaders to improve the quality of mental health and addictions care and service delivery; driving the quality of care through innovative professional development; reflecting patient and family lived experiences in all mental health and addictions teaching and learning programs. 4. Creating and Translating Knowledge Through Research for Global Impact – by fostering a culture of scholarship throughout the Centre; mentoring and supporting staff to advance research careers across the health professional team; and setting clear goals with quality metrics to stimulate innovation and discovery. A divisional structure is still being established with interim groupings, to advance the strategic plan, of Acute Care, Addictions, Eating Disorders, Medical Psychiatry including Psychosocial Oncology, Neuropsychiatry and Sleep, Mood and Seniors Mental Health. The UHN Centre for Mental Health supports the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatric strategic plan through activities aligning with all four major pillars.
Year in Review a. Education Education and educational scholarship are an integral part of UHN’s activities. In the past year we have provided educational experiences and training to 35 core undergraduate medical students and 54 elective students, 51 core and elective postgraduate psychiatry residents, 24 psychiatric fellows, 30 nursing students, 17 allied health
students, 4 psychology students, 28 observerships, 9 professionals undertaking advanced learning regarding eating disorders and 200 continuing professional development attendees. We have held four public education programs. Our nursing leadership has developed a highly regarded educational program for mental health nurses. We held a hospital wide conference on addictions. Centre members have led all three working groups for the UHN wide Delirium Innovation Project, an IPC approach to assessment, treatment and prevention of delirium that has been formally evaluated and demonstrated improvement in the assessment of delirium by front line staff.
b. Research UHN has extensive research and scholarly activities that are listed elsewhere in this Departmental Annual Report. Dr. Gary Rodin and PMH colleagues have launched the Global Institute of Psychosocial, Palliative & End-of-Life Care to much acclaim. Highlights of UHN research include leadership of CAN-BIND (Canadian Biomarker Integration Network In Depression) that has received grants from the Ontario Brain Institute, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, industry partners and the Toronto General and Toronto Western Foundation, rTMS and DBS work in depression and eating disorders, novel psychopharmacologic approaches to treatment resistant depression, psychotic depression in the elderly and the impact of psychopharmacology on fall risk in the elderly, eating disorders research ranging from neuromodulatory approaches through to family therapy, psychosocial aspects of palliative care, eapproaches to self-management of chronic medical conditions, outcomes following bariatric surgery, sleep research and novel knowledge translation research with artists exploring distress in heart transplant patients. Education scholarship remains an important focus of academic work. Nursing members of the Centre presented at the World Congress for Psychiatric Nurses.
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c. Clinical Programs We have had over 100,000 visits to our diverse ambulatory care programs as well as caring for 366 psychiatric inpatients and over 1500 medical and surgical inpatients through our inpatient consultation services. Our inpatient unit advanced their model of care with the integration of behavioural activation in the psychiatric intensive care unit.
d. Leadership UHN was delighted to welcome Dr. Peter Pisters as our new President and CEO. He is a champion regarding the importance of mental health in medical and surgical care and has a strong population health perspective that will enhance healthcare in the GTA. As part of our renewal process, we have begun changing over medical leadership to allow new voices and perspectives. We thank Dr. Alastair Flint for his longstanding leadership in geriatric
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psychiatry and his important role as Director of Psychiatric Research. We thank Dr. Blake Woodside for his significant contributions as Medical Director of the Eating Disorders Program. We welcome as new leaders, Dr. Donna Stewart as Head of Research and Academic Development, Dr. Marion Olmsted as the Loretta Anne Rogers Chair in Eating Disorders, Dr. Pat Colton as the Medical Head of the Eating Disorders Program and Dr. Ron Keren as the Medical Head of the Seniors Mental Health Program. We congratulate Dr. Donna Stewart on being appointed a Member of the Order of Canada and Dr. Roger McIntyre on being named as one of the “World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds” by Thomson Reuters.
Susan Abbey, MD, FRCPC Psychiatrist-in-Chief
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Women’s College Hospital Report produced by Dr. Valerie Taylor, Physician and Chief, The WCH Department of Psychiatry is working to address the key mandates set for it by the Ministry of Health while staying true to the core values and strategic direction of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. The department has three strategic programs: The Reproductive Life Stages (RLS) program which offers psychiatric care across the spectrum of a woman’s reproductive life, a Trauma Therapy (TTP) program focusing on the adult psychiatric sequellae of early life exposure to trauma and the Mental Health in Medicine (MHM) program, which addresses psychiatric sequellae of chronic medical and surgical conditions.
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Specialty programs exist within the core care areas; Child Psychiatry is led by Drs. Aliza Israel and Cintia Padoin while Addictions is led by Dr. Inbal Gafni. Collaborative care programming is run by Dr. Joanna Barlas.
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Our Day Treatment Program is unique in that it uses the ACT model (Acceptance Commitment Therapy).
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Education is embedded in all activities of the program. Dr. Inbal Gafni is the Undergraduate Education Coordinator and represents the department on matters pertaining to the training of medical students. Dr. Lori Wassermann is our Post-graduate Coordinator and is involved with coordinating activities related to resident trainees. Dr. Renu Gupta is the programs Fellowship Coordinator and is involved with educational activities for both international trainees and local physicians who are interested in getting specialty training in some aspect of women’s mental health.
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Dr. Catherine Classen is the academic leader of the Trauma Therapy Program and research director for the WMH Research Program.
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The Shirley Brown Research Chair in Women’s Mental Health is held currently by Dr. CindyLee Dennis.
The program is currently the largest it has ever been and now includes 15 full-time psychiatrists, a number of part-time staff and a large compliment of allied health professionals that all work together to create a dynamic clinical, educational and research milieu The Department is led by Physician-in-Chief, Dr. Valerie Taylor. Each program is led by staff that report to the Physician-in-chief. The head of the Reproductive Life Stages Program is Dr. Simone Vigod, Dr. Deanna Bruno is head of the Mental Health and Medicine/General Psychiatry Program and the Trauma Program is led by Anne Fourt.
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INNOVATIONS AND STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS
Psychiatry, Medical and other interested students from U of T, focused on understanding and treating psychological trauma. It is part of the offerings in the Health, Arts and Humanities Program at U of T Department of Psychiatry
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The educational offerings for psychiatry residents at WCH continue to grow under the leadership of Dr. Lori Wasserman (postgraduate director) and Dr. Inbal Gafni (Undergraduate director). We currently take residents in PGY 1, 2, 4 and 5 and have worked closely to create sought after educational experiences. In addition to offering many electives and senior selectives in RLS, trauma, collaborative care and research, WCH is also core site for collaborative care training. The program also continues to expand its senior selective offerings, now offering cross-cultural psychiatry, child psychiatry and parenting, an outpatient day program, and addictions. We have also developed a women’s mental health fellowship at Women’s College Hospital, creating a structured training program on the assessment and treatment of psychiatric symptoms linked with reproductive cycle transitions by applying research findings to clinical practice and teaching evidence-based interventions. To this end we have been invited to be the only Canadian partner in the newly formed Women’s Mental Health Fellowship Committee in the U.S to develop guidelines that represent the minimum components of all education in perinatal mental health and suggest ways of implementing these on a national level. Allied health clinical practica are offered within the Trauma Therapy Program for social work, psychology, nursing and occupational therapy. A weekly trauma seminar series was developed for learners in these disciplines and it is also open to interested staff within the WMHP as well as interested workers from community agencies. Art therapist Eva Marie Stern developed and implemented a new 4-part seminar series for
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The program also accepts residents and graduates students for research training.
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The psychotherapy offerings now include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (group and individual), Interpersonal Psychotherapy, Dynamic Psychotherapy, Narrative Based Psychotherapy, Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction, Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy, Art Therapy and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy. We have also created a new women’s mental health weekly seminar series that covers topics from critical analysis, treating bipolar disorder and addictions in pregnancy to IPT for post partum depression. This compliments our weekly trauma seminar series which is open to learners and staff and weekly grand rounds. We also have a number of undergraduate educational offerings, providing both didactic teaching and observerships to medical students.
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A significant amount of work has also been placed into the development of an online educational program, OPEN( Online Psychiatric Education Network) kickstarted by an Excellence Award Grant to Dr. Renu Gupta. This institute is being designed to offer on line training to health care practioners in the community around areas in which there is expertise at WCH, beginning with trauma and mental health and addictions during pregnancy.
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A trauma manual designed to educate health care providers about trauma and how to deliver health care that is sensitive to the psychological needs of trauma survivors was also produced and released at a well-attended book launch. (Treating the Trauma Survivor: An essential Guide to Trauma-Informed Care.
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Carrie Clark, Catherine C. Classen, Anne Fourt, Maithili Shetty published by Routledge Press, 2015). Dr. Classen also co-authored an online CME course to educate primary care physicians on Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and trauma-informed care. This course was launched through MDcme.ca in November, 2015 and by May 2015, over 400 had taken the course. •
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Dr. Classen chaired the second Trauma Talks Conference, which focused on cultural competence and trauma-informed care. The broad aim of the Trauma Talks conference is to educate health care providers about traumainformed care. The third Trauma Talks conference is in the planning stage. A transitional program (P-STEP) has been created in partnership with CAMH and the support of the hospital, to look at decreasing emergency department visits for individuals with mental illness. A highlight of this year was the third annual Shopper’s Drug Mart/Running Room/Women’s College Hospital Run for Women’s Mental Health. The funds raised from this event help support scholarly activities with the mental health program. Early efforts are underway to meet the needs of transitional age population through links with Ryerson and the First Episode Clinic at CAMH. A direct link to endocrinology for transitional youth with diabetes has also been forged.
Research Our main research themes include 1) women’s mental health, including epidemiological and clinical trials research related to pharmacotherapy, pregnancy and health services utilization as well as innovative care models of care related to perinatal mental disorders, trauma and gynecological cancer, and biological work looking at new treatment options; and 2) health systems research, including a focus on helping with transitions to the
community after discharge from psychiatric hospitalization, and integrating e-health solutions to improve access and effectiveness of care for individuals with mental health issues, with a particular focus on those with comorbid chronic health conditions. Work is also ongoing to evaluate our clinical programs as well, such as WRAP and the Trauma and the Body Group. We have collaborative research projects with community organizations such as a pilot study to examine the benefits of a drop-in group on trauma for homeless women. There has been significant growth in research at WCH and we have been fortunate to have received a number of peer-reviewed grants. Dr. Cindy-Lee Dennis, the holder of our Shirley Brown research chair has successfully funded a number of large research trials and Dr. Simone Vigod, who holds both the Shirley Brown Clinician-Scientist award and a research fellowship from OMHF, has received a number of peerreviewed grants. The research lead for the program, Dr. Catherine Classen, also received a number of large grants to examine online based tools to support patients with cancer, diabetes, and HIV infection and continues to do innovative work on trauma-informed care and psychotherapy for trauma survivors. She was recently asked to speak at the UN on this work, highlighting the importance of work occurring at WCH. The department has also begun research into the area of E-health and work looking at the role of technology in the treatment of patients with complex chronic illness lead by Dr. Jennifer Hensel, who is also a fellow at WHIV (Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care). Dr. Hensel’s work is funded in part by an excellence award from the department of psychiatry.
Recognition •
Dr. Classen was recently promoted to full professor, which takes effect July 2015. She received the 2015 Psychologist of the Year Award from the Traumatic Stress Section of
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the Canadian Psychological Association. She was also granted fellow status of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation in November. •
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Dr. Joanna Barlas was awarded the Teacher/Educator Award at the Women’s College Hospital 2014 Excellence in Education Award Ceremony. Andrea Sadler, OT was presented with the Interprofessional Education Award by the Women’s College Hospital Education Committee. Eva-Marie Stern won the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry Postgraduate Psychotherapy Award for Excellence in Supervision
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Renu Gupta: Department of Psychiatry Excellence Funds Recipient
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Jennifer Hensel: Department of Psychiatry Excellence Funds Recipient
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Alicja Fishell: Nomination for the Mary Seeman Award for clinical excellence in the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto
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Erin Carter: Nominated for resident teaching award
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Greer Slyfield –Cook: Taken on the Professional Advisor and Education Coordinator Roles for Social Work at Women’s College Hospital
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Dr. Jennifer Hensel was awarded the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry award for Best Presentation by a Fellow.
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Dr. Simone Vigod was awarded the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry John M. Cleghorn Newly Established Researcher Prize.
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Eva-Marie Stern received the Department of Psychiatry’s Psychotherapy Award for Excellence in Supervision.
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Pat Woods received a WCH Excellence in Ambulatory Practice Award
Valerie H. Taylor MD, PhD, FRCPC Psychiatrist-in-Chief
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Community Sites
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George Hull Centre Overview
Organization
The George Hull Centre for Children and Families is an accredited children’s mental health centre serving children and youth, from birth to age 18 and their families. The Centre has a formal affiliation agreement with the University of Toronto and offers placements for trainees at the Faculty of Social Work and the Faculty of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry. The Centre provides psychiatric assessment and treatment, comprehensive child and family-centered treatment and groups, as well as health promotion services for over 5,000 families annually. The Centre has a strong tradition of working in multidisciplinary teams and collaborating with community partners in education, health, child protection and other community based mental health agencies.
COMMUNITY CLINIC
In August 2014, The Centre moved from its head office location of 29 years to the new location at 81 The East mall. Thanks to a very successful capital campaign and generous donor support, extensive leasehold improvements were made possible. Centre staff and clients now enjoy a bright, modern and welcoming space. The Ontario Early Years Centre which offers services to children and families in the 0-6 age group moved into their new and updated space at 295 The West Mall in October 2014.
The outpatient Community Clinic offers clinical services to families with children and youth from birth through 18 who are experiencing significant emotional, behavioural, developmental and/or psychiatric difficulties. The multidisciplinary staff includes psychiatry, social work, psychology and child and youth workers, who believe in finding family strengths and promoting positive outcomes for children and adolescents through comprehensive assessment, consultation and treatment. The Community Clinic offers several specialized programs to address high need areas: 1. Student Priority Access Program (SPA): This initiative is a partnership between children’s mental health agencies and two Toronto school boards (TDSB, TCDSB) designed to support school-aged children and youth who have identified mental health concerns. The SPA social workers provide prioritized access to clinical services with a flexible, outreach approach. 2. Trauma Assessment and Treatment: Trauma assessments are completed with the use of standardized questionnaires and clinical interviews. Trauma Focused CBT (TF-CBT) is the main treatment modality. Clinicians at the GHC regularly attend a monthly peer support
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network meeting with a local expert in trauma treatment. 3. Attachment Focused Family Therapy (AFFT): In 2015, the outpatient and residential clinical staff completed an intensive training program with Dr Daniel Hughes, consisting of didactic sessions, live family therapy sessions, viewing videotaped sessions and case-based discussions. Dr Hughes developed his AFFT model to help treat children and youth in adopted or foster care who have experienced trauma, neglect and attachment disruptions. Half of the clinical staff have gone on to seek additional training and certification in the model and an evaluation project is currently underway.
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY TREATMENT SERVICES The Boys House and Libby’s Place are long term, adolescent residential treatment programs. The clients have a variety of presenting difficulties ranging from significant mental health disorders, family relational difficulties, child welfare involvement, substance use and academic difficulties. The School Program Day Treatment Program, in partnership with the Toronto District School Board and the Toronto Catholic District School Board, provide therapeutic and academic programming to adolescents who struggle in regular community schools. The partnership between the teacher and the child and youth workers is exemplary and essential. Clear Directions, in partnership with the Toronto District School Board, provides an adolescent substance abuse day program. The multidisciplinary team, working with a harm reduction philosophy, engages youth and families by acknowledging and building on strengths.
Year In Review The Toronto Central LIHN sponsored implementation of the ED Clinical Pathways
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project, aimed at increasing partnerships and communication between hospitals and local children community mental health agencies. Three pilot hospitals were identified, Toronto East General Hospital, Sick Kids and St. Joseph’s Health Centre as well as 7 community agencies: The George Hull Centre for Children and Families; Oolagen;Yorktown Child and Family Centre; The Hincks-Dellcrest Centre;Youthdale Treatment Centre; Griffin Centre and East Metro Youth Services. The George Hull Centre was successful in being awarded a new lead agency contract for Preschool Speech and Language Services, following a Citywide restructuring on November 1, 2014. Under this new lead agency contract, The George Hull Centre For Children and Families is the service provider for Toronto Preschool Speech and Language Services in geographic area one, which covers the western side of the City of Toronto, from Steeles Avenue to Lake Ontario. As part of the Prevention and Early Intervention continuum of services, the Centre’s Preschool Speech and Language Program provides a full range of services, including assessment, treatment, parent coaching, parent training, consultation and school transition support to families with children who have speech and language challenges, up to their entry into Junior Kindergarten.
Research and Evaluation Implementation of the Attachment Focused Family Therapy program includes an evaluation plan, consisting of a series of questionnaires administered to families pre-treatment and after 6 months. In addition, clinician rating scales will be administered periodically to ensure model fidelity.
Leadership Dr Greg Lodenquai is the current Psychiatrist-inChief and represents the Centre at the Division of Child and Youth Mental Health at the University of Toronto. Dr Lodenquai also chairs the Centre’s Education Committee which coordinates and
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organizes rounds during the academic year. Dr. Taylor Armstrong is the undergraduate medical student coordinator and the postgraduate site coordinator for the Centre. Dr Armstrong has been involved in the development and teaching of the Child Psychiatry Subspecialty educational curriculum. Dr Kulkarni has a special interest in the pre-school age group and consults through Inner City Health Associates. She is the current Director of Continuing Professional Development for the Division of Child & Youth Mental Health.
Reem Abdul Qadir, (MSW, RSW) is the Educational Coordinator and represents the Centre at the Faculty of Social Work. She runs the family therapy training program and helps supervise the MSW interns and psychiatry residents in family therapy, during their placements.
Dr. Greg Lodenquai
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Humber River Hospital It has been an exciting and busy time for the Department of Psychiatry at Humber River Hospital. A key focus in my first year as Chief has been working with the mental health team to prepare for the October 2015 move to our new hospital. This significant transition will see medical services currently spread across three legacy sites being consolidated in one modern facility, being built as North America’s first fully digital hospital. Our mental health program will occupy 120,000 square feet across the entire 5th floor of the south ambulatory clinic block and the north inpatient tower, plus a dedicated Emergency Psychiatry Unit in the ground floor Emergency Room. This physical and digital transition presents unique opportunities and challenges as we integrate electronic processes throughout our patient work flows. We have reviewed our existing programs to revise our models of care, and have planned strategically to enhance collaborations with the rest of medicine in the new site. The Mental Health program was the first in the hospital to pilot our new Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE) and Physician Electronic Documentation (PDoc) systems in February 2015, and our experience with this facilitated other services’ subsequent digital transitions. We are also looking for ways to leverage opportunities our new infrastructure provides into novel clinical care processes. For example, we are developing a Real Time Location System (RTLS) to unobtrusively keep high wander risk patients safely
on the unit by having elevators disabled and doors secured if a patient with a wander guard wrist band approaches. We concurrently need to develop appropriate clinical policies to deal with such new processes, for example suitable environmental restraint policies utilizing RTLS monitoring.
ORGANIZATION While we prepare for transition, the department has continued to provide services through a broad range of general and specialized programs, from child and adolescent through to adult and geriatric services. Our current Adult inpatient unit includes fifty inpatient beds, with four beds dedicated to medical withdrawal management. After we move we will run two separate adult inpatient units plus the acute care unit, and open eight additional beds over five years. The Child and Adolescent Program will continue to include six inpatient beds, in-hospital classroom teaching through our collaboration with the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), and extensive transition and outpatient services. Both the adult and child/adolescent inpatient units will have their own outdoor rooftop gardens at the new site. Our Emergency Psychiatry team will work in a dedicated Emergency Psychiatry Unit (EPU) in the new Emergency Room, with four secure patient rooms, two consultation rooms, a central nursing station and a small waiting area for family members or discharged patients. We will also be starting a new
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Urgent Care clinic at the new hospital with psychiatric, nursing and social work support to assist with ER diversion and rapid follow-up, and our Mobile Crisis Intervention Team (MCIT) has expanded its collaboration with Metro Toronto Police to work with four local divisions. Our Consultation-Liaison team of psychiatrists and two C-L nurses will continue to provide psychiatric services to medical and surgical inpatients, and integrated psychiatric services to specialized programs including dialysis/nephrology and bariatric surgery, with planned expansion into psycho-geriatrics and psycho-oncology programs. Our Outpatient program will continue to service a broad range of needs including mood and anxiety, psychosis, early intervention in psychosis, psychopharmacology, general psychiatric clinics, a regional clozapine clinic, and a day program, and Psychogeriatrics will continue to provide community outreach and enhanced support of hospital inpatients. The Addiction and Concurrent Disorders program will continue to provide a wide range of community-based services, inpatient medical withdrawal beds, and increased support for medical/surgical inpatients. In reviewing our models of care and projected future developments, the Department anticipates bringing on two additional psychiatrists in 2015 and likely one additional psychiatrist in 2016.
ACADEMICS The HRH Department of Psychiatry is affiliated with both the University of Toronto and Queen’s University. We are providing training and educational programs for a variety of professionals, including elective psychiatry residents, physician assistants, family medicine residents, nurses, social workers and psychologists. We continue to conduct an annual Clinical Day for hospital staff and community partners, as well as a separate Child/Adolescent Clinical Day plus a seminar series in conjunction the Griffin Centre and TDSB. We continue to seek opportunities to build research capabilities, particularly in
collaboration with other academic programs, and are accepting graduate students from the Institute of Medical Science. Being a community hospital with less robust infrastructure supporting academic activities than core AHSC sites can pose challenges for academic involvement; at the same time, the hospital’s community care focus provides opportunities for developing programmatic excellence with academic rigour. As befits a community academic hospital, we are building capacity for clinically relevant creative professional activities that positively impact patient care, while concurrently building our teaching and research capabilities and expertise. A program goal for the coming year is to have 80% of HRH department staff pursue academic appointments (compared to the current situation where the significant minority of staff hold academic appointments).
LEADERSHIP The Department of Psychiatry at HRH is one of the largest departments in a community general hospital in the GTA, and is providing leadership in exploring innovative approaches to service delivery as well as education and training. Numerous department members have been instrumental in collaborating with hospital leadership in developing appropriate policies and initiatives for our coming digital transition, including dealing with the mental health record in the broader context of the electronic health record, CPOE, the Patient Portal, electronic oncall scheduling, and other initiatives. Beyond our own hospital walls, members have been involved in coordinating approaches to inpatient psychiatry bed utilization across the LHIN, contributing to key leadership roles in the Child and Adolescent as well as Adult psychiatry training programs, and working with various organizations and associations to develop appropriate local, provincial and national mental health policies.
IN CONCLUSION
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It is an exciting time for the Department of Psychiatry at Humber River Hospital, and in coming years we anticipate being able to build on our strong foundations as we take stock of further opportunities following the opening of our new hospital.
Respectfully submitted, K. Sonu Gaind, MD, FRCP(C), FCPA Chief of Psychiatry / Medical Director of Mental Health, Humber River Hospital Associate Professor, University of Toronto President-Elect & Executive Committee, Canadian Psychiatric Association
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HincksDellcrest Centre OVERVIEW 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.
YEAR IN REVIEW
cutting edge care to children over the age of 7 who are receiving medication. A DNA analysis of their saliva allowed the psychiatrists to prescribe only those medications to which the children would optimally respond. •
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT): DBT is an evidence-based treatment, shown to be highly effective in helping emotionally and behaviourally dysregulated adults. HDC pioneered the adaptation of DBT to adolescents by training 10 staff through Behavioral Tech, LLC, partnering with CAMH’s Borderline Personality Disorder Clinic to provide weekly group skills training for city residential patients and a parallel group for parents, and running a study group for front line staff facilitated by the Family Connections program. All initiatives were evaluated.
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Youth Justice Mobile Clinical Team: In partnership with Turning Point Youth Services, HDC provided a multi-disciplinary team to provide consultation and treatment to mentally ill youth in a number of open custody/open detention programs across Toronto. As a result, the needs of mentally ill youth who are involved with the justice system were better met.
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Emergency Department Pathways: In response to the sharp increase in ED visits by youth with mental health challenges, the Toronto Central Local Health Integration Network (TCLHIN), sponsored a city-wide initiative aimed at
Created out of a series of town hall meetings and brainstorming sessions, 5 key areas were the foci of improved quality of service, teaching, and research: 1. Access, intake and triage; 2. Inter-disciplinary practice; 3. Pathways and transitions; 4. Outreach and education; 5. Integration of research, training, and evaluation. Some highlights of the outcomes are: •
Pharmacogenetic testing for medication efficacy: HDC partnered with CAMH’s Individualized Medicine: Pharmacogenetic Assessment and Clinical Treatment (IMPACT) study to provide
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implementing new care pathways in the transition from hospitals to the community. HDC partnered with the Hospital for Sick Children and Toronto East General Hospital to evaluate the trajectory which such children follow, and developed brief services which facilitated the delivery of communitybased care. •
In-Home Intensive Treatment Team: Evidence shows that most latency aged children are better served using a non-residential model of care, with a focus on support for families in the home and community. Accordingly, HDC transitioned a 9 bed long-term residential program into a mobile, in-home intensive service, which quadrupled our service capacity. Working with the Ministry of Children and Youth, Centralized Access to Residential Services (CARS), and the Child Development Institute (CDI), HDC has triaged patients from across Toronto to facilitate more coordinated access to this level of service.
Knowledge Translation and Dissemination: The Gail Appel Institute forged innovative partnerships with the Canadian Mental Health Association (Ontario),Young People’s Theatre, The Sashbear Foundation, and Right to Play, to deliver advanced training opportunities for professionals, as well as education programs for the general public. An elearning program on Brief Services was developed; Learning Through Play (an early child development program) was delivered to 5 new countries, bringing its total reach to 75,000 families in 42 countries in 35 languages; an expertled parent seminar series provided strategies for 500 parents to use with disturbed children; and a parent webinar series called “The ABC’s of Mental Health” (building on the already-existing resource of the same name for teachers) was rolled out, to help parents distinguish normal from abnormal behaviour, and to know when to ask for help.
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Dr. Nancy Cohen, with Bonnie Pape and Dr. Fataneh Farnia, have evaluated a mental health promotion training program for parents and caregivers of young children living in communities at risk for mental health problems, called Handle with Care. Based out of the Hincks-Dellcrest Centre, the project involved 430 participants in more than 16 communities across Canada in Prince Edward Island, Ontario, Manitoba and the Yukon. The program is currently being rolled out both within participating communities and in new provinces and territories with a grant from the Public Health Agency of Canada ($1,05 million). Dr. Farnia and Dr. Cohen in collaboration with Trent University and OISE/University of Toronto are developing a new test of higher order language. Dr. Cohen and Dr. Farnia are also involved in international studies of the infantparent program, Learning Through Play. The current work is being done in Ethiopia and in Pakistan in collaboration with Dr. Nusrat Husain (University of Manchester) and with Dr. Phil Tanner (Christian Children’s Fund of Canada) and will expand to additional countries in the developing world in the coming year. Dr. Cohen and Dr. Farnia also made poster presentations at the 2014 meeting of the World Association of Infant Mental Health and, along with students, at the 2015 meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development. 2014-2015 was an exciting year, in which quality improvement was at the fore, and hope and optimism about the possibilities for better treatment, training, and research were realized.
Dr. Marshall Korenblum, F.R.C.P.(C), Dip. Child Psych. Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Hincks-Dellcrest Centre for Children and Families Associate Professor, Dep’t. of Psychiatry, University of Toronto
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North York General Hospital Overview North York General Hospital is a vibrant community academic hospital partially affiliated with the University of Toronto, and home to the regional Genetics Program. With its collegial and innovative culture it is one of Canada’s most sought after training sites for family medicine resident for over 40 years. In addition to psychiatry residents it provides rotations for residents in emergency medicine, paediatrics, surgery, radiology, and obstetrics and gynaecology. A newly renovated resident lounge, on call rooms, academic centre, weekly grand rounds, library services connected to the University of Toronto, and subway access have benefited trainees. In 2014 the hospital established Canada’s First Research Chair in Family Medicine, the Gordon Cheesbrough Chair led by Dr. Sullivan and also appointed to the role of Director of the University of Toronto Practice Based Research Network (UTOPIAN), a network of the 14 University of Toronto primary care sites working together to improve patient care. The department is led by the Chief of Psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Ungar. The Psychiatry department is a busy well recognized provider of high quality mental health care and schedule 1 hospital program with a total of 50 inpatient beds (child and adolescent, adult, and psychogeriatric and Psychiatric Intensive Care Area).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, psychiatrists and peer support workers. The program includes; emergency services, and MCIT (mobile crisis intervention team), inpatient, partial hospitalization, psychosomatic consultation liaison general hospital service, subspecialty psychooncology service, ambulatory care and outreach, telemedicine, ACTT (Assertive Community Treatment Team), adult and adolescent eating disorders outpatient and day programs, 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. The 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, shared collaborative mental health program and FHT. The Mental Health Program provides over 70,000 outpatient visits annually. The department provides an urgent care clinic available since 2010 in collaboration with NYGH’s family physicians to run an innovative reversed shared care medical care clinic offering integrated care to mental health patients who would not otherwise have access to family doctors.
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The inpatient unit, including PICA intensive care area, provides acute stabilization, crisis management and short-term treatment through individual, family and group modalities. Each unit works according to an interdisciplinary collaborative team approach, with links to aftercare. 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 numerous partnered community agencies. The Child and Adolescent Mental Health Team provide care to all ages through family therapy, individual counselling, group therapy and psychiatric/psychological assessments, supporting and working with NYGH which is Ontario’s second busiest obstetrics centre, and the NYGH paediatrics program. The hospital serves children from infancy onwards 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.
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successful academic micro-grants project is enabling projects and research in areas such as psycho-genetics, cultural psychiatry, sports psychiatry, spirituality in psychiatry, collaborative shared mental health care, and anti-stigma knowledge translation. Psychiatrist Dr. Alan Fung has been appointed Chair of the NYGH Research Ethics Board, and for 2014-2015 there is renewed leadership in postgraduate site director and psychotherapy training site director roles in training future psychiatrist, family physicians and multidisciplinary mental health providers. Ongoing initiatives for 2014 include renovations in the Emergency Department including an enhanced mental health emergency assessment area, and clinical services planning and relocation of ambulatory services. Innovations and Major Accomplishments •
“Micro-grants can stimulate academic growth in community Hospitals” – Academic Medicine: Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, February 2012 Ungar T, Marcus M
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In the above article Dr. Ungar reported on the benefits and success of using micro-grants, originally pioneered in the world of business and third world countries economical development, to facilitate academic development in community teaching hospitals. To date the NYGH’s Department of Psychiatry has been given funding for two micro-grant projects totalling $36,000.00 which had yielded 9 peer-viewed articles, 3 non-peer reviewed articles, 9 peer-reviewed presentations and 2 non-peer reviewed presentations.
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National contributions to anti-stigma activity in collaboration with Opening Minds group of the Mental Health Commission of Canada including 3 publication sand development of a national anti-stigma training module for physicians and other health care providers not being
Geriatric Psychiatry includes a 10 bed inpatient unit, inpatient consultation service, outpatient clinics, memory clinic, community outreach, and nursing home outreach services. A multidisciplinary team and highly collaborative relationship and partnership with Geriatric Medicine provide care to patients through the NYGH Senior’s Health Centre. The GMHOT geriatric mental health outreach team provides outreach care to nursing homes in the region. 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 innovation and research activity. Vibrant weekly continuing education Grand Rounds are well attended and broadcast throughout Ontario via the OTN network. The
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published in the Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health & Healthcare Management Forum, Canadian College of Health Leaders, October 29th, 2013.
expanded to a nursing training module and to a mental health and justice training module for lawyers and judges. (see below) •
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Combating Stigma for Physicians and Other Health Professionals – An interactive online module to educate family physicians and specialists in the recognition of stigma related to mental illness. The module is designed to provide participants with an opportunity to recognize attitudes and behaviours that could potentially lead to stigma as well as provide an example of practical clinical approach to helping doctors and patients overcome stigma. Reversed Shared Care Clinic - North York General Hospital developed and piloted a new service that built upon the benefits of collaborative and shared care by locating a primary physical healthcare clinic within the Mental Health Department at North York General Hospital’s Branson Site. Recently
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International contributions and pioneer scholarship in sports psychiatry. Dr. Saul Marks
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Achievement in psychiatry and mental health continuing education annual conference – Dr. Alan Fung – Toronto Mental Health and Spiritual Care Symposium – May 8th, 2014 Hart House, University of Toronto http:..www.nygh.on.ca/mhscsymposium
Thomas Ungar MD, M.Ed, CCFP, FCFP, FRCPC, DABPN Chief of Psychiatry and Medical Director Mental Health Program Chair of Medical Advisory Committee North York General Hospital
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Ontario Shores Overview Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences (Ontario Shores) is a public teaching hospital providing a range of specialized assessment and treatment services to those living with complex and serious mental illness. Exemplary patient care is delivered through safe and evidence-based approaches. Successful outcomes are achieved using best clinical practices and the latest advances in research. Patients benefit from a recovery-oriented environment of care built on compassion, inspiration and hope. The Organization shares its expertise, knowledge and experiences, through research, education and advocacy initiatives and provides leadership to healthcare providers, community partners, policy makers and social sectors to strengthen and advance the mental health care system. Ontario Shores embraces the opportunity to raise awareness of mental illness, educate healthcare practitioners and train the next generation of mental health care specialists. As advocates, Ontario Shores champions and supports the efforts of patients, professionals and policy makers to ensure individuals with mental illness have access to care and the opportunity to fully participate in society. This past year, HIMSS Analytics announced that Ontario Shores had received a Stage 7 Award. The award represents attainment of the highest level on the EMRAM scale.
Ontario Shores is the first hospital in Canada to receive a Stage 7 Award, and the first Stage 7 behavioural health facility ever anywhere in the world! During the second quarter of 2014, only 3.2 percent of the more than 5,400 U.S. hospitals in the HIMSS Analytics® Database received the Stage 7 Award. In Canada, only 0.6% had achieved even a level 6 of EMR integration! “Achieving Stage 7 reflects the high standard of quality at Ontario Shores and demonstrates how we are advancing care for individuals living with mental illness,” said Karim Mamdani, president and CEO at Ontario Shores. “Our electronic health record system improves the delivery and quality of care that we provide and standardizes clinical documentation in an environment which is efficient, secure and collaborative.” Mamdani added. Hospitals who have reached Stage 7 are recognized for having achieved all the steps necessary towards a paperless environment. They have a very real competitive, academic and quality advantage, as they support the true sharing, information exchange and immediate delivery of patient data to improve process performance, quality of care and patient safety. Stage 7 Designees can: •
Share patient clinical information via electronic transaction with all entities within the entire
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health information exchange network •
Support the true sharing, widespread and comprehensive use of health and wellness information by consumers and hospitals
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Use data warehousing and mining techniques to capture and analyze care data to perfect, advance and institute organization-wide operational, research, academic, financial and quality improvements.
When big data is synthesized and analyzed—and the associations, patterns and trends within revealed—healthcare providers and other stakeholders in the healthcare delivery system can develop more thorough and insightful diagnoses and treatments, resulting, we expect, in higher quality care at lower costs and in better outcomes overall. The potential for big data analytics in healthcare to lead to better outcomes exists across many scenarios, for example: by analyzing patient characteristics and the cost and outcomes of care to identify the most clinically and cost effective treatments and offer analysis and tools, thereby influencing provider behaviour; applying advanced analytics to patient profiles (e.g., segmentation and predictive modelling) to proactively identify individuals who would benefit from preventative care or life-style changes; broad scale disease profiling to identify predictive events and support prevention initiatives; and collecting and publishing data on medical procedures, thus assisting patients in determining the care protocols or regimens that offer the best value.
Department Overview The centerpiece of our academic plan is our community affiliation with the University of Toronto; the current iteration is dated June, 2013. We joined Peters-Boyd Academy in 2013, and now have University of Toronto medical students doing core rotations here. This year, Ontario Shores hosted the first Dual Diagnosis resident rotation in the U of T system. We also have approximately 48 (7 new) other affiliation agreements with post-secondary institutions,
serving our academic work in various disciplines, including medicine, psychology, social work, rehabilitation therapy, dental hygeine, dentistry, therapeutic recreation, pharmacy, and other disciplines. We host 450 students and medical learners yearly who are provided workspace in a new interprofessional learning centre, an academic space that support the education arm of our mission, co-locating students of various disciplines in an attractive new environment. We have also implemented a suite of faculty development opportunities in collaboration with University of Toronto’s Centre for Faculty Development. We have Royal College subspecialist physicians in each of the three newly created disciplines, including child and adolescent psychiatry (1), geriatric psychiatry (3), and forensic psychiatry (7).
Clinical Programs Ontario Shores provides a range of highly specialized clinical programs, including inpatient and outpatient geriatric psychiatry, forensic psychiatry, and adolescent psychiatry, along with general psychiatry. Clinical highlights include: •
The only dedicated neuropsychiatry unit in the Central East LHIN region
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The only unit dedicated to management of the behavioral and psychological symptoms of Dementia in the region (Geriatric Dementia Unit)
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We are now a training site for physician assistants, and we now employ two physician assistants working exclusively in mental health care
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We have opened a Prompt Care clinic, which uses a multi-disciplinary team to generate high volume urgent consults on short turnaround times
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We have opened manualized PTSD and BPD clinics, excellent settings for learners using
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Cognitive Processing and Dialectical Behavioural Therapies respectively. •
We have opened up an Adolescent Inpatient Eating Disorders Service , the only one of its kind in Ontario
We have opened a Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP), a short term day treatment program for individuals with a serious and persistent mental illness as an alternative to inpatient admission. This program also serves as a stepdown service for patients transitioning from inpatient care to community living.
Governance and Leadership Our University of Toronto affiliation agreement is signed by our President and CEO and has been approved by our Board of Directors. The complete academic portfolio is headed by a triumvirate that includes Dr. Barbara Mildon (Vice-President of Practice, Research, Human Resources and Chief Nurse Executive). Dr. Ian Dawe (Physician-inChief), and Dr. Phil Klassen (Vice-President, Medical Affairs). Dr. Hoa Pham is our Lead, Undergraduate Education, and Dr. Tim Gofine is our Lead, Postgraduate Education. We have an academic department that is comprised of, amongst others, a Director, Leader, Education and Student Affairs, Evaluation Researcher, and Leader, Research Services.
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Direction #2: Leverage Teaching and Learning Opportunities Direction #3: Extend Impact through Leadership, Creative Professional Activity and Engagement Direction #4: Enabling the Academic Mandate Our commitments to interprofessional care as an organization are key success factors of our new academic plan. The implementation of applied research in clinical practice requires the expertise, collaboration and dedication of all health disciplines coming together with a shared goal to enhance care for patients. Our psychiatrists, nurses, therapeutic recreationists, occupational therapists, psychologists, child and youth counsellors and many others will be translating the knowledge we gain through research and applying it to their clinical practices.
Key Academic Accomplishments include: • Creation of a second 5-year academic plan (2012-2017) that is embedded within the overarching organizational Strategic Plan. •
The establishment of the Research and Academics Office in 2013-14 and the installation of leadership and strategic support services personnel to build Ontario Shores’ research capacity.
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Development of roles in Education, increased academic affiliates and the expansion of medical learning which includes Community Affiliate status with University of Toronto in 2009 and the addition of Peters-Boyd academy in 2013.
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Creation of an Academic Council to oversee academic plan execution and identify opportunities to advance Ontario Shores’ research and education portfolio.
Academic Plan Overview Ontario Shores launched its second five-year Academic Plan entitled Advancing a Culture of Innovation and Discovery in 2012. The plan builds on the momentum from the first academic plan to further the goal of becoming a dynamic academic and research environment. Direction #1: Solidify Research Enterprise through Focused Initiatives
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Funding and recruiting the Ontario Shores Research Chair in Community Management of Dementia in 2013, one of three planned academic chair positions.
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Awarding of first peer-reviewed research grant in 2014.
An academic scorecard was developed in 2013 to monitor indicators attainment of strategic and academic plan goals (see below). The outputs for the current year, as summarized below, speak to the early success of Ontario Shores’ academic endeavors: 362 field placement students 96 medical learners 27 publications 29 research grant applications
Sincerely,
Dr. Ian Dawe Physician-in-Chief, Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto Physician Lead, Mental Health & Addictions, CE LHIN
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St. Joseph’s Health Centre Department Overview Hospital Overview St. Joseph’s Health Centre is a 382-bed accredited Catholic community teaching hospital affiliated with the University of Toronto, serving half a million people living in Toronto’s west end communities. St. Joe’s vision is to be Canada’s Best Community Teaching Hospital. Students from a wide variety of health care professions choose St. Joe’s for the unique learning opportunities. Our staff endeavors to support and encourage students as they learn how to deliver the best care to meet the needs of our patients, their families and the communities that we serve.
book patient’s for consultation in real-time and reduce wait time for follow-up. In addition, our ambulatory services include a concurrent disorder service, and a geriatric psychiatry service. Addiction services include community residential withdrawal management, emergency addiction crisis workers, addiction medicine consultation-liaison service, addiction medicine physicians, the Toronto Centre for Substance Use in Pregnancy and an extensive harm reduction program. The Mental Health and Addiction Program is organized into 4 services. Our services have been organized based on optimal integration of clinical services around patient needs and to optimize continuity of care for the community that we serve.
Mental Health and Addiction Program Overview
The 4 services are as follows:
The 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.
1. ADDICTION SERVICES
The department has a 35 bed 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 (for a total of 47 beds) and an adult day hospital. Ambulatory services are organized into a unique open access system which enables the emergency department, inpatient units and consultation liaison service to electronically
2. ADULT AFTERCARE AND COMMUNITY SERVICES 3. ADULT PSYCHIATRY ACUTE CARE 4. CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY SERVICE
Organization - Highlights, Events and Achievements 14/15 We have finalized a new detailed Program Plan to guide Operations for the next 5 years summarized by the following Goal:
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“St. Joseph’s Mental Health and Addictions Program will focus on meeting the needs of its population today, as well as establishing a strong foundation to change the trajectory of patient and caregiver health outcomes for the future, particularly for children, adolescents and young adults. As such, the Mental Health and Addictions Program will optimize opportunities for secondary prevention through targeted services and partnerships to improve patient/caregiver experiences, easy access, and benefits from specialized, interdisciplinary services close to home.” This year a strengthened focus on fundraising led to several successful events to help renovate our Mental Health Short Stay Unit (MHESU) including; Denim & Diamonds, St. Joe’s Plate, and “Here. This Is What I Feel” - an art exhibit focused on architectural design and the creation of healing mental health spaces. We successfully recruited 3 full-time staff psychiatrists, Dr. Mariam Abdurrahman, Dr. Kate Strasburg and Dr. Matthew Knox in order to grow our Consultation-Liaison and Perinatal Mental Health services.
specialized examiner training regarding STACER examinations and will be offering teaching sessions on STACER preparation open to all residents in and outside of St. Joe’s.
Research •
This year allowed Dr. Andrew Howlett to collaborate with McGill University on their anticipated Movember fundraiser, funded by Healthydads.ca Project Phases 1 and 2. Dr. Howlett has also begun his research into Father’s Mental Health (www.fathersmentalhealth.com ) by screening expectant fathers for depression and alcohol use, a study in partnership with Mount Sinai Hospital.
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A new Family Navigator Program has produced exciting research results regarding reduced emergency readmission rates for patients discharged from our adult inpatient units.
Clinical Programs •
The crisis area has been rebranded as the Mental Health Emergency Services Unit (MHESU) with accompanying changes in the model of care incorporating mental health nurses and psychiatric assistants within the unit.
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Adult Aftercare and Community Services has worked with Dr. Colman Nefsky to provide on-site consultations in geriatric psychiatry at our 3 community health centre partners; LAMP, Four Villages and Stonegate.
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Dr. Michelle Marshall has been appointed as Physician Lead for Collaborative Care in the Child, Adolescent and Family Mental Health service, a new initiative resulting from the program plan.
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Dr. Wendy Moore has been appointed as a Complex Care psychiatrist working collaboratively and across both our community partners and the hospital.
Year in Review Education •
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At St. Joseph’s Health Centre, we continue to place strong emphasis on developing and expanding our educational program for Psychiatry and Family Medicine residents. We added monthly Shared Care seminars which provide an opportunity for our Psychiatry and Family Medicine residents to collaborate and practice a Shared Care model. We have completed preparation to welcome a new Chronic Care Rotation with Dr.Virgina Duff and the West End ACT Team for incoming PGY-4 residents starting the 2015-2016 academic year. Dr. Erin Carter is now part of a select group of department staff who has received additional
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The past year has seen the development of several inpatient groups through community collaborations. Dr. Kasra Khorasani, who specializes in group therapy, has implemented new tri-weekly patient-centred groups on the in-patient unit. We also developed a patientcentred Psychopharmacology Education Group for the adult in-patient unit.
Leadership •
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Dr. Justin Delwo was appointed as the inaugural Service Head of the Adult Psychiatry Acute Care Service. Dr. Lori Weisberg continues to develop perinatal mental health services and will be joined in 2015 by Dr. Kate Strasburg.
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We welcomed Ms. Bonnie Hills as the new ACT Team coordinator.
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Dr. Eric Solway, Addiction Medicine Physician has joined our MHAP leadership team.
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Dr. Erin Carter now sits on the departments Resident Education Subcommittee & the Collaborative Care Steering Committee. She is also involved with the Resident Mentorship Program.
Jose Silveira, MD, FRCPC, Dip ABAM Psychiatrist-in-Chief Medical Director Mental Health and Addictions Program St. Joseph’s Health Centre
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Surrey Place Centre Overview
Year in Review
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.
Education
Programs and Services SPC www.surreyplace.on.ca offers interdisciplinary assessment, diagnostic and treatment services to children and adults with ID, ASD and visual impairments. Programs and services, organized by age group (Infancy & Early Childhood, Children & Youth and Adults) are available to persons with ID, their families and caregivers. In addition, extensive education and consultation services are offered to community agencies. Apart from specialized clinical and mental health consultation to adults in remote northern Ontario communities via video conferencing, services are offered to those living in the Toronto area. Details of these services and the integration of the medical subspecialties present at SPC (psychiatry, neurology, developmental pediatrics and family medicine) and medical training, are outlined in the Annual Report for 2013-2014 available at (Editor please make a link to last year’s report)
We continue to offer core training, electives and selectives in ID to medical clerks, residents and fellows in psychiatry, developmental pediatrics and family medicine, MSc students in Genetic Counselling and allied health care trainees. Working with ID Faculty in The Dual Diagnosis Program, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), senior residents and SPC staff, mandatory core curriculum teaching in ID psychiatry, now well established, is offered to psychiatry residents during their first, second and third years of residency. Evidence-based ‘Tools’, many accessible online, to support this teaching and clinical practice, have been developed and assembled by the SPC Psychiatry education team. The Transition to Residency teaching module was offered for the second successive year to over 200 medical clerks (leads: Drs Loh and Isaacs).
Research The Toronto Autism Treatment Network (a partnership between SPC, SickKids and Holland Bloorview McMillan Hospitals) (SPC lead: Dr Loh) is in the first year of its new 3 year cycle (20152018). The main research focus is to understand the needs of children with ASD 3-4 years after their initial diagnosis and entry into the ATN registry.
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Another area of focus is quality improvement projects in the area of underserviced populations, atypical antipsychotic safety monitoring, family involvement, and the co-ordination of services. The Developmental Disability Primary Care Initiative (DDPCI – Director Dr Sullivan, SPC) originally funded for 5 years in 2005 and then extended for a further five years, was approved for Program status and sustainable funding. Other activities of the DDPCI have included completion of further tools to assist primary care providers in their care of their patients who have intellectual disability. The Autism Spectrum Disorder Health Watch Table (ASD HWT) was completed and launched at the Ontario Working Group Conference on Autism in Toronto in October 2014 and at the first National Autism Leadership Summit in Ottawa in March 2015. This is a comprehensive tool designed to assist primary care providers (and general psychiatrists) in the physical and mental health care of their patients with autism across the life span and of all abilities. It has embraced participation from across Canada and international peer review. The ASD HWT is also available at the ATN https://www.autismspeaks.org/blog/2015/01/27/ your-atnwork-toronto-health-watch-table-autism Other activities of the DDPCI have included development of a Family Medicine Curriculum Resource (available at http://www.surreyplace.on.ca/primary-care bottom of page), based on the Primary Care Guidelines. The Curriculum integrates clinical competencies with case-based modules in a faculty handbook to assist teachers of these modules. It was developed by members of the DDPCI Curriculum Working Group led by Drs. Elizabeth Grier and Ian Casson, Queen’s University, Kingston. Medical staff continues involvement in several clinical research activities through the ATN and DDPCI.
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New Clinical Programs i:
Monthly clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) attended by SPC clinicians for children 0-3 years old with Down syndrome living in the catchment area of SickKids. The focus is on early care and clinical service co-ordination. As the clinic gets established, collaboration and partnership with other agencies is anticipated.
ii: SPC has been identified by the community as the potential “Special Needs Co-ordinating Agency” lead for the Toronto Region to coordinate access to individualized and coordinated service planning. If the Toronto proposal is approved SPC will co-ordinate services as well as partner with Community Living Toronto, Family Services Toronto and Community Care Access, to provide coordinated service planning across Toronto. iii: It is anticipated SPC will contributed to a broader range of care and resources to children and adults with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome through partnership with Toronto General Hospital Dalglish Family Hearts and Minds Clinic run by Dr. Anne Bassett and Dr. Alan Fung. This clinic, through its partnership with SickKids, offers services across the age range for individuals with this condition and their families.
Leadership Psychiatry faculty has provided leadership in the development of the ASD HWT (above) and during the year has provided consulting and teaching around this tool and other aspects of autism (e.g., Autism Through a Different Lens) in Toronto (seminars and videoconferencing through Ontario Health Network) and in Nova Scotia. Psychiatry faculty has participated in the Developmental Disabilities online course, a joint endeavor between the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and SPC. This online module is based on the DDPCI Primary Care Guidelines for
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Adults with Developmental Disabilities. Staff changes This year SPC welcomed a new psychiatrist to the medical team - Dr Anupam Thakur.
Elspeth Bradley, BSc, MB BS, PhD, FRCPC, FRCPsych Psychiatrist-in-Chief on behalf of the team at SPC 11 July 2015
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Toronto East General Hospital Dr. M Rosenbluth, Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Medical Director The Toronto East General Hospital (TEGH) Department of Psychiatry/ Mental Health Service was founded 30 years ago with a mission “to work in partnership to provide quality mental health services which respond to our clients and community.” We value excellence, respectful relationships, personal growth, the unique contributions of all, and creativity. Our goal is to optimize patient outcomes while working to increase the capacity of community clinicians to treat psychiatric patients. We strive to serve the community of East York and the TEGH catchment area by providing a variety of Psychiatric and Mental Health services through a mix of hospital inpatient, outpatient, community based programs and through partnerships with community agencies. The Department of Psychiatry/ Mental Health Program is aligned with the TEGH commitment to providing equitable access to care for some of Toronto’s most marginalized patient populations. Our primary service area—stretching from Eglinton Avenue in the north, south to Lake Ontario and from Bayview Avenue in the west to Midland Avenue in the east— constitutes a richly multicultural community, including new immigrants and refugees. This rapidly growing community encompasses some
of the city’s most socially and economically challenged neighbourhoods. A study (2012) by the Centre for Research on Inner City Health and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) found that TEGH had the highest proportion of low income patients versus high income patients by a factor of 3.5 compared to the Toronto central LHIN average. This differential was more pronounced in particular service areas such as obstetrics, medicine and mental health. The Department and Service continue to be one of the busiest in the city with a large number of patients being seen in the emergency, outpatient, 40-bed adult inpatient program, through our extensive Aftercare program and in our community programs. We average 3,500 to 4000 outpatient visits per month. There is an important focus on the TEGH Emergency Department. We typically average >200 adult emergency crisis visits in the ED per month. The data gathered by the Emergency Alliance has demonstrated that we have one of the busiest emergency departments in the city for psychiatric patients. The Mental Health Service has an experienced and committed interdisciplinary staff team. The team is comprised of physicians, psychiatrists, nurses, occupational therapists, psychometrists, social workers, mental health workers, case managers, and addiction workers.
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Services Community Program
Communnity Outreach Services; Withdrawal Management Service
Withdrawal Management Consultation 2 retirement residences 2 nursing homes Community Outreach • REACH • ACT • Group Homes (2) • Community and Schoo Outreach • Family Support
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Residential Withdrawal Management
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A non-medical, crisis intervention, brief councelling, referral, resource and education program
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30 bed residential services providing physical care for the adult male in an acute state of intoxication or withdrawal from alcohol and other addictive substances.
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The Day Withdrawal management Program
Hospital Services
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Less intrusive method of managing withdrawal symptoms than is offered in the residential withdrawal management program by providing a full day of programming that consists of auricular acupuncture, a psycho-educational component, a living skills component and relaxation thereapy. The program focuses primarily on the late stages of acute withdrawal and the early stages of post acute withdrawal.
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The Aboriginal Day Program
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Provides culturally appropriate addiction services to Aboriginals in the Great Toront Area.
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Community Withdrawal Mangement Service
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A non intrusive approach that primarily helps clients who abuse alcohol and drugs to improve their quality of life regardless of what stage of change they happen to be in.
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In addition to expanding counseling services to addicts, family members of clients are also being assisted and counseled.
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Case Management
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Provides continued support to clients to follow, assist, and support clients.
ER Crisi over 4000 visits Adults Inpatient 1100-1200 pts C&A Inpatient 203 pts.
Outpatient Services 39, 122 Visits Urgent Care Anxiety Clinic Building Bridges Psychiatric Consultation Medication Clinic
Aftercare CATT Crisis Intervention Day Treatment Neuropsych Pre Vocational Therapy Psychogeriatric Metabolic Clinic
Community Partners Good Shepherd Canterbury Clinic Ecu Homes Toronto Police Woodgreen East Metro Youth Services Toronto Catholic District School Board Child Development Institue SETFHT We are relatively unique in having a full Withdrawal Management Services program consisting of several service arms.
TEGH was provided with HSIP funding from the TC LHIN to initiate a Mobile Crisis Intervention Team for TEGH in partnership with Divisions 54 and 55 of the Toronto Police Services. Two teams
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consisting of RN and Police constable work 10 hours a day 7 days a week to address calls related to situations with an emotionally disturbed person. The goal of the team is to provide early intervention and to minimize unnecessary visits to the emergency department. The teams have been fully operational since April 2013. The Department continues to focus on enhancing its Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service which was started in 2005. Our Child inpatient volumes have increased significantly, with stable or declining lengths of stay. This has prompted important changes in our processes to optimize efficiency without sacrificing quality of care. Our Child inpatient team has been an active participant in the Ideal Patient Experience process and has been able to streamline admission and care delivery processes, while including patients and families more actively in the process. A parenting group was started to support the parents of current and past inpatients, as well as parents of children and youth who have come through the emergency department and urgent care service. Links have been strengthened with the newly established youth mental health ‘walk-in clinics’ at East Metro Youth Services in Scarborough and Oolagen Community Services downtown. These walk-in clinics are now available between 20 to 30 hours a week and can serve as an alternative to the emergency department for many youth mental health crises. Our Child Building Bridges Day Treatment classroom has developed an increasing profile in the community. Our Child Outpatient Anxiety Clinic has worked collaboratively with the community-based Child Development Clinic to deliver an evidence-based parent group for inhibited preschoolers that has been demonstrated to reduce the incidence of anxiety disorders up to three years later.
Child and Adolescents; since 2015 6 Bed inpatient Unit •
2012/13; 223 admissions, ALOS 9 days, annual occupancy 82.7% (comparable to other GTA
125
sites and at desired targets, given summer slowdown) •
Seamless transition to step-down day hospital (4 spots)
•
Day program shared by inpatients and day hospital:
•
full-time Toronto Catholic District School Baoard teacher
•
Treatment groups including safety planning and discharge readiness, modified CBT and DBT, music, yoga, fitness, animal therapy.
•
Post-discharge phone calls to all discharged families to access service and follow up on discharge recommedations
•
Leading role in the emerging GTA-based Child and Adolescent Mental Health Inpatient Collaborative
•
Role on the steering committee of the Ontario Network of Child and Adolescent Inpatient Psychiatric Services (ONCAIPS), currently focusing on establishing benchmarks and developing provincial standards for inpatient care.
The Toronto East General Education Initiative (TEGEI) has been developed with a focus on the development and delivery of educational programming targeting professionals (community mental health workers, occupational therapists, nurses, social workers, psychiatrists and physicians) involved with the delivery of psychiatric care. Its goal is to highlight the Department and Service as a centre of excellence and contribute to TEGH’s leadership role in the community. TEGEI has contributed to teaching through its city, province wide and beyond tele-medicine lecture series hosted at the TEGH that has featured both local and international experts in the field. (Over 40 lectures have occurred since inception). This is part of a focus on CME. Several of our psychiatrists are well known both within the city, province and country for their presentations on
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psychiatric topics. A department member has chaired the section on affective disorder/personality disorder co-morbidities for the CANMAT Canadian national recommendations for treatment of these issues (2012). The TEGH Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health Service is one of the busiest department/services in the city. Our goal is to optimize patient outcomes while working to increase the capacity of community clinicians to treat those with psychiatric problems.
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Trillium Health Partners OVERVIEW
Organization
Trillium Health Partners (THP) is a Community Hospital affiliated with the University of Toronto. It is one of the largest Community Hospitals in Ontario. It is comprised of Credit Valley Hospital, Mississauga Hospital, and Queensway Health Centre. The Mental Health Program is one of the priority Programs within the 13 Programs of THP. Our Department is informed by the strategic goals of the hospital which include a focus on access, quality, and sustainability as well as by the four pillars of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. We aim to create an innovative interdisciplinary program which emphasizes partnering and collaborative approaches to care. We continue to partner with our colleagues in the Mississauga Halton LHIN as well as the Community Mental Health Agencies, Family Health Teams, the Department of Psychiatry University of Toronto, the MOHLTC, and our Ministry of Youth Services. We are an active teaching site and have welcomed the first group of nine clinical clerks, from the Mississauga Academy of Medicine, located at all three Sites. We have a teaching cadre of 22 psychiatrists, who are credentialed in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, actively involved in the teaching program. This year we have trained our first core resident with a block in geriatric psychiatry and child psychiatry.
Our Mental Health Program is organized into 5 areas: The Acute Adult Mental Health Pillar (Mental Health ER services, Urgent Care Services and Inpatient Units) and the Ambulatory Adult Mental Health Services under the direction of Dr Louis Peltz and Dr Maryam Afshar respectively. The Medical Psychiatry Pillar is directed by Dr Don Head; the Child and Adolescent Services by Dr Jonathan Beard; and the Seniors Mental Health Services by Dr Richard Shulman all of whom work with their mangers to lead the pillars. Our combined inpatient services include 79 beds for general adult mental health patients as well as specialized services directed to 10 seniors mental health beds at the MSite and a 4 bed Eating Disorders Unit at CVH. We have psychiatrists attending in the ER from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at both sites and a 72 hour urgent response service. We have a large ambulatory program across the lifespan with specialty clinics: Women’s Reproductive Mental Health Program; Addictions and Concurrent Disorders; Schizophrenia; Child and Adolescent Services; Outreach services for youth and seniors; ACTT teams; Case Management, and Housing Support.
Year in Review Clinical Programs This year has been an exciting period of opportunity and innovation. We have completed our first year of
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
the exciting, new initiative entitled the Medical Psychiatry Alliance which is a partnership with the University of Toronto, Trillium Health Partners, CAMH, The Hospital for Sick Children, a generous donor, and the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Together we have received funding of a 60 million dollar grant over 6 years which will support the building of a network of clinical care education and research in Medical Psychiatry. The vision is far reaching and transformative for the partners and their patients with medically unexplained symptoms, comorbid medical and psychiatric disorders and comorbid psychiatric and medical disorders. Our goal is to create a new and exciting integrated medical and mental health initiative with the partners and across the lifespan. This year we have developed an infrastructure for operations and governance for the MPA both centrally and at THP. We have developed a number of working groups within the THP MPA for MPA collaborative care design in seniors, adults and pediatric age groups. The teams are multidisciplinary and creating evidence based approaches to integrative collaborative med-psych care. We are working with our partners to develop a database, a web-site, a communication strategy and an innovative education program for medical psychiatry clinicians. Our opportunity to develop a Mental Health First Aid Program for Seniors Manual in partnership with the Mental Health Commission of Canada has been developed further to include an adaptation of this manual and curriculum for youth in high school. This has been a very new and successful initiative. We are in the process of completing this adaptation. This year we are developing our newly funded urgent care mental health program for youth. We have almost completed a new zone for our mental health patients who visit the ER at the M-Site. We have seen a rapid growth in volume of our mental health patients who seek service in the ER and the new space will add to improved access and quality of care for these patients. This year we have been successful in partnering with CAMH and several other centers in the ARTIC funding for
the DA Vinci project for the development of integrated care for patients with both depression and alcohol use disorders. Our MPA and seniors mental health program have also secured a grant from TVN to develop a geri-LOCUS frailty scale for our seniors patients with medical and psychiatric comorbidities. This year we will be consolidating our youth mental health programs in a single site at CVH. We also opened our RBC urgent care program for youth; a program funded for the next 8 years by RBC. Our ambulatory mental health programs have been reorganized to be harmonized amongst all three sites offering the same level of care to patients no matter what site they attend for treatment. Our partial hospitalization program is now in operation as well.
Education The mental health program at THP has a long tradition of providing education to allied health and mental health learners. The psychiatrists have worked closely together with our interdisciplinary staff to develop our teaching program for the University of Toronto medical clinical clerks. Our first class of 54 students graduated at MAM in June, 2015. We are delighted to welcome Dr. Ariel Shafro as the new Medical Education Lead for Mental Health Program at Trillium Health Partners. Dr. Shafro has been recognized as an excellent and committed teacher. We continue to develop our collaborative care models with the Family Health Teams as well as primary care physicians and pediatricians. We continue to provide interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary teaching programs for our medical students, family practice residents and learners across all services.
Research THP will be starting a new Research Direction in the next year within the MPA. The Department of Psychiatry has developed an interest in mental health service delivery and will be supporting initiatives in this area. We have started a program
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COMMUNITY SITES
evaluation process in each of our pillars as part of our quality assurance initiatives.
Leadership The THP psychiatry department has grown to 46 full and part time psychiatrists. We have 5 new leaders (Service Medical Directors) in each of the pillars as described above and continue to have medical leads in the several of the specialty services. Our leadership team is collaborative and committed to creating the best possible mental health experience for our patients and staff.
Summary It has been a pleasure to work with so many committed mental health staff at Trillium Health Partners. It is especially exciting to work with a Hospital Administration who continues to show their commitment to Mental Health Care.
Sincerely, Dr Rose Geist Chief and Medical Director Mental Health Program Trillium Health Partners Associate Professor of Psychiatry University of Toronto
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Faculty Listing
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty Listing Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Abadi, Babak
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Abbey, Susan E.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Abdool, Petal
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Abraham, Gebrehiwot (Gaby)
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Abrams, Karen M.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Addae, Gina A.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Adlaf, Edward
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Adler Nevo, Gili W.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Afshar, Maryam
Trillium Health Partners
Assistant Professor
Agarwal, Parul
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Lecturer
Agid, Ofer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Agrawal, Sacha
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Ahmad, Yusra
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Akman, Donna E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Albert, Mathieu
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Albuquerque, Joy
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Aleem, Nadia
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Alem, Atalay
Amanuel Hospital
Lecturer
Ali, Faizal
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Allain, Suzanne
Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital
Assistant Professor
Almagor, Doron
Private Practice
Lecturer
Alsuwaidan, Mohammad
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Ameis, Stephanie
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Andermann, Lisa
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Anderson, Nicole Dianne
Baycrest
Associate Professor
Andrade, Brendan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Andreazza, Ana
University of Toronto
Assistant Professor
Andrew, Melissa
Queen’s University
Assistant Professor
Antony, Martin M.
Ryerson University
Full Professor
Araya, Wolde Tensai
St. Paul’s Hospital, Addis Ababa University
Lecturer
Armstrong, Taylor C.
George Hull Centre
Lecturer
Arnold, Paul D.
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Askland, Kathleen
Waypoint Centre For Mental Health Care
Assistant Professor
Astell, Arlene
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Associate Professor
Atkinson, Leslie R.
Ryerson University
Associate Professor
Awad, A. George
Humber River Regional Hospital
Professor Emeritus
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133
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Bacchiochi, Jason
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Bagby, R. Michael
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Baici, Wayne C.V.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Baker, Brian
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Bakshi, Neely
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Balaban, Kayli S.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Balchand, Kamlesh K.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Balderson, Ken
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Ballon, Bruce
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Balneaves, Lynda
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Baluyut, Crystal A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Banoub, Tahany D.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Barakat, Sammy
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Barankin, Tatyana
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Barbaree, Howard E.
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Full Professor
Barbera, Joseph
Youthdale Child & Adolescent Sleep Centre
Lecturer
Barlas, Joanna
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Barr, Cathy
University Health Network
Full Professor
Barr, Mera
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Barsky, Stephen A.
The Scarborough Hospital
Lecturer
Bart, Catherine
Workplace Safety & Insurance Board
Lecturer
Bartha, Christina
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Baruch, Ruth
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Barwick, Carmelina S.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Barwick, Melanie A.
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Bassett, Anne S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Battigelli, Marino
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Beard, Jonathan D.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Beder, Michaela
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Beiser, Morton
Ryerson University
Full Professor
Beitchman, Joseph H.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Bell, Jennifer
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Bender, Ashley
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Benoit, Diane
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Berber, Mark
Markham Stouffville Hospital
Assistant Professor
Bergmans, Yvonne
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Bernstein, Lori J.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Berntson, Andrea
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Bettridge, Shannon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Bhalerao, Shree
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Bhide, Devayanee
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Bismil, Ramprasad
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Bismil, Supuneet
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Blackburn, Janice
Bersenas Jacobsen Chouest Thomson Blackburn LLP
Lecturer
Blackman, Adam
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Blanchard, Ray
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Blank, Diana
University Health Network
Lecturer
Bloom, Hy
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Bluestein, Marilyn
University Health Service
Lecturer
Blumberger, Daniel M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Boachie, Ahmed
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Bobrowski, Jake
Assistant Professor
Bodnar, Ana
Private Practice
Lecturer
Boileau, Isabelle
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Book, Howard E.
Private Practice
Associate Professor
Boritz, Tali
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Boulos, Carolyn
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Bourdeau, Danielle
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Boydell, Katherine Mary
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Bradbury, Cheryl C.L.B.
Toronto Rehab - Lyndhurst Centre
Assistant Professor
Bradley, Elspeth A.
Surrey Place Centre
Associate Professor
Brandes, Jack S.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Brandys, Clare
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Brar, Simuran K.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Braverman, Jennifer
University Health Network
Lecturer
Brook, Shelley C.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Brown, Cara
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Brown, Gregory M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Professor Emeritus
Brown, Nicola
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Brownlie, Elizabeth
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Bruno, Deanna M.E.
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Bryden, Pier
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Buckingham, Robert A.
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Buckley, Leslie L.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Burgoyne, Robert W.
University Health Network
Lecturer
Burnham, W. McIntyre
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Full Professor
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135
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Burra, Tara
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Byrne, Miriam R.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Cairney, John
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Cantor, James M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Cardish, Robert J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Carlier, Michelle
FACT Peel Clinic
Lecturer
Carlisle, Corine
Hospital for Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Carr, Melanie L.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Carter, Erin
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Carter, Jacqueline
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Carvalhal, Adriana
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Casola, Paul G.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Caspary, Arthur
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Cassin, Stephanie E.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Castel, Saulo
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Cavanagh, Patricia
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Chad, Lawrence L.
Toronto East General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Chagoya, Charlotte A.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Chagoya, Leopoldo
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Chaim, Gloria
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Chakravarty, Mallar
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Chamberlain, Clive G.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Chandler, Gregory
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Charach, Alice
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Charach, Ron
Private Practice
Lecturer
Charlton, Katharine
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Chatterjee, Sumeeta
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Chavez, Sofia
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Cheung, Amy
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Chisvin, Martin
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Chiu, Mary
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Choi, Monica
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Chopra, Kevin
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Chopra, Sabeena
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Chow, Eva W.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Chow, Wendy
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Christensen, Bruce
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
Associate Professor
Cirone, Sharon
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Clark, Carrie C.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Classen, Catherine
Women’s College Hospital
Associate Professor
Clinton, Jean
Hamilton Healthcare Science
Lecturer
Cochrane-Brink, Katherine A.
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Lecturer
Cohen, Carole
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Cohen, Nancy J.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Full Professor
Cohen, Sherry Tziporah
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Cohen, Steven N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Cohn, Tony
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Coleman, Elizabeth
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Colleton, Michael
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Collins, Evan J.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Collins, Peter I.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Colton, Patricia
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Conn, David Keith
Baycrest
Full Professor
Cooke, Robert G.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Coolbear, Jennifer L.
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Costigan, Shannon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Cote, Isabelle
Private Practice
Lecturer
Court, John P.M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Courtney, Darren
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Craigen, Gerard P.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Crawford, Allison
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Crawford, Barbara
Northeast Mental Health Centre
Lecturer
Crocker, Thomas C
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Crosbie, Jennifer
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Cunning, Sandra
Kinark Child and Family Services
Lecturer
Czukar, Gail
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
D’Agostino, Norma
University Health Network
Lecturer
Dalfen, Ariel
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Dang, Kien T.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Darani, Shaheen A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Darby, Padraig L.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Daskalakis, Zafiris Jeffrey
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Davies, Simon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Davis, Caroline A.
York University
Associate Professor
Dawe, Ian
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Associate Professor
De Freitas, Karen D.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
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137
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
de Jesus, Danilo
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
De Luca, Vincenzo
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
De Roche, Peter L.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
De Souza, Claire
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
De Souza, Minella F.
University Health Network
Lecturer
Dembo, Justine
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Denisoff, Eilenna
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Dennis, Cindy-Lee E.
Faculty of Nursing
Associate Professor
Desai, Devanshu D.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Desarkar, Pushpal
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Deshauer, Dorian
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Deutsch, James W.
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Assistant Professor
Devins, Gerald M.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Dewa, Carolyn S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Diaz, Pablo
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Dickey, Robert
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
DiGiacomo, Dan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Dimanno, Domenic
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Dixon, David J.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Doan, Richard
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Doidge, Norman R.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Dorenbaum, David
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Dorian, Barbara J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Downar, Jonathan
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Drandic, Marijana
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Driver, Kelly
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Duarte Giles, Marlene
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Dubo, Elyse D.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Dubord, Greg
Toronto Center for Cognitive Therapy
Assistant Professor
Duchen, Suzanne
Private Practice
Lecturer
Dudek, Malgorzata
Humber River Regional Hospital
Lecturer
Duff, Virginia A.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Dunbar, Christine
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Dundas, Susan
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Dunlap, Hester E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Durbin, Janet
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Eapen, Tamina
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Eayrs, Gertrude E. (Beth)
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Edelstein, Kim
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Eisen, Joel N.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Elliott, M. Esther
University Health Network
Lecturer
Elliott, Mary E.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Ellis, Janet
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Emelianova, Svetlana
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Enchin, Adam
Peterborough Regional Health Centre
Lecturer
Ennis, Jon D.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Epstein, Irvin
START CLINIC
Assistant Professor
Epstein, Trina
University Health Network
Lecturer
Erlich, Murray
Private Practice
Lecturer
Eryavec, Goran
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Esplen, Mary Jane
University Health Network
Full Professor
Evans, Kenneth R.
Ontario Cancer Biomarker Network
Lecturer
Everett, Barbara
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Fadel, Marc
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Farcnik, Karl D.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Farewell, John C.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Farid Araki, Keyghobad
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Farnia, Fataneh
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Assistant Professor
Farvolden, Peter
CBT Associates of Toronto
Assistant Professor
Farzan, Faranak
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Feder, Victor
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Fefergrad, Mark
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Feinstein, Anthony
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Fenta, Haile
The Ontario HIV Treatment Network
Lecturer
Ferguson, Anne
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Ferguson, Bruce
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Ferguson, Donna
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Ferguson, Ian D.
Providence Healthcare
Lecturer
Filipczuk, Mark J.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Fischer, Benedikt
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Fischer, Corinne E.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Fischler, Ilan
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Fish, Arthur
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Fishell, Alicja
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
Fitzgerald, Nicola
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Fitzgerald, Peter
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
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Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Fitzpatrick-Hanly, Margaret
Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis
Lecturer
Flak, Edred
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Fleming, Russell L.
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Lecturer
Fletcher, Paul J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Flett, Heather L.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Flint, Alastair J.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Fong, Harvey
Unison Health & Community Service
Lecturer
Fourt, Anne
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
Foussias, George
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Franche, Renee-Louise
Occupational Health & Safety Agency for Healthcare in BC Assistant Professor
Frantseva, Marina M.F.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Frayn, Douglas H.
Private Practice
Associate Professor
Freeland, Allison
Trillium Health Centre
Associate Professor
Freire, Marlinda
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Friedman, Jerry A.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Fung, Kenneth
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Fung, Wai Lun Alan
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Futerman, David H.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Gabel, Kevin
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Gafni, Inbal
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Gage (McCabe), Laura
Toronto East General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Gagliese, Lucia
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Gaind, Karandeep Sonu
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Gallagher, Damien
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Gallop, Ruth
Faculty of Nursing
Professor Emeritus
Gangbar, Randy
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Ganguli, Rohan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Garfinkel, Paul E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Geagea, Justin
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Geist, Rose G.
Trillium Health Partners; Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Gelber, Stephen G.
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
George, Tony P.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Gerber, Lionel
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Ghabbour, Nagi
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Ghaffar, Omar
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Giacobbe, Peter
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Gilbert, Barry
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Gillies, Laurie A.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Ginsberg, Leonard S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Glancy, Graham D.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Gofine, Timothy
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Gojer, Julian A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Goldbloom, David S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Goldhamer, Paul M.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Goldstein, Benjamin I.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Goldstein, Mara S.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Golombek, Harvey
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Golts, Marianna
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Gorman, Daniel
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Gorman, Howard
Private Practice
Lecturer
Gotlib, David A.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Gotowiec, Andrew P.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Assistant Professor
Grace, Sherry
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Grady, Cheryl
Baycrest
Full Professor
Graff-Guerrero, Ariel A.G.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Gratzer, David G.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Greaves, Lorraine
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Full Professor
Greben, Daniel H.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Green, Robin
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Grek, Adrian J.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Grewal, Seena
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Grief, Cindy
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
Grigoriadis, Sophie
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Grof, Paul
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Grujich, Nikola
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Guimond, Marie Claude
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Guimond, Tim
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Gupta, Malati
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Gupta, Renu
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Hackett, Andrew
Northeast Mental Health Centre
Associate Professor
Haggarty, Jack
St. Joseph’s Health Centre (THUNDER BAY)
Assistant Professor
Hahn, Margaret
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Hales, Sarah A.
University Health Network
Lecturer
Halman, Mark H.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Halpern, Janice
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Hanson, Mark D.
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
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Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Harris, Grant
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Associate Professor
Harrison, Ken J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Hart, Stacey
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Haskell, Lori
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Hastings, Tom J.
Halton Healthcare Services Corp
Lecturer
Hawa, Raed Jad
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Hawley, Lance
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Head, Don B.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Hendershot, Christian
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Henderson, Joanna
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Henderson, Julie
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Hensel, Jennifer
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
Herrmann, Nathan
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Hershkop, Susan
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Hershler, Abby
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Higgins, Darren S.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Hildebrand, Anne M. E.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Hill, Mariana
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Hilton, Zoe
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Associate Professor
Hirsch, Jennifer
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Hlousek, Daniela
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Hodges, Brian D.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Hoffman, Brian F.
North York General Hospital
Associate Professor
Homatidis, Soula
York Catholic District School Board
Assistant Professor
Hood, Eric
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Horodezky, L. Sandy
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Hou, Feng
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Houle, Sylvain
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Howlett, Andrew
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Hucker, Stephen J.
Private Practice
Full Professor
Hunter, Jonathan J.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Husted, Janice
University of Waterloo
Lecturer
Hutchinson, Lois
St. Joseph’s Care Group
Assistant Professor
Iaboni, Andrea
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Ickowicz, Abel
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Iosif, Alina R.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Irvine, Marilyn Jane
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Ismail, Zahinoor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Israel, Aliza T.
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Izenberg, Samuel O.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Jamal, Laila T.
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Jasper, Karin R.
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Jaunkalns, Robert
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Jeavons, Michael
Private Practice
Lecturer
Jeeva, Imraan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Jeffries, Joel
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Joannou, Jason
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Johnson, Sunny V.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Johnston, Anita G.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Johnston, Paul
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Johnston, William
Private Practice
Lecturer
Jones, Brian
Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care
Assistant Professor
Jones, Jennifer
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Joseph, Llewellyn W.
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Associate Professor
Kahn, Alan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Kamkar Parsi, Katayoun (Katy)
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Kanagaratnam, Pushpa
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Kaplan, Allan S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Kaplansky-Gold, Cathy S.
University Health Service
Lecturer
Karagianis, James
Waypoint Centre For Mental Health Care
Associate Professor
Kaspar, Violet
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Katz, Mark R.
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Assistant Professor
Katzman, Martin A.
START CLINIC
Assistant Professor
Kay, Rex L.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Keefe, Peter H.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Kemenoff, Sylvia
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Lecturer
Kennedy, James
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Kennedy, Sidney H.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Keren, Ron
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Kerr, Ann G.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Keyhan, Nicola
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Khan, Seema
Bridgepoint Health
Lecturer
Khan, Yasir
University Health Network
Lecturer
Khanlou, Nazilla
York University
Associate Professor
Khorasani, Kasra
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Kiang, Michael
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
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Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Kidd, Sean A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Kim, Donna M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Kindler, Alan R.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
King, Eric J.
Pine River Institute
Lecturer
Kiraly, Leslie T.
East Toronto Health Centre
Lecturer
Kirsh, Bonnie
Dept. of Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy
Assistant Professor
Kirsh, Shari G.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Kish, Stephen J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Kiss, Ivan
Lakeridge Health Network - Oshawa
Assistant Professor
Klassen, Philip E.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Klein, Ryan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Kljenak, Diana
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Klukach, John
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Knight, Joanne
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Kodsi, Maged
Humber River Regional Hospital
Assistant Professor
Kohl, Jack H.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Kolchak, Andriy
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Korczak, Daphne J.
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Korenblum, Marshall S.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Associate Professor
Korostil, Michele C.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Kovacs, Adrienne
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Koziel, Nicole
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Kral, Michael
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Assistant Professor
Kreindler, David
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Kriegle-Perez, Graciela
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Krisman, Avery A.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Kroft, Frederick
Private Practice
Lecturer
Kronick, Rachel
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Kuch, Helga E.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Kulesha, Denis
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Kulkarni, Chetana
George Hull Centre
Lecturer
Kurdyak, Paul A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Kussin, Dennis J.
University Health Network
Associate Professor
La Croix, Eileen
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Labrie, Viviane
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Lachmann, Mark
Bridgepoint Health
Assistant Professor
Lackstrom, Jan J.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Lafer, Beny
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Lai, Meng-Chuan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Lamba, Wiplov
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Lambe, Evelyn
Department of Physiology
Assistant Professor
Lancee, William J.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Lanctot, Krista
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Langevin, Ronald A.
Private Practice
Associate Professor
Langley, John
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Laposa, Judith
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Laurencic, Djurdjica (Georgia)
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Law, Samuel
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Lawson, Andrea
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Le Foll, Bernard
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Le, Dzung Anh
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
LeBlanc, Serge
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Lee, Victoria
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Lefebvre, Arlette M.
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Lefebvre, Lisa G.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Legault, Suzanne E.
Trillium Health Partners
Assistant Professor
Leibow, Deborah F.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Lemke, Krista K.
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Lemmens, Trudo
Faculty of Law
Assistant Professor
Lena, Tanya Suvendrini
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Leon, Chloe
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Leong, Marissa
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Lester, Michael
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Leszcz, Molyn
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Leung, Debbie
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Levene, Judith E.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Levine, Deborah
University Health Service
Lecturer
Levinson, Andrea J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Levitan, Robert D.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Levitsky, Neil
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Levitt, Anthony J.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Levy, Matthew
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Lewis, Ralph
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Lezon-Giacomelli, Dianne A.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Li, Madeline
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Li, Shupeng
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
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145
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Lieff, Susan J.
Baycrest
Full Professor
Likwornik, Victor
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Lin, Elizabeth
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Lin, Judy
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Liu, Fang
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Liu, Shi-Kai
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Llewellyn-Thomas, Hilary
Dartmouth Medical School
Full Professor
Lo, Christopher
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Lobo, Daniela S.S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Lodenquai, Gregory M.
George Hull Centre
Lecturer
Lofchy, Jodi S.
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Lojkasek, Miroslav
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Lopez de Lara Gutierrez, Catalina
Baycrest
Lecturer
Lorberg, Gunter W.
Central North Correctional Centre
Assistant Professor
Lorefice, Sylvia
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Lowe, Alan
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Lunsky, Yona
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Lustig, Andrew J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
MacFarlane, Dianne
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Macfarlane, James G.
The Toronto Sleep Institute
Assistant Professor
MacKay, Sherri
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
MacKenzie, Susan E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
MacPhee, David
Sault Area Hospitals
Lecturer
Madan, Robert
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
Madonik, Bonnie
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Maerov, Phillip
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Magder, David M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Maggi, Julie
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Mah, Bill
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Mah, Linda
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
Maharaj, Sherry
University Health Network
Lecturer
Malat, Jan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Mamelak, Mortimer
Baycrest
Associate Professor
Manassis, Katharina
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Mandelman, Krystyna
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Manohar, Savalai V.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Mansfield, Joanna K.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Margittai, Katalin
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Margolese, Ellen
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Margulies, Alfred I.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Marks, Saul
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Marshall, Lisa
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Marshall, Michelle T.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Martin, Barry A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Martin, Karen E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Martin, Nyranne S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Mason, Robin
University of Toronto
Assistant Professor
Maunder, Robert G.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Mayberg, Helen
Emory University School of Medicine
Full Professor
McBride (Cristi), Carolina
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
McCallum, Nancy
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
McCay, Elizabeth A.
Ryerson University
Assistant Professor
McCullagh, Scott
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
McDonald, Angus
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
McFarlane, Traci
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
McInerney, Shane
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
McIntosh, Christopher A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
McIntyre, Roger S.
University Health Network
Full Professor
McKenzie, Kwame
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
McKercher, Grant
Northeast Mental Health Centre
Lecturer
McMain, Shelley
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Associate Professor
McMaster, Jeff
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
McMaster, Robert
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
McNeely, Heather
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
Assistant Professor
Meen, Richard
Kinark Child and Family Services
Assistant Professor
Mehta, Gaurav
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Lecturer
Meier, Helen M.R. (Rosemary)
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Assistant Professor
Mendlowitz, Sandra
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Menzies, Peter
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Meschino, Diane
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
Meyer, Jeffrey
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Mian, Irfan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Miller, Kimberley
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Minsky, Samuel
University Health Service
Lecturer
Mishna, Faye
Factor-Inewentash Faculty of Social Work
Associate Professor
Miula, Elena
Trillium Health Centre
Lecturer
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FACULTY LISTING
147
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Mizrahi, Romina R.M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Molleken, Lynda L.
Mt. Pleasant Therapy Centre
Lecturer
Moller, Henry
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Monga, Suneeta
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Moran, Peter I.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Morgan, Andrew
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Morris, Susan S.J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Moss, Jay H.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Mount, Howard
Tanz Centre for Research in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Associate Professor
Mueller, Daniel J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Muhammad, Amin
Trillium Health Partners
Full Professor
Mulsant, Benoit H.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Munshi, Alpna
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Muntaner, Carles
University of Toronto
Full Professor
Murphy, Leo
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Myran, David
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
Nacson, Deborah
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Naidoo, Sury
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Nakhost, Arash
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Nandlal, Joan
John Howard Society of Waterloo Wellington
Assistant Professor
Nathanson, Jay A.
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Nefsky, Colman
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Ng, Karen
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Nguyen, Jennifer
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Nirula, Latika
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Nissim, Rinat
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Nobrega, Jose N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Noh, Samuel
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Nolan, Robert
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Novak, Marta
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Novick, Jon
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Offman, Hilary
Private Practice
Lecturer
Oguntoyinbo, Funmi
Private Practice
Lecturer
O’Halpin, Helen
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Okyere, Ebenezer
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Olive, Christopher
Private Practice
Lecturer
Olmsted, Marion P.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Ozersky, Sam
University Health Network
Lecturer
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Padoin, Cintia
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Pain, Clare
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Pallandi, Derek
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Palucka, Anna M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Panjwani, Dilkhush
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Papatheodorou, George
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Parikh, Sagar V.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Parker, Vivien
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Pasricha, Suvercha
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Patel, Kiran
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Patel, Mitesh
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Paterson, Andrew
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Paupst, Millie
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Paus, Tomas
Baycrest
Full Professor
Payer, Doris
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Pearce, Mark A.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Pearce, Michelle
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Assistant Professor
Peck, Jared R.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Peltz, Louis
Hospital For Sick Children; Trillium Health Partners
Assistant Professor
Pendharkar, Sushama
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Penney, Stephanie R.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Peterkin, Allan
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Petronis, Arturas
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Petruccelli, Karen
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Pham, Hoa C.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Philipp, Diane A.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Assistant Professor
Philips, Nabil A.
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Pignatiello, Antonio
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Pillai Riddell, Rebecca R.
York University
Associate Professor
Pinhas, Leora
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Polivy, Janet
Department of Psychology, UTM
Associate Professor
Pollock, Bruce
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Pollock, Nathan
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Portigal, Terryl
George Hull Centre
Lecturer
Posel, Clifford H.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Postl, Lara
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Preisman, Mary
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Propst, Lara G.
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
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Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Qian Lee, Ivy H.P.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Quastel, Adam
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Quesnel, Susan
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Quilty, Lena
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Rahi, Kahn S.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Rajji, Tarek
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Raju, Priyadarshani (Priya)
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Rakoff, Vivian M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Professor Emeritus
Ralph, Martin R.
Department of Psychology
Full Professor
Ramsay, Douglas John
Private Practice
Lecturer
Ramshaw, Lisa
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Rapoport, Mark
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Rasasingham, Rajeevan
Humber River Regional Hospital
Assistant Professor
Raskin, Joel
Eli Lilly Canada
Lecturer
Ravindran, Arun V.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Ravindran, Lakshmi N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Ravindran, Nisha
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Ravitz, Paula
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Rawkins, Sian
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Razmy, Ajmal
Trillium Health Centre
Lecturer
Read, Nancy
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Rector, Neil
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Reeves, Scott
University Health Network
Full Professor
Regehr, Glenn
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Rehm, Jurgen
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Rehman, Mujeeb ur
Private Practice
Lecturer
Reichman, William E.
Baycrest
Full Professor
Reichmann, Jaak T.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Reid, Sandra D.
University of the West Indies
Lecturer
Reiter, Sharon R.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Remington, Gary J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Reznek, Lawrie R.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Rhodes, Anne E.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Richter, Peggy Margaret
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Ritvo, Paul
University of Toronto
Assistant Professor
Roberge, Johanne
Hospital For Sick Children
Assistant Professor
Robertson, David
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Robillard, Matthew T.
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Robinson, Gail E.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Rockman, Patricia
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Rodin, Gary M.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Roher, Luna
Private Practice
Lecturer
Rolin-Gilman, Cheryl
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Romach, Myroslava K.
Private Practice
Associate Professor
Rootenberg, Jonathan H.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Rosenberg, Marsha
Baycrest
Lecturer
Rosenbluth, Allan
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Rosenbluth, Michael B.
Toronto East General Hospital
Associate Professor
Ross, Lori E.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Rotem, Amit
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Rotzinger, Susan
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Rourke, Sean B.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Full Professor
Rueda, Sergio
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Rumm, Ellen
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Rummens, Joanna Anneke
Hospital for Sick Children
Associate Professor
Rush, Brian
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Rusjan, Pablo
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Ruskin, Ronald
Mount Sinai Hospital
Associate Professor
Sadavoy, Joel
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Sagman, Doron
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Sailasuta, Napapon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Salama, Arielle
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Salim, Syeeda S.S.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Saltzman-Benaiah, Jennifer
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Salvendy, John T.
Private Practice
Full Professor
Samokhvalov, Andriy V.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Sandhu, Vicky
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Sandor, Paul
University Health Network; Youthdale Treatment Centres
Full Professor
Sapag Munoz de la Pena, Jaime Camilo JS
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Sapirman, Vivian
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Scalco, Andreia
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Scalco, Monica
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Schabas, Patti-Anne
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Schachar, Russell J.
Hospital For Sick Children
Full Professor
Schachter, Debbie C.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
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151
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Schaffer, Ayal
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Scharf, Nathan
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Lecturer
Schmidt, Nancy L.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Schneider, Richard
Ontario Court of Justice
Full Professor
Schofield, Sally
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Schuller, Deborah R.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Schwartz, Ken M.
Baycrest
Assistant Professor
Seeman, Mary V.
University of Toronto
Professor Emeritus
Seeman, Philip
Pharmacology & Psychiatry Depts., University of Toronto
Professor Emeritus
Segal, Zindel V.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Selby, Peter
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Selchen, Steven
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Senthelal, Sashikala
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Serin, Ralph
Frontenac Institution
Assistant Professor
Seto, Michael
Royal Ottawa Health Care Group
Associate Professor
Seyone, Chanth
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Shafro, Ariel AS
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Shahid, Azmeh
Youthdale Treatment Centres
Assistant Professor
Shapirman, Vivian
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Shapiro, Colin M.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Shapiro, Solomon M.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Assistant Professor
Shaw, Brian F.
Private Practice
Full Professor
Shawn, Ilana
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Shen, Jianhua
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Shera, Wesley John
Factor-Inewentash Faculty of Social Work
Full Professor
Shin, Karen
Scarborough Hospital
Lecturer
Shoichet, Roy P.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Shomair, Garry
Private Practice
Lecturer
Shorter, Edward
History of Medicine
Full Professor
Showraki, Mostafa
Private Practice
Lecturer
Shuchman, Miriam
Women’s College Hospital
Associate Professor
Shugar, Gerald
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Shulman, Kenneth I.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Full Professor
Shulman, Richard
Trillium Health Partners
Assistant Professor
Sibille, Etienne
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Silberfeld, Michel
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Silveira, Jose
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Assistant Professor
Silver, Ivan L.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Silverstein, Paul V.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Simich, Laura
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Simon, Barry
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Simpson, Alexander (Sandy)
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Singh, Mandeep
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Sinha, Smit S.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Sinyor, Mark
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Siu, Maurice
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Sivasubramanian, Velan
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Skilling, Tracey
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Skinner, Wayne
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Skorzewska, Anna
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Sloan, Eileen P.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Sloane, John A.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Sloman, Leon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Slonim, Rodney O.N.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Small, Fern E.
Private Practice
Lecturer
Smoley, Joanna
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Snaiderman, Abraham
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Sockalingam, Sanjeev
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Soklaridis, Sophie
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Sokolov, Stephen T.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Solomon, Leigh
North York General Hospital
Assistant Professor
Sommers, Frank
Private Practice
Lecturer
Soni, Jorge
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Spivak, Harold
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Spring, Paul
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Assistant Professor
Sproule, Beth A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Srinivasan, Janaki
Private Practice
Lecturer
Srivastava, Rani
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Staab, Randy
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Stall, Richard J.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Staniloiu, Angelica
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Stefaniu, Rodica
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Stein, Bernard A.
North York General Hospital
Associate Professor
Stein, Debra G.
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Steiner, Meir
St. Joseph’s Hospital (HAMILTON)
Full Professor
Steingart, Allan B.
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
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Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Stephens, Robyn
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Stergiopoulos, Vicky
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Stern, Eva Marie
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Stewart, Donna E.
University Health Network
University Professor
Stewart, Pamela
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Stirtzinger, Ruth
Trillium Health Partners
Assistant Professor
Stokl, Stephen B.
Southlake Regional Health Centre
Lecturer
Stone, Karina
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Strauss, John
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Streiner, David
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Strike, Carol
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Assistant Professor
Stuckless, Noreen
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Styra, Rima
University Health Network
Associate Professor
Styrsky, Eva M.
Humber River Regional Hospital
Assistant Professor
Sullovey, Amanda
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Sunderji, Nadiya A.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Assistant Professor
Sussman, Jillian
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Sutandar, Kalam
University Health Network
Lecturer
Sutton, Peter
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Svihra, Martin W.
University Health Network
Lecturer
Swayze, Ian G.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Sy, William
Private Practice
Lecturer
Szatmari, Peter
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health; Hospital for Sick Children Full Professor
Szmuilowicz, Sharon
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
Taerk, Gary
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Tait, Glendon R.
Dalhousie University
Assistant Professor
Tallerico, Teresa
Department of Psychiatry
Assistant Professor
Tam, Christopher H.H.
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Tan, Adrienne O.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Tang, Taryn N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Tannock, Rosemary
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the UofT
Full Professor
Tarnopolsky, Alex
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Taube-Schiff, Marlene
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Taylor, Graeme J.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Full Professor
Taylor, Valerie
Women’s College Hospital
Associate Professor
Tennen, Gayla B.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Teplitsky, Mark
Private Practice
Lecturer
Teshima, John
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Thakur, Anupam
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Toews, Adam
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Tolomiczenko, George
University of Southern California
Assistant Professor
Toner, Brenda B.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Tong, Junchao
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Trainor, John N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Trepanier, Lisa
Lakeridge Health Network - Oshawa
Assistant Professor
Trottier, Kathryn
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Tsemberis, Sam
St. Michael’s Hospital
Associate Professor
Turner, Tyrone S.
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Tuters, Kaspars
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Tyndale, Rachel F.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Full Professor
Ulic, Christian
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Ungar, Thomas
North York General Hospital
Associate Professor
Urowitz, Sara
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Vaccarino, Franco J.
University of Toronto Scarborough
Full Professor
Vachon, Mary L.S.
Private Practice
Full Professor
Vallabhaneni, Madhusudana Rao
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Vallance, Denise
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Van Reekum, Robert
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Vatsya, Pracha
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Verhoeff, Nicolaas Paul
Baycrest
Associate Professor
Vidal, Carolina (Bertha)
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Vigod, Simone
Women’s College Hospital
Assistant Professor
Vincent, John
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Virey, Maselle
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Voineskos, Aristotle N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Voineskos, George
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Professor Emeritus
Voon, Valerie
University Health Network
Lecturer
Voore, Peter M.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Waddell, Andrea E.
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Wadhwa, Uttam Jit
Trillium Health Partners
Lecturer
Waese, Adam
Canadian Mental Health Association
Lecturer
Waisman, Zohar
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Assistant Professor
Wang, Jun-Feng
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Wanono, Oshrit
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Warme, Gordon
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Associate Professor
Warsh, Jerry J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
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155
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Wasserman, Lori
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Wasylenki, Donald A.
St. Michael’s Hospital
Full Professor
Watson, Priya N.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Waxman, Robyn
Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
Lecturer
Weigeldt, Almuth
Women’s College Hospital
Lecturer
Weinroth, Ian
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Weinstein, Robert
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Weir, Heather
Private Practice
Lecturer
Weisberg, Lori
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Weissglas, Justin
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Lecturer
Wekerle, Christine
McMaster University
Associate Professor
Wesson, Virginia A.
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Westlind, Paul
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Westreich, Neal
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Whitney, Diane K.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Whitty, Carolyn
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Wiebe, Carmen
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Wiener, John
Private Practice
Lecturer
Wiesenfeld, Lesley
Mount Sinai Hospital
Assistant Professor
Wiesenthal, Stephanie R.
Toronto East General Hospital
Lecturer
Wilansky-Traynor, Pamela
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Assistant Professor
Wiljer, David
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Wilkie, Treena D.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Willer, Chris
St. Michael’s Hospital
Lecturer
Wilson, Alan A.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Winocur, Gordon
Baycrest
Full Professor
Wittenberg, Jean-Victor
Hospital For Sick Children
Associate Professor
Wnuk, Susan
University Health Network
Lecturer
Wolf, Michael Uri
Baycrest
Lecturer
Wolfe, David
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Wong, Albert
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Wong, Franklin
North York Seniors Health Centre
Lecturer
Wong, Jiahui
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Woo, Vincent
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Woodside, Blake D.
University Health Network
Full Professor
Woodside, Scott
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Lecturer
Yeung, Danny
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Young, Beverly
Mount Sinai Hospital
Lecturer
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
Name
Organization
Rank (as of June 30, 2015)
Young, Donald
Private Practice
Assistant Professor
Young, L. Trevor
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Younker, Marika
St. Joseph’s Health Centre
Lecturer
Yuen, Sandra
UofT Counselling and Psychological Services
Lecturer
Zahlan, Usama
Lake of the Woods District Hospital
Lecturer
Zahn, Catherine
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Zalan, Robert M.
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Zarb, Therese
Hincks-Dellcrest Centre
Lecturer
Zare-Parsi, Mojgan
North York General Hospital
Lecturer
Zaretsky, Ari
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Associate Professor
Zemans, Marcia
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Assistant Professor
Zener, Shery
Baycrest
Lecturer
Zielinsky, Ariel
Private Practice
Lecturer
Zikman, Sharon
Counselling and Psychological Services
Lecturer
Zimmerman, Camilla
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
Zipursky, Robert B.
St. Joseph’s Healthcare (HAMILTON)
Full Professor
Zucker, Kenneth J.
Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Full Professor
Zurowski, Mateusz
University Health Network
Assistant Professor
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Funding
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
CO-PI
Grant Title
Agency
Type
Current Amount
Current Period
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159
FUNDING 2014–2015 (continued) PI
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Grant Title
Agency
Type
Current Amount
Current Period
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Current Period
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Grant Title
Agency
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Publications
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Publications Peer Review Journal Articles 1.
Abi-Jaoude E, Segura B, Obeso I, Cho SS, Houle S, Lang AE, Rusjan P, Sandor P, Strafella AP (2015). Similar striatal D2/D3 dopamine receptor availability in adults with Tourette syndrome compared with healthy controls: A [C-11]-(+)-PHNO and C11] raclopride positron emission tomography imaging study, Hum Brain Mapp, 36(7), 2592-2601.
2.
Absolon NS, Balneaves LG, Truant TLO, Cashman RL, Wong ME, Hamm JD, Witmans MB (2014). I Can’t Sleep!: Gathering the evidence for an innovative intervention for insomnia in cancer patients, Canadian Oncology Nursing Journal, 24(3), 154-165.
3.
Adams G, Presniak M, Chopra K, Ravindran AV, Segal Z, Levitan, R, (2014). Adult attachment style differences in individuals with major depressive disorder with or without comorbid social anxiety, Depression and Anxiety.
4.
Adler Nevo GW, Avery D, Fiksenbaum L, Kiss A, Mendlowitz S, Monga S, Manassis K (2014). Eight Years Later: Outcomes of CBT-Treated versus Untreated Anxious Children, Brain and Behavior, 4(5), 765-774.
5.
Afriyie-Boateng M, Loftus C, Wiesenfeld L, Bennett J (2015). Safe Patients/Safe Staff: An Innovative Interdisciplinary Approach to the Care of Hospitalized Older Adults with Behavioral Disturbances Due to Delirium, Dementia and Mental Illness, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 23(3), 175-176.
6.
Agras WS, Lock J, Brandt H, Bryson SW, Dodge E, Halmi KA, Jo B, Johnson C, Kaye W, Wilfley D, Woodside B, (2014). Comparison of 2 family therapies for adolescent anorexia nervosa: a randomized parallel trial, JAMA Psychiatry, 71(11), 1279-1286.
7.
Agüera-Ortiz L, Gil-Ruiz N, Cruz-Orduña I, Ramos-García I, Osorio RS, Valentí-Soler M, Olazarán-Rodriguez J, Dobato-Ayuso JL, Lanctôt K, Martínez-Martín P, (2015). A novel rating scale for the measurement of apathy in institutionalized persons with dementia: the APADEM-NH, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 23(2), 149-159.
8.
Ahmad F, Jhajj AK, Stewart DE, Burghardt M, Bierman AS, (2014). Single item measures of self-rated mental health: a scoping review, BMC Health Serv Res, 14(1), 398.
9.
Aitken M, Martinussen R, Wolfe RG, Tannock R (2015). Factor Structure of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire in a Canadian Elementary School Sample, Assessment for Effective Intervention, 40(3), 155-165.
10.
Aitken M, Steensma TD, Blanchard R, VanderLaan DP, Wood H, Fuentes A, Spegg C, Wasserman L, Ames M, Fitzsimmons CL, Leef JH, Lishak V, Reim E, Takagi A, Vinik J, Wreford J, Cohen-Kettenis PT, de Vries ALC, Kreukels B, Zucker KJ (2015). Evidence for an altered sex ratio in clinic-referred adolescents with gender dysphoria, Journal of Sexual Medicine, 12(3), 756-763.
11.
Alibhai SMH, Breunis H, Timilshina N, Brignardello-Petersen R, Tomlinson G, Mohamedali H, Gupta V, Minden MD, Li M, Buckstein R, Brandwein JM (2015). Quality of life and physical function in adults treated with intensive chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia improve over time independent of age, J Geriatric Oncology, 4(2), S1879-S4068.
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ARTICLES (continued) 12.
Aljassem K, Raboud J, Hart TA, Benoit A, Margolese S, Rourke SB, Rueda S, Burchell A, Cairney J, Shuper P, Loutfy M (2014). Gender differences in severity and correlates of depressive symptoms in people living with HIV in Ontario, Canada, Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care, 1-12.
13.
Allen J, Hopper K, Wexler L, Kral MJ, Nystad K, Rasmus S (2014). Mapping resilience pathways of Indigenous youth in five circumpolar communities, Transcultural Psychiatry, 51(4), 601-631.
14.
Ameis SH, Catani M, (2015). Altered white matter connectivity as a neural substrate for social impairment in Autism Spectrum Disorder, Cortex, 62C, 158-181.
15.
Ameis SH, Ducharme S, Albaugh MD, Hudziak JJ, Botteron KN, Lepage C, Karama S, (2014). Cortical thickness, cortico-amygdalar networks, and externalizing behaviors in healthy children, Biol Psychiatry, 75(1), 65-72.
16.
Amodeo S, Mainland B, Herrmann N, Shulman K, (2015). The Times They Are a-Changin’: Clock Drawing and Prediction of Dementia, Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology, 28(2), 28145-155.
17.
Anderson JAE, Campbell KL, Amer T, Grady CL, Hasher L (2014). Timing is Everything: Age differences in the cognitive control network are modulated by time of day, Psychology and Aging, 29(9), 648-657.
18.
Anderson K, Flora N, Ferrari M, Tuck A, Archie S, Kidd SA, Tang T, Kirmayer L, McKenzie K (2015). Pathways to firstepisode care for psychosis in African, Caribbean, and European origin groups in Ontario, Can J Psychiatry, 60(6), 223231.
19.
Anderson KK, Rodriques M, Mann K, Voineskos AN, Mulsant BH, George TP, McKenzie K (2015). Is Untreated Psychosis Neurotoxic? A Systematic Review of its Association with Brain Morphology in First-Episode Psychosis,Schizophr Res, 162(1), 222-233.
20.
Anderson KK, Rodrigues M, Mann K, Voineskos A, Mulsant BH, George TP, McKenzie KJ, (2015). Minimal evidence that untreated psychosis damages brain structures: a systematic review, Schizophr Res, 162(1-3), 222-33.
21.
Anderson KK, Voineskos A, Mulsant BH, George TP, McKenzie KJ, (2014). The role of untreated psychosis in neurodegeneration: a review of hypothesized mechanisms of neurotoxicity in first-episode psychosis, The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 59(10), 513-517.
22.
Andrade BF, Browne DT, Tannock R (2014). Prosocial skills may be necessary for better peer functioning in children with symptoms of disruptive behavior disorders, PeerJ, 15(2), 1-16.
23.
Andrade BF, Browne D, Tannock R, (2014). Prosocial skills may be necessary for better peer functioning in children with symptoms of conduct disorder, PeerJ, 2(487), 1-16.
24.
Andrade BF, Browne DT, Naber AR, (2015). Parenting skills and parenting readiness for treatment are associated with child disruptive behavior and parent participation in treatment, Behavior Therapy, 46(3), 365-378.
25.
Andrade BF, Sorge G, Djordjevic D, Naber AR, (2014). Callous-unemotional traits are associated with fewer peer problems in children with less inattentive-impulsive-overactive behavior, Journal of Child and Family Studies, 24(8), 2183-2190.
26.
Andrade BF, Sorge GB, Na J, Wharton-Shukster E, (2014). Determination of clinically-relevant profiles of children with disruptive behavior based on callous-unemotional traits, emotional difficulties and conduct problems, Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 46(4), 567-576.
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ARTICLES (continued) 27.
Andreazza AC, Barakauskas VE, Fazeli S, Feresten A, Shao L, Wei V, Wu CH, Barr AM, Beasley CL (2015). Effects of haloperidol and clozapine administration on oxidative stress in rat brain, liver and serum, Neurosci Lett., 591, 36-40.
28.
Andreazza AC, Gildengers A, Rajji TK, Zuzarte PM, Mulsant BH, Young LT (2015). Oxidative stress in older patients with bipolar disorder, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 23(3), 314-319.
29.
Andreazza AC, Young LT (2014). The neurobiology of bipolar disorder: identifying targets for specific agents and synergies for combination treatment, Int J Neuropsychopharmacol, 17(7), 1039-1052.
30.
Andreazza AC, Young LT, (2015). Reply, Acta Psychiatr Scand, 131(5), 397-8.
31.
Apers S, Kovacs AH, Luyckx K, Alday L, Berghammer M, Budts W, Callus E, Caruana M, Chidambarathanu S, Cook SC, Dellborg M, Enomoto J, Eriksen K, Fernandes SM, Jackson JL, Johansson B, Khairy P, Kutty S, Menahem S, Rempel G, Sluman MA, Soufi A, Thomet CV, (2015). Assessment of patterns of patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease - international study (APPROACH-IS) - rationale, design and methods, International Journal of Cardiology, 179, 334-342.
32.
Ashcroft R, Silveira J, Rush BR, McKenzie K (2014). Incentives and disencentives for the treatment of depression and anxiety: A scoping review, Can J Psychiatry, 59(7), 385-392.
33.
Astell AJ, Alm N, Dye R, Gowans GM, Vaughan P, Ellis M (2014). Digital video games for older people with cognitive impairment, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8547, 264-271.
34.
Astell AJ, Hwang F, Brown LJE, Timon C, Maclean LM, Smith T, Adlam T, Khadra H, Williams EA (2014). Validation of the NANA (Novel Assessment of Nutrition and Ageing) touch screen system for use at home by older adults, Experimental Gerontology, 6, 100-107.
35.
Astell AJ, Malone B, Williams G, Hwang F, Ellis MP (2014). Leveraging everyday technology for people living with dementia: a case study, Journal of Assistive Technology, 8(4), 164-176.
36.
Atkinson L, Beitchman JH, Gonzalez J, Young A, Wilson B, Escobar M, Chisholm V, Brownlie EB, Khoury J, Ludmer J, Villani V (2015). Cumulative risk, cumulative outcome: A 20-year longitudinal study, PLoS One, 10(6), e0127650 xxxx—xxxx.
37.
Augustinavicius JLS, Zanjani A, Zakzanis KK, Shapiro CM, (2014). Polysomnographic features of early-onset depression: A meta-analysis, Journal of Affective Disorders, 158, 11-8.
38.
Awad AG, et al, (2014). Health-related quality of life among patients treated with lurasidone: results from a switch trial in patients with schizophrenia, BMC Psychiatry, 14, 53-62.
39.
Awad AG, Voruganti LNP, (2015). Revisiting the self-medication hypothesis in light of the new date linking low striatal dopamine to comorbid addictive behavior, Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology, 5(3), 172-178.
40.
Azin A, Zhou C, Jackson T, Cassin S, Sockalingam S, Hawa R, (2014). Body Contouring Surgery after Bariatric surgery: A Study of Cost as a Barrier and Impact on Psychological Well-Being, Plastic and Reconstructing, 133(6), 776e-782e.
41.
Bailey NW, Hoy KE, Maller JJ, Segrave RA, Thomson RH, Williams N, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB (2014). An exploratory analysis of Go/Nogo event-related potentials in major depression and depression following traumatic brain injury, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 224(3), 324-334.
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PUBLICATIONS
ARTICLES (continued) 42.
Baker K, Costain G, Fung WLA, Bassett AS, (2014). Chromosomal microarray analysis - a routine clinical genetic test for patients with schizophrenia, Lancet Psychiatry, 1(5), 329-331.
43.
Bakker N, Shahab S, Giacobbe P, Blumberger DM, Daskalis ZJ, Kennedy SH, Downar J (2015). rTMS of the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex for depression: a comparison of safety, tolerability, efficacy, and outcome predictors for 10Hz versus intermittent theta-burst stimulation in 185 consecutive clinical cases, Brain Stimulation, 8(2), 208-215.
44.
Bakker N, Geraci J, Dunlop K, Giacobbe P, Salomons T, Blumberger D, et al, (2014). Optimizing rTMS as a Treatment for Depression: Reducing Treatment Time per Session and Predicting Treatment Outcome, Biol Psychiatry, 75(9), 34S-5S.
45.
Baldwin DS, Aitchison K, Bateson A, Curran HV, Davies S, Leonard B, (2014). Benzodiazepines: Risks and Benefits. A Reconsideration, FOCUS: The Journal of Lifelong Learning in Psychiatry, 12(2), 229-234.
46.
Baldwin DS, Anderson IM, Nutt DJ, Allgulander C, Bandelow B, den Boer H, Christmas DM, Davies S, Fineberg N, Malizia A, McCrone P, Nabarro D, O’Neill C, Scott J, van der Wee N, Wittchen HU, (2014). Evidence-based pharmacological treatment of anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder: a revision of the 2005 guidelines from the British Association for Psychopharmacology, Journal of Psychopharmacology, 28, 403-439.
47.
Balneaves LG, Van Patten C, Truant TLO, Kelly M, Neill SE, Campbell KL (2014). Women’s perspectives on a weight loss and physical activity lifestyle intervention in the context of breast cancer, Journal of Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(8), 2051-2065.
48.
Balogh R, Wood J, Lunsky Y, Isaacs B, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Sullivan W, (2015). Care of adults with developmental disabilities, Canadian Family Physician, 61(7), 316-323.
49.
Balogh RS, Lake JK, Lin E, Wilton A, Lunsky Y (2015). Disparities in diabetes prevalence and preventable hospitalizations in people with intellectual and developmental disability: a population-based study, Diabetic Medicine, 32(2), 235-242.
50.
Bar R, Cassin SE, Dionne M (2015). Eating disorder prevention initiatives in athletes: A review, European Journal of Sport Science, 1-11.
51.
Barac R, Stein S, Bruce B, Barwick M, (2014). Scoping review of toolkits as a knowledge translation strategy in health, BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 14(121), 1-9.
52.
Baribeau DA, Doyle-Thomas KA, Dupuis A, Iaboni A, Crosbie J, McGinn H, Arnold PD, Brian J, Kushki A, Nicolson R, Schachar RJ, Soreni N, Szatmari P, Anagnostou E (2015). Examining and comparing social perception abilities across childhood-onset neurodevelopmental disorders, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 54(6), 479-486.
53.
Barr MS, George TP (2014). Deep rTMS for smoking cessation: Is going deeper better? Biological Psychiatry, Biol Psychiatry, 76(9), 678-680.
54.
Barr MS, Radhu N, Guglietti C, Zomorrodi R, Rajji TK, Ritvo P, Daskalakis ZJ (2014). Age-related increases in working memory evoked gamma oscillations, Brain Research, 1576(1), 43-51.
55.
Barros AL, Ghisi GML, Santos RZ, Bonin CBD, Grace SL (2014). Different barriers to cardiac rehabilitation, Rev Bras Cardiol, 27(4), 293-298.
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ARTICLES (continued) 56.
Barwick M, Barac R, Akrong LM, Johnson S, Chaban P, (2014). Bringing evidence to the classroom: exploring educator notions of evidence and preferences for practice change, International Education Research, 2(4), 1-15.
57.
Barwick M, Phipps D, Myers G, Johnny M, Coriandoli R, (2014). Knowledge translation and strategic communications: Unpacking differences and similarities for scholarly and research communications, Scholarly and Research Communication, 5(3), 1-14.
58.
Bassi S, Seney ML, Argibay P, Sibille E (2015). Elevated Hippocampal Cholinergic Neurostimulating Peptide precursor protein (HCNP-pp) mRNA in the amygdala in major depression, Journal of Psychiatric Research, 63, 105-116.
59.
Bauer M, Glenn T, Alda M, Andreassen OA, Angelopoulos E, Ardau R, Baethge C, Bauer R, Bellivier F, Belmaker RH, Berk M, Bjella TD, Bossini L, Bersudsky Y, Cheung EY, Conell J, Del Zompo M, Dodd S, Etain B, Fagiolini A, Frye MA, Fountoulakis KN, Garneau-Fournier J (2014). Relationship between sunlight and the age of onset of bipolar disorder: an international multisite study, Journal of Affective Disorder, 167(10), 104-111.
60.
Bauer M, Glenn T, Alda M, Andreassen OA, Angelopoulos E, Ardau R, Baethge C, Bauer R, Baune BT, Bellivier F, Belmaker RH, Berk M, Bjella TD, Bossini L, Bersudsky Y, Wo Cheung EY, Conell J, Del Zompo M, Dodd S, Etain B, Fagiolini A, Frye MA, Fountoulakis KN, Garnea (2015). Influence of light exposure during early life on the age of onset of bipolar disorder, Journal of Psychiatric Research, 64(1), 1-8.
61.
Bauer M, Glenn T, Alda M, Andreassen OA, Angelopoulos E, Ardau R, Baethge C, Bauer R, Bellivier F, Belmaker RH, Berk M, Bjella TD, Bossini L, Bersudsky Y, Cheung EY, Conell J, Del Zompo M, Dodd S, Etain B, Fagiolini A, Frye MA, Fountoulakis KN, Garneau-Fournier J, (2015). Influence of birth cohort on age of onset cluster analysis in bipolar I disorder, European Psychiatry, 30(1), 99-105.
62.
Bawor M, Dennis B, Samaan MC, Plater C, Worster A, Varenbut M, Daiter J, Marsh D, Desai D, Steiner M, Anglin R, Coote M, Bami H, Pare G, Thabane L, Samaan Z (2014). Methadone induces testosterone suppression in patients with opioid addiction, Scientific Reports, 4, 6189-6195.
63.
Becker PM, Novak M, (2014). Diagnosis, comorbidities, and management of restless legs syndrome, Curr Med Res Opin, 30(8), 1441-60.
64.
Behl P, Edwards JD, Kiss A, Lanctôt KL, Streiner DL, Black SE, Stuss DT, (2014). Treatment effects in multiple cognitive domains in Alzheimer’s disease: a two-year cohort study, Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy, 6(4), 48-48.
65.
Beitchman JH, Brownlie EB, Lin B, (2014). Age 31 Mental Health Outcomes of Childhood Language and Speech Impairments, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 53(10), 1102-1110.
66.
Bell JAH, Balneaves LG (2015). Cancer patient decision making related to clinical trial participation: A systematic review with implications for patients’ relational autonomy, Journal of Supportive Care in Cancer, 23(4), 2581-2589.
67.
Benardot D, Zimmermann W, Cox GR, Marks SI (2014). Nutritional Recommendations for Diving, International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 24(4), 392-402.
68.
Bennett TA, Szatmari P, Georgiades K, Hanna S, Janus M, Georgiades S, Duku E, Bryson S, Fombonne E, Smith IM, Mirenda P, Volden J, Waddell C (2014). Language impairment adn early social competence in preschoolers with autism spectrum disorders: a comparison of DSM-5 profiles, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 44(11), 27972808.
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ARTICLES (continued) 69.
Bensimon K, Herrmann N, Swardfager WL, Yi H, Black SE, Gao FQ, Snaiderman A, Lanctôt KL, (2014). Kynurenine and depressive symptoms in a post-stroke population, Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, 22(10), 1827-1835.
70.
Berk M, Williams LJ, Andreazza AC, Pasco JA, Dodd S, Jacka FN, Moylan S, Reiner EJ, Magalhaes PV (2014). Pop, heavy metal and the blues: secondary analysis of persistent organic pollutants (POP), heavy metals and depressive symptoms in the NHANES National Epidemiological Survey, BMJ Open, 4(7), e005142.
71.
Berman H, Mason R, Hall J, Rodger S, Classen CC, Evans MK, Ross L, Mulcahy GA, Carranza L, Al-Zoubi F, (2014). Laboring to mother in the context of past trauma: The transition to motherhood, Qualitative Health Research, 24(9), 1253-64.
72.
Bernstein LJ, Catton PA, Tannock IF (2014). Intra-Individual variability in sustained attention in women with breast cancer, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 20(4), 380-390.
73.
Bertoni N, Burnett C, Santos Cruz M, Andrade T, Bastos F, Leal E, Fischer B, (2014). Exploring gender differences in key characteristics among young crack users in Brazil, International Journal of Equity in Health, 13(70), 1-11.
74.
Beyer JL, Greenberg RL, Marino P, Bruce ML, Al Jurdi RK, Sajatovic M, Gyulai L, Mulsant BH, Gildengers A, Young RC, (2014). Social support in late life mania: GERI-BD, International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 29(10), 1028-1032.
75.
Bhaijiwala M, Chevrier A, Schachar R, (2014). Withholding and canceling a response in ADHD adolescents, Brain Behav, 4(5), 602-14.
76.
Bharti VK, Srivastava RS, Kumar H, Bag S, Majumdar AC, Singh G, Pandi-Perumal, SR, Brown GM, (2014). Effects of Melatonin and Epiphyseal Proteins on Fluoride-Induced Adverse Changes in Antioxidant Status of Heart, Liver, and Kidney of Rats, Advances in Pharmacological Sciences, 2014, 1-6.
77.
Bingham K, Hawa R, Sockalingam S, (2014). SSRI Discontinuation Syndrome Following Bariatric Surgery: A Case Report and Focused Literature Review, Psychosomatics, 55(6), 692-7.
78.
Black A, Balneaves LG, Garrosino C, Puyat JH, Qian H (2015). Not afraid of research anymore…†: Promoting evidence-based practice through a research training program for point-of-care clinicians, Journal of Nursing Administration, 45(1), 14-20.
79.
Bleakley S, Davies SJ (2014). The pharmacological management of anxiety disorders, Progress in Neurology and Psychiatry, 18(6), 27-32.
80.
Bohra MH, Kaushik C, Temple D, Chung SA, Shapiro CM, (2014). Weighing the balance: how analgesics used in chronic pain influence sleep?, British Journal of Pain, 8(3), 107-118.
81.
Boileau I, Payer D, Chugani,B, Lobo DS, Houle,S, Wilson AA, Warsh J, Kish,SJ, Zack M (2014). In vivo evidence for greater amphetamine-induced dopamine release in pathological gambling: a positron emission tomography study with [C-11]-(+)- PHNO, Mol Psychiatry, 19(12), 1305-1313.
82.
Boileau I, Bloomfield PM, Rusjan PM, Mizrahi R, Vitcu I, Mufti A, Kish S, Houle S, Wilson AA, Tong J, (2014). Whole-Body Radiation Dosimetry of 11C-Carbonyl-URB694: A PET Tracer for Fatty Acid Amide Hydrolase, J Nucl Med., 55(12), 1993-1997.
83.
Bölte S, de Schipper E, Holtmann M, Karande S, de Vries PJ, Selb M, Tannock R (2014). Development of ICF Core Sets to standardize assessment of functioning and impairment in ADHD: the path ahead, Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 23(12), 1139-1148.
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84.
Boot E, Butcher NJ, van Amelsvoort TAMJ, Lang AE, Marras C, Pondal M, Andrade DM, Fung WLA, Bassett AS, (2015). Movement disorders and other motor abnormalities in adults with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A, 167A(6), 639-645.
85.
Boritz T, Bryntwick E, Angus L, Greenberg L, Constantino M (2014). Narrative and emotion process in psychotherapy: An empirical test of the narrative-emotion process coding system, Psychotherapy Research, 24(5), 594-607.
86.
Boroska V, Zeggini E, Kaplan AS , Bulik C , et al, (2014). A Genome Wide Association Study of Anorexia Nervosa,Molecular Genetics, 19(10), 1085-1094.
87.
Boutcher FD, Conn DK, Mroziewicz M, Guttman Sokoloff LM, (2014). Introducing interprofessional education and care concepts in a geriatric multilevel centre: Development and introduction of a toolkit for staff and students,Journal of Research in Interprofessional Practice and Education, 4(1), 1-19.
88.
Bouvette-Turcot AA, Fleming AS, Wazana A, Sokolowski M, Gaudreau H, Gonzalez A, Deslauriers J, Kennedy J, Steiner M, and Meaney MJ, on behalf of the MAVAN research team (2015). Maternal childhood adversity and child temperament: an association moderated by child 5-HTTLPR genotype, Genes Brain Behav, 14(3), 229-237.
89.
Boyd JE, Patriciu I, McKinnon MC, Kiang M (2014). Test-retest reliability of N400 event-related brain potential measures in a word-pair semantic priming paradigm in patients with schizophrenia, Schizophr Res, 158(1), 195-203.
90.
Boydell KM, Hodgins M, Pignatiello A, Teshima J, Edwards H, Willis D, (2014). Using Technology to Deliver Mental Health Services to Children and Youth: A Scoping Review, Canadian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 23(2), 87-99.
91.
Braun M, Hasson-Ohayon I, Hales S, Zimmermann C, Rydall A, Peretz T, Rodin G (2014). Quality of dying and death with cancer in Israel, Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(7), 1973-1980.
92.
Bresner L, Banach R, Rodin G, Thabane L, Ezzat S, Sawka AM (2015). Cancer-related worry in Canadian thyroid cancer survivors, Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 100(3), 977-985.
93.
Bridgman AC, Mackowick KM, Rabin RA, Barr MS, George TP (2014). Translating Neurobiology to Treatment of Dual Diagnosis: The Example of Nicotinic Receptors and Disease-Related Endophenotypes for Smoking Cessation in Schizophrenia, Curr. Addict. Rep., 1(1), 272-280.
94.
Brown NC, Andreazza AC, Young LT (2014). An updated meta-analysis of oxidative stress markers in bipolar disorder, Psychiatry Research, 218(1), 61-68.
95.
Burke M, Staines R, Ghaffar O, Downar J, Feinstein A (2014). Functional neuroimaging of conversion disorder: the role of ancillary activation, Neuroimage Clinical, 6(1), 333-339.
96.
Butcher NJ, Fung WLA, Fitzpatrick L, Guna A, Andrade D, Lang A, Chow EWC, Bassett AS, (2015). Response to clozapine in a clinically identifiable subtype of schizophrenia: 22q11.2 deletions mediate side effect risk and dosage,British Journal of Psychiatry, 206(6), 484-491.
97.
Buxbaum JD, Bolshakova N, Brownfeld JM, Anney RJ, Bender P, Bernier R, Cook EH, Coon H, Sutcliffe JS, Szatmari P, Vicente AM, et al (2014). The Autism Simplex Collection: An International, Expertly phenotyped autism sample for genetic and phenotypic analysis, Molecular Autism, 5, 34-34.
98.
Caravaggio F, Borlido C, Hahn M, Feng Z, Fervaha G, Gerretsen P, Nakajima S, Plitman E, Chung JK, Iwata Y, Wilson A, Remington G, Graff-Guerrero A (2015). Reduced insulin sensitivity is related to less endogenous dopamine at D2/D3 receptors in the ventral striatum of healthy non-obese humans, Int J Neuropsychopharmacol, 18(7), 1-10.
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99.
Caravaggio F, Nakajima S, Borlido C, Remington G, Gerretsen P, Wilson A, Houle S, Menon M, Mamo D, Graff-Guerrero A (2014). Estimating endogenous dopamine levels at D2 and D3 receptors in humans using the agonist radiotracer [C11]-(+)-PHNO, Neuropsychopharmacology, 39(12), 2769-2772.
100. Carleton RN, Duranceau S, Freeston MH, Boelin PA, McCabe RE, Antony MM, (2014). “But it might be a heart attack”: Intolerance of uncertainty and panic disorder symptoms, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 28(5), 463-470. 101. Carroll JC, Blaine S, Permaul J, Dicks E, Warner E, Esplen M J, Rothenmund H, Semotiuk K, Worrall G, McLaughlin J (2014). Efficacy of an Educational Intervention on Family Physicians’ Risk Assessment and Management of Colorectal Cancer, Journal of Community Genetics, 5(4), 303-311. 102. Case AD, Todd NR, Kral MJ (2014). Ethnography in community psychology: Promises and tensions, American Journal of Community Psychology, 54(3), 60-71. 103. Caulet M, Charette Y, Côté G, Crocker AG, Nicholls TL, Salem L, Seto MC, Wilson CM (2015). La nonresponsabilité criminelle pour cause de troubles mentaux (2014): Non criminellement responsable pour cause de troubles mentaux: Vers des pratiques et des politiques informées., Barreau du Quebec - Service de la formation continue, 388, 23-52. 104. Causarano N, Platt J, Baxter N, Bagher S, JOnes J, Metcalfe K, Hofer SO, O’Neill A, Cheng T, Starenkyj E, Zhong T (2015). Pre-consultation educational group intervention to improve shared decision-making for postmastectomy breast reconstruction: a pilot randomized controlled trial, Supportive Care in Cancer, 23(5), 1365-1375. 105. Chaiton M, Mercredy G, Rehm J, Samokhvalov AV (2014). Tobacco retail availability and smoking behaviours among patients seeking treatment at a nicotine dependence treatment clinic, Tobacco Induced Diseases, 12(1), 19. 106. Chambers L, Wilson MG, Rueda S, Gogolishvili D, Shi M, Rourke SB (2014). Evidence informing the intersection of HIV, aging and health: a scoping review, AIDS and Behavior, 18(4), 661-675. 107. Chambers LA, Greene S, Watson J, Tucker R, Koornstra J, Sobota M, Hambly K, Hwang S, O’Brien-Teengs D, Walker G, Rourke SB, (2014). Not Just “A Roof over Your Head†: The Meaning of Healthy Housing for People Living with HIV, Theory and Society, 31(3), 310-333. 108. Charett Y, Crocker AG, Seto MC, Salem L, Nicholls TL, Caulet M (2015). The National Trajectory Project of Individuals found Not Criminally Responsible on account of Mental Disorder in Canada. Part 4: Criminal Recidivism, Can J Psychiatry, 0(60), 127-134. 109. Chau S, Herrmann N, Ruthirakuhan MT, Chen JJ, Lanctôt KL, (2015). Latrepirdine for Alzheimer’s disease,Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 4, CD009524. 110. Chen PY, Liu SK, Chen CL, Wu CS (2014). Long-term statin use and dementia risk in Taiwan, Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology, 27(3), 165-171. 111. Chengappa KNR, Perkins KA, Brar J, Schlicht P, Turkin SR, Hetrick ML, Levine MD, George TP (2014). Varenicline for Smoking Cessation in Bipolar Disorder: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study, J. Clin. Psychiatry, 75(1), 765-772. 112. Chenoweth M, Novalen M, Hawk LW Jr, Schnoll RA, George TP, Cinciripini P, Lerman C, Tyndale RF (2014). Sources of Variability in the Nicotine Metabolic Ratio in a Large Sample of Treatment-Seeking Smokers, Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev., 23(9), 1773-1782. 113. Cherner R, Aubry T, Ecker J, Kerman N, Nandlal J (2014). Transitioning into the community: Outcomes of a housing program for forensic patients, International Journal of Forensic Mental Health, 13(1), 62-74.
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ARTICLES (continued) 114. Cheung ENM, George SR, Costain GA, Andrade DM, Chow EWC, Silversides CK, Bassett AS, (2014). Prevalence of hypocalcemia and its associated features in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome, Clinical Endocrinology, 81(2), 190-196. 115. Chiu M, Pauley T, Wesson V, Pushpakumar D, Sadavoy J (2015). Evaluation of a problem-solving (PS) techniques-based intervention for informal carers of patients with dementia receiving in-home care, International psychogeriatrics, 27(6), 937-948. 116. Chivers ML, Roy C, Grimbos T, Cantor JM, Seto MC (2014). Specificity of sexual arousal for preferred sexual activities in men and women with conventional and masochistic sexual interests, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43(5), 931-940. 117. Chivers ML, Roy C, Grimbos T, Cantor JM, Seto MC (2014). Specificity of sexual arousal for sexual activities in men and women with conventional and masochistic sexual interests, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43(5), 690-704. 118. Cho SS, Koshimori Y, Aminian K, Obeso I, Rusjan P, Lang AE, Daskalakis ZJ, Houle S, Strafella AP (2015). Investing in the future: stimulation of the medial prefrontal cortex reduces discounting of delayed rewards,Neuropsychopharmacology, 40(3), 546-553. 119. Christopher L, Duff-Canning S, Koshimori Y, Segura B, Boileau I, Chen R, Lang AE, Houle S, Rusjan P, Strafella AP (2015). Salience network and parahippocampal dopamine dysfunction in memory-impaired Parkinson disease,Ann Neurol, 77(2), 269-280. 120. Chung F, Liao P, Yang Y, Andrawes M, Kang W, Mokhlesi B, Shapiro CM, (2015). Postoperative sleep-disordered breathing in patients without preoperative sleep apnea, Anesth Analg, 120(6), 1214-24. 121. Chung JK, Plitman E, Nakajima S, Chow TW, Chakravarty MM, Caravaggio F, Gerretsen P, Brown EE, Iwata Y, Mulsant BH, Graff-Guerrero A, (2015). Lifetime history of depression predicts increased amyloid-β accumulation in patients with mild cognitive impairment, Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 45(3), 907-919. 122. Clarke TK, Crist RC, Doyle GA, Weiss AR, Brandt H, Crawford S, Crow S, Fichter MM, Halmi KA, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, La Via M, Mitchell JE, Strober M, Rotondo A, Treasure J, Woodside DB, Keel P, Klump KL, Lilenfeld L, Plotnicov K, Magistretti PJ, et al, (2014). Characterization of genetic variation in the VGLL4 gene in anorexia nervosa, Psychiatric Genetics, 24(4), 183-184. 123. Claus ED, Hendershot CS (2015). Moderating effect of working memory capacity on acute alcohol effects on BOLD response during inhibition and error monitoring, Psychopharmacology, 232(4), 765-776. 124. Clayton AH, Kennedy SH, Edwards JB, Gallipoli S, Reed CR, (2015). The effect of Vilazodoneon sexual function during the treatment of major depressive disorder, J Sex Med, 1, 2465-76. 125. Cobigo V, Martin L, Lysaght R, Lunsky Y, Hickey R, Ouellette-Kuntz H (2014). Quality improvement in services for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities: Guiding principles, Journal on Developmental Disabilities, 20(2), 89102. 126. Colella TJF, Gravely S, Marzolini S, Grace SL, Francis JA, Oh P, Scott LB (2015). Sex bias in referral of women to outpatient cardiac rehabilitation? A meta-analysis, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 22(4), 423-441. 127. Collimore K, Rector NA (2014). Treatment of anxiety disorders with comorbid depression: A survey of expert CBT clinicians, Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 21(4), 485-493. 128. Collins C, Suskin N, Aggarwal S, Grace SL (2015). Cardiac rehabilitation wait times and relation to patient outcomes, European Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 51(3), 301-309.
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ARTICLES (continued) 129. Colton P, Olmsted MP, Wong H, Rodin G (2015). Eating disorders in individuals with type 1 diabetes: Case series and day hospital treatment outcome, European Eating Disorders Review, 23(4), 312-317. 130. Colton PA, Olmsted MP, Daneman D, Farquhar JC, Wong H, Muskat S, Rodin GM, (2015). Eating disorders in girls and women with type 1 diabetes: a longitudinal study of prevalence, onset, remission and recurrence, Diabetes Care, 38(7), 1212-1217. 131. Costain G, Lionel AC, Fu F, Stavropoulos DJ, Marshall CR, Scherer SW, Bassett AS, (2014). Adult neuropsychiatric expression and familial segregation of 2q13 duplications, American Journal of Medical Genetics B, 165B(4), 377-344. 132. Court JPM, Simpson AIF, Webster C (2014). Contesting Mad versus Bad: The Evolution of Forensic Mental Health Services and Law at Toronto, Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 21(6), 918-936. 133. Couturier J, Kimber M, Lock J, Barwick M, McVey G, Findlay S, Webb C, Boettcher M, Niccols A, Woodford T, (2015). Implementing highly specialized and evidence-based pediatric eating disorder treatment: protocol for a mixed methods evaluation, Implementation Science, 10(1), 40. 134. Covolan L, de Almeida AG, Amorim B, Cavarsan C, Miranda MF, Aarão MC, Madureira AP, Rodrigues AM, Nobrega JN, Mello LE, Hamani C (2014). Effects of anterior thalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation in chronic epileptic rats, PLoS One, 9(6), e97618. 135. Crawford A, Sunderji N, Jovanovic M (2014). Telepsychiatry in graduate medical education: A Narrative Review,Academic Psychiatry, 39(1), 55-62. 136. Croarkin PE, Nakonezny PA, Lewis CP, Zaccariello MJ, Huxsahl JE, Husain MM, Kennard BD, Emslie GJ, Daskalakis ZJ (2014). Developmental aspects of cortical excitability and inhibition in depressed and healthy youth: An exploratory study, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 669-669. 137. Crocker AG, Charette Y, Seto MC, Nicholls TL, Côté G, Caulet M (2015). Introduction to the special section on the National Trajectory Project of Individuals, Can J Psychiatry, (60), 96-97. 138. Crocker AG, Charette Y, Seto MC, Nicholls TL, Côté G, Caulet M (2015). The National Trajectory Project of Individuals found Not Criminally Responsible on Account of Mental Disorder in Canada. Part 3: Trajectories and outcomes through the forensic system, Can J Psychiatry, 60(3), 117-126. 139. Crocker AG, Nicholls TL, Charette Y, Seto, MC (2014). Dynamic and static factors associated with discharge dispositions: the National Trajectory Project of individuals found not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder (NCRMD), Behav Sci Law, 32(5), 577-595. 140. Crocker AG, Nicholls TL, Seto MC, Cote G, Charette Y, Latimer EA, Caulet M (2015). The National Trajectory Project of Individuals found Not Criminally Responsible on account of Mental Disorder in Canada. Part 1: Contex and Methods, Can J Psychiatry, 0(60), 98-105. 141. Crocker AG, Nicholls TN, Seto MC, Cote G (2015). Introduction to the special section on The National Trajectory Project of Individuals found Not Criminally Responsible on account of Mental Disorder in Canada. Part 2: The people behind the label, Can J Psychiatry, (60), 106-116. 142. Crooks C, Scott KS, Broll R, Zwarych S, Hughes R, Wolfe DA (2015). Does an evidence-based healthy relationships program for high school students show similar effects for 7th and 8th graders? Results from 57 schools randomized to intervention, Health Education Research, 30(3), 513-519.
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ARTICLES (continued) 143. Cruz M, Bastos F, Bertoni N, Burnett C, Gooch J, Fischer B, (2014). Comparing key characteristics of young adult crack users in and out-of-treatment in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention and Policy, 9(1), 2-2. 144. Cuijpers P, Weitz E, Reynolds C, Twisk J, Cristea IA, David D, DeRubeis RJ, Dunlop BW, Hegerl U, Jarrett RB, Kheirkhah F, Kennedy SH, Mergl R, Miranda J, Mohr DC, Segal ZV, Siddique J, Simons A, Vittengl J, Hollon SD, Rush A (2014). Age as a moderator of outcome in cognitive behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy for depression in early and middle adulthood, Am J Psychiatry, 31, 941-951. 145. Cuijpers P, Weitz E, Twsik J, Kuehner C, Cristea I, David D, DeRubeis RJ, Dimidijian S, Dunlop BW, Hegerl U, Jarrett RB, Kennedy SH, Kheirkhah F, Mergl R, Miranda J, Mohr DC, Segal ZV, Siddique J, Simons AD, Vittengl J, Hollon SD (2014). Gender as predictor and moderator of outcome incognitive behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy for adult depression: An “”individual patient data”“ meta-analysis, Depression and Anxiety, 31(11), 941-951. 146. Cummings J, Mintzer J, Brodaty H, Sano M, Banerjee S, Devanand DP, Gauthier S, Howard R, Lanctôt K, Lyketsos CG, Peskind E, Porsteinsson AP, Reich E, Sampaio C, Steffens D, Wortmann M, Zhong K, (2015). Agitation in cognitive disorders: International Psychogeriatric Association provisional consensus clinical and research definition, Int Psychogeriatr, 27(1), 7-17. 147. Cunha A, dos Santos B, Dias à M, Carmagnani AM, Lafer B, Busatto GF (2014). Success in publication by graduate students in psychiatry in Brazil: an empirical evaluation of the relative influence of English proficiency and advisor expertise, BMC Medical Education, 14(6), 238-238. 148. Cunningham CE, Barwick MA, Short K, Chen Y, Ratcliffe J, Rimas H, Mielko S, (2014). Modeling the mental health practice change preferences of educators: a discrete–choice conjoint experiment, School Mental Health, 6, 1-14. 149. Cunningham JA, Hendershot CS, Rehm J (2015). Randomized controlled trial of a minimal versus extended Internetbased intervention for problem drinkers: Study protocol, BMC Public Health, 15(21), 1-6. 150. Cunningham JA, Murphy M, Hendershot CS (2014). Treatment dismantling pilot study to identify the active ingredients in personalized feedback interventions for hazardous alcohol use: Randomized clinical trial, Addiction Science and Clinical Practice, 10(1), 1-5. 151. Curran G, Ravindran A (2014). Lithium for bipolar disorder: A review of the recent literature, Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics, 14(9), 1079-1098. 152. Cyr AA, Anderson ND, (2015). Mistakes as stepping stones: Effects of errors on episodic memory among younger and older adults, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 41, 841-850. 153. Daros AR, Zakzanis KK, Rector NA, (2014). A quantitative analysis of facial emotion recognition in obsessivecompulsive disorder, Psychiatry Research, 215(3), 514-521. 154. Daskalakis ZJ, (2014). Theta Burst Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Depression: When Less May Be More,Brain, 137(7), 1860-1862. 155. Daskalopoulou SS, Rabi DM, Zarnke KB, Dasgupta K, Nerenberg K, Cloutier L, Gelfer M, Lamarre-Cliche M, Milot A, Bolli P, McKay DW, Tremblay G, McLean D, Tobe SW, Ruzicka M, Burns KD, Vallee M, Ramesh Prasad GV, Lebel M, Feldman RD, Selby P, Pipe A, Schiff (2015). The 2015 Canadian hypertension education program recommendations for blood pressure measurement, diagnosis, assessment of risk, prevention, and treatment of hypertension, Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 31(5), 549-568.
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ARTICLES (continued) 156. Davey CJ, Niccols A, Henderson J, Dobbins M, Sword W, Dell C, Wylie T, Suave E, (2014). Predictors of research use among staff in Aboriginal addiction treatment programs serving women, Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse, 13(4), 315-336. 157. Davies SJC, Dubovsky S (2015). Treatment: Special Conditions-Psychological Aspects Relating to the Treatment of Hypertension, Journal of the American Society of Hypertension, 9(2), 150-153. 158. Davies SJC, Dubovsky SL, Reisin E, Owen J, Whelton PK (2015). American Society of Hypertension Self-Assessment Guide, Journal of the American Society of Hypertension, 9(2), 154-155. 159. Davies SJC, Mulsant BH, Flint AJ, Rothschild AJ, Whyte EM, Meyers BS, (2014). Differential impact of anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders on treatment outcome for psychotic depression in the STOP-PD study,Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(7), 1069-1076. 160. Davies SJC, Pollock BG, Kirshner M, Meyers B, Sorisio D, Mulsant B, Whyte E, Flint A, Rothschild A, Bies RR, for the STOP-PD study group., (2015). Sertraline co-administration increases Olanzapine Clearance in people with psychotic depression, a Population Pharmacokinetic analysis, Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 54(435), 1-8. 161. De Long NE, Barry EJ, Pinelli C, Wood GA, Hardy DB, Morrison KM, Taylor VH, Gerstein HC, Holloway AC, (2015). Antenatal exposure to the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine leads to postnatal metabolic and endocrine changes associated with type 2 diabetes in Wistar rats, Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 285(1), 32-40. 162. De Long NE, Stepita RA, Taylor VH, Holloway AC, (2015). Major Depressive Disorder and Diabetes: Does Serotonin Bridge the Gap?, Curr Diabetes Rev, 11(2), 71-78. 163. De Rubeis S, He X, Goldberg AP, Poultney CS, Samocha K, Szatmari P, et al (2014). Synaptic, transcriptional and chromatin genes disrupted in autism, Nature, 515(7526), 209-215. 164. de Schipper E, Lundequist A, Wilteus AL, Coghill D, de Vries PJ, Granlund M, Bölte S (2015). A comprehensive scoping review of ability and disability in ADHD using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health-Children and Youth Version (ICF-CY), European child & adolescent psychiatry, 24(8), 859-872. 165. Di Narzo AF, Kozlenkov A, Roussos P, Hao K, Hurd Y, Lewis DA, Sibille E, Siever LJ, Koonin E, Dracheva S (2014). A unique gene expression signature associated with serotonin 2C receptor RNA editing in the prefrontal cortex and altered in suicide, Human Molecular Genetics, 23(18), 4801-4813. 166. Diamant A, Milner J, Sunil S, Sockalingam S, Okrainec A, Jackson T, Quereshy F, (2014). Analysis of Dropouts for a Publicly Funded Bariatric Surgery Program, J Am Coll Surg, 219(5), 1047-1055. 167. DiLauro M, Pereira A, Carr J, Chiu M, Wesson V (2015). Spousal caregivers and persons with dementia: Increasing participation in shared leisure activities among hospital-based dementia support program participants, Dementia, 0, 120. 168. Dimitropoulos G, Farquhar JC, Freeman VE, Colton P, Olmsted M (2015). Pilot Study Comparing Multi-Family Therapy to Single Family Therapy for Adults with Anorexia Nervosa in an Intensive Eating Disorder Program,European Eating Disorder Review, 23(4), 294-303. 169. Dimitropoulos G, Toulany A, Herschman J, Kovacs A, Steinegger C, Bardsley J, Sandhu S, Gregory G, Colton P, Anderson J, Kaufman M, (2014). A qualitative study on the experiences of young adults with eating disorders transferring from pediatric to adult care, Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention, 23, 1-19-1-19.
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ARTICLES (continued) 170. Distelhort SR, Cleary JF, Ganz PA, Bese N, Camacho-Rodriguez R, Cardoso F, Ddungu H, Gralow JR, Yip CH, Anderson BO, on behalf of the Breast Health Global Initiative Global Summit on Supportive Care and Quality of Life Consensus Panel Members Rodin G (2015). Optimisation of the continuum of supportive and palliative care for patients with breast cancer in low-income and middle-income countries: Executive summary of the Breast Health Global Initiative, 2014, Lancet Oncology, 16(3), e137-e147. 171. Diwadkar VA, Burgess A, Hong E, Rix C, Arnold PD, Hanna GL, Rosenberg DR, (2015). Dysfunctional Activation and Brain Network Profiles in Youth with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: A Focus on the Dorsal Anterior Cingulate during Working Memory, Front Hum Neurosci, 9, 149. 172. Dixon PG, Sinyor M, Schaffer A, Levitt A, Haney CR, Ellis KN, Sheridan SC, (2014). Association of weekly suicide rates with temperature anomalies in two different climate types, Int J Environ Res Public Health, 11(11), 11627-11644. 173. Dowlati Y, Ravindran A, Maheux M, Steiner M, Stewart D, Meyer JH (2014). No Effect of Oral Tyrosine on Total Tyrosine Levels in Breast Milk: Implications for Preventing Postpartum Depression, Arch Womens Ment Health, 17(6), 541-548. 174. Downar J, Geraci J, Salomons TV, Dunlop K, Wheeler S, McAndrews MP, Bakker N, Blumberger DM, Daskalakis ZJ, Kennedy SH, Flint AJ, Giacobbe P (2014). Anhedonia and Reward-Circuit Connectivity Distinguish Nonresponders from Responders to Dorsomedial Prefrontal rTMS in Major Depression, Biol Psychiatry, 76(3), 176-185. 175. Doyle F, McGee H, Conroy R, Conradi HJ, Meijer A, Steeds R, Sato H, Stewart DE, Parakh K, Carney R, Freedland K, Anselmino M, Pelletier R, Bos EH, de Jonge P, (2015). Systematic Review and Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis of Sex Differences in Depression and Prognosis in Persons With Myocardial Infarction: A MINDMAPS Study, Psychosom Med, 77(4), 419-28. 176. Dragomir AI, Gentile C, Nolan RP, D’Antono B, (2014). Three-year stability of cardiovascular and autonomic nervous system responses to psychological stress, Psychophysiology, 51(9), 921-931. 177. Dunlop K, Geraci J, Bakker N, Giaccobe P, Colton P, Olmsted M, et al, (2014). Altered Cortico-Subcortical Connectivity Predicts and Correlates with Treatment Response to Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Dorsomedial Prefrontal Cortex for Bulimia and Anorexia Nervosa, Biol Psychiatry, 75(9), 362S-S. 178. Dunlop K, Woodside B, Olmsted M, Colton P, Giacobbe P, Downar J, (2015). Reductions in corticostriatal hyperconnectivity accompany successful treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder with dorsomedial prefrontal rTMS, Biol Psychiatry, 77(9). 179. Durisko Z, Mulsant BH, Andrews P, (2015). An adaptationist perspective on the etiology of depression, Journal of Affective Disorders, 172, 315-323. 180. Dwyer T, Glover Takahashi S, Kennedy Hynes M, Herold J, Wasserstein D, Nousiainen M, Ferguson P, Wadey V, Murnaghan ML, Leroux T, Semple J, Hodges B, Ogilvie-Harris D (2014). How to assess communication, professionalism, collaboration and the other intrinsic CanMEDS roles in orthopedic residents: use of an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), Canadian Journal of Surgery, 1(57), 230-236. 181. Ecclestone C, Verma S, Leahey A, Bedard G, Hamer J, Rakovitch E, Pulenzas N, Bhatia A, DeAngelis C, Ellis J, Chow E (2015). Validation of the long-term quality of life breast cancer scale (LTQOL-BC) by health care professionals, Supportive Care in Cancer, 23(6), 1629-1635. 182. Edelstein KE, Bernstein LJ, (2014). Cognitive dysfunction after chemotherapy for breast cancer, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 20(4), 351-356.
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ARTICLES (continued) 183. Eke AW, Meloy R, Brooks K, Jean L, Hilton NZ (2014). Threats, approach behavior, and violent recidivism among offenders who harass Canadian justice officials, Journal of Threat Assessment and Management, 1(3), 188-202. 184. Emlet CA, Brennan DJ, Brennanstuhl S, Rueda S, Hart T, Rourke SB (2015). The impact of HIV-related stigma on older and younger adults living with HIV disease: does age matter?, AIDS Care, 27(4), 520-528. 185. Eng L, Qiu X, Jie S, Pringle D, Hon CN, Mahler M, Charow R, Villeneuve J, Halytskyy O, Lam C, Tiessen K, Brown MC, Howell D, Giuliani ME, Jones JM, Alibhai SMH, Goldstein DP, Xu W, Selby P, Liu G (2015). The Role of Second-Hand Smoke Exposure on Smoking Cessation in Non-Tobacco Related Cancers, Cancer, 121(15), 2655-2663. 186. Epstein I, Szpindel I, Katzman MA, (2014). Pharmacological Approaches to Manage Persistent Symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder: Rationale and Therapeutic Strategies, Psychiatry Research, 220(Sup1), S15-S33. 187. Escobar R, O’Donnell K, Colalillo S, Pawlby S, Steiner M, Meaney M, Levitan R, Silveira P (2014). Better quality of mother-child interaction at 4 years of age decreases emotional overeating in IUGR girls, Appetite, 81, 337-342. 188. Esplen MJ, Wong J, Aronson M, Butler K, Rothenmund H, Semotiuk K, Madlensky L, Way C, Dicks E, Green J, Gallinger S (2015). Long-term Psychosocial and Behavioral Adjustment in Individuals Receiving Genetic Test Results in Lynch Syndrome, Clinical Genetics, 87(6), 525-532. 189. Fang L, Mishna F, Zhang VF, Van Wert M, Bogo M (2014). Social media and social work education: Understanding and dealing with the new digital world, Social Work in Health Care, 53, 800-814. 190. Faramarzi M, Azadfallah P, Book HE, Rasolzadeh Tabatabai K, Taherim H, Kashifard M, (2015). The Effect of Psychotherapy in Improving Physical and Psychiatric Symptoms in Patients with Functional Dyspepsia, Iran J Psychiatry, 10(1), 43-49. 191. Farmer AS, Gros DF, McCabe RE, Antony MM, (2014). Clinical predictors of diagnostic status in individuals with social anxiety disorder, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(8), 1906-1913. 192. Farnia F, Gottardo A, Javier C, Mak L, Geva E, (2014). Written Language & Literacy: Special issue on Cross-linguistic transfer in reading in multilingual contexts, The Linguist List, 17(1), 62-88. 193. Farrell MacDonald S, MacSwain M, Cheverie M, Tiesmaki M, Fischer B, (2014). Impact of methadone maintenance treatment on women offenders’ recidivism post-release, European Addiction Research, 20(4), 192-199. 194. Fazio RL, Cantor JM (2015). Factor structure of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory versus the Fazio Laterality Inventory in a population with established atypical handedness, Applied Neuropsychology, 2(2), 156-160. 195. Fazio RL, Lykins AD, Cantor JM (2014). Elevated rates of atypical-handedness in pedophilia: Theory and implications, Laterality, 19(6), 690-704. 196. Feinstein A, (2015). Is there a cognitive signature for fatigue in multiple sclerosis, Multiple Sclerosis Journal, 21(4), 353-353. 197. Feinstein A, Freeman J, Lo A (2015). Symptom management in progressive MS: what works, what does not and what is needed, Lancet Neurology, 14(2), 194-207. 198. Feinstein A, Magalhaes S, Richard JP, Audet B, Moore C (2014). The link between multiple sclerosis and depression, Nature Review Neurology, 10(9), 507-517.
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ARTICLES (continued) 199. Feinstein A, Waknine E, Audet B (2014). Witnessing extreme violence in the newsroom, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Short Reports, 5(8), 1-7. 200. Feinstein S, Starr S (2015). Civil War in Syria: the psychological effects on journalists, Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research, 7(1), 57-64. 201. Felsky D, Szeszko P, Yu L, Honer WG, De Jager PL, Schneider JA, Malhotra AK, Lencz T, Ikuta T, Pipitone J, Chakravarty MM, Lobaugh NJ, Mulsant BH, Pollock BG, Kennedy JL, Bennett DA, Voineskos AN, (2014). The SORL1 Gene and Convergent Neural Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease Across the Human Lifespan, Molecular Psychiatry, 19(10), 1125-32. 202. Fervaha G, Agid O, Foussias G, Remington G (2014). Impact of primary negative symptoms on functional outcomes in schizophrenia, European Psychiatry, 29(7), 449-455. 203. Fervaha G, Agid O, McDonald K, Foussias G, Remington G (2014). Daily acitivity patterns in remitted first-episode schizophrenia, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(5), 1182-1187. 204. Fervaha G, Agid O, Takeuchi H, Foussias G, Zakzanis KK, Graff-Guerrero A, Remington G (2015). Extrapyramidal symptoms and cognitive test performance in patients with schizophrenia, Schizophr Res, 161(2), 351-356. 205. Fervaha G, Agid O, Takeuchi H, Lee J, Foussias G, Lee J, Remington G (2015). Clinical and functional outcomes in people with schizophrenia with a high sense of well-being, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders, 203(3), 187-193. 206. Fervaha G, Agid O, Takeuchi H, Lee J, Foussias G, Remington G (2015). Relationship between symptomatic improvement and overall illness severity in patients with schizophrenia, Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 35(2), 128-133. 207. Fervaha G, Foussias G, Agid O, Remington G (2014). Motivational and neurocognitive deficits are central to the prediction of longitudinal functional outcome in schizophrenia, Acta Psychiatr Scand, 130(4), 290-299. 208. Fervaha G, Takeuchi H, Lee J, Foussias G, Fletcher P, Agid O, Remington G (2015). Antipsychotics and amotivation, Neuropsychopharmacology, 40(6), 1539-1548. 209. Fervaha G, Zakzanis KK, Foussias G, Graff-Guerrera A, Agid O, Remington G (2014). Motivational deficits and cognitive test performance in schizophrenia, JAMA Psychiatry, 71(9), 1058-1065. 210. Fervaha G, Zakzanis KK, Jeffay E, Graff-Guerrero A, Foussias G, Agid O, Remington G (2014). Amotivation as central to negative schizotypy and their predictive value for happiness, Personality and Individual Differences, 68, 37-42. 211. Fineberg NA, Reghunandanan S, Simpson HB, Phillips KA, Richter MA, Matthews K, Stein DJ, Sareen J, Brown A, Sookman D, (2015). Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): Practical strategies for pharmacological and somatic treatment in adults, Psychiatry Research, 227(1), 114-125. 212. Fischer B, Blanken P, Da Silveira D, Gallassi A, Goldner E, Rehm J,Tyndall M, Wood E, (2015). Effectiveness of Targeted Prevention and Treatment Interventions for Crack Use Abuse: A Comprehensive Narrative Review of English-language Studies, International Journal of Drug Policy, 26(4), 352-363. 213. Fischer B, Burnett C, Rehm J, (2015). Considerations towards a population health framework for prescription opioidrelated harms (with primary focus on Canada), Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy, 22(1), 60-65. 214. Fischer B, Jones W, Rehm J, (2014). Trends and changes in prescription opioid analgesic dispensing in Canada 20052012:An update with a focus on recent interventions, BMC Health Services, 14(90), 1-8.
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ARTICLES (continued) 215. Fischer B, Kuganesan S, Room R, (2015). Medical Marijuana programs – Implications for cannabis control reform: Observations from Canada, International Journal of Drug Policy, 26(01), 15-19. 216. Fischer B, Murphy Y, Kurdyak P, Goldner E, Rehm J, (2015). Medical Marijuana Programs - why might they matter for public health and why should we better understand their impacts?, Preventive Medicine Reports, 2, 53-56. 217. Fischer C, Egeto P, Fischer CE, Ismail Z, Smith EE, Schweizer TA (2014). Lacunar stroke, deep white matter disease and depression: a meta-analysis, International psychogeriatrics / IPA, 26(7), 1101-1109. 218. Fischer C, Karimpoor M, Tam F, Strother SC, Fischer CE, Schweizer TA, Graham SJ (2015). A computerized tablet with visual feedback of hand position for functional magnetic resonance imaging., Frontiers in human neuroscience, 9, 150-150. 219. Fischer C, Ting WK, Fischer CE, Millikin CP, Ismail Z, Chow TW, Schweizer TA (2015). Grey matter atrophy in mild cognitive impairment / early Alzheimer disease associated with delusions: a voxel-based morphometry study,Current Alzheimer research, 12(2), 165-172. 220. Fisher BC, Garges DM, Sun Y, Young R, Maguire K, Zipay D, Gambino M, Shapiro CM, (2014). Sex differences and the interaction of age and sleep Issues in neuropsychological testing performance across the lifespan in an add/adhd sample from the Years 1989 to 2009, Psychological Reports, 114, 404-438. 221. Fitzgerald PB, Mcqueen S, Daskalakis ZJ, Hoy KE (2014). A negative pilot study of daily bimodal transcranial direct current stimulation in schizophrenia, Brain Stimulation, 7(6), 813-816. 222. Flint AJ, Iaboni A, Mulsant BH, Rothschild AJ, Whyte EM, Meyers BS, for the STOP-PD Study Group, (2014). Effect of sertraline on risk of falling in older adults with psychotic depression on olanzapine: results of a randomized placebocontrolled trial, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 22, 332-336. 223. Flynn J, Zlotnik Shaul R, Hanson MD, Borschel GH, Zuker R, (2014). Pediatric facial transplantation: Ethical considerations, Plast Surg, 22(2), 67-69. 224. Fonseka T, Swampillai B, Timmins V, Scavone A, Mitchell R, Collinger KA, Goldstein BI, (2014). Significance of Borderline Personality-Spectrum Symptoms among Adolescents with Bipolar Disorder, Journal of Affective Disorders, 17, 39-45. 225. Fonseka TM, McIntyre RS, Soczynska JK, Kennedy SH (2015). Novel investigational drugs targeting IL-6 signaling for the treatment of depression. Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs, Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs, 24(4), 459-475. 226. Fonseka TM, Tiwari AK, Goncalves VF, Lieberman JA, Meltzer HY, Goldstein BI, Kennedy JL, Kennedy SH, Mueller DJ (2015). The role of genetic variation across IL-1β, IL-2, IL-6 and BDNF in antipsychotic-induced weight gain, World Journal of Biological Psychiatry, 16(1), 45-46. 227. Fonseka TM, Richter MA, Müller DJ, (2014). Second Generation Antipsychotic-Induced Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms in Schizophrenia: A Review of the Experimental Literature, Current Psychiatry Reports, 16(11), 1-17. 228. Fornadi K, Ronai KZ, Turanyi CZ, Malavade TS, Shapiro CM, Novak M, Mucsi I, Molnar MZ, (2014). Sleep apnea is not associated with worse outcomes in kidney transplant recipients, Sci Rep, 4, 6987. 229. Foussias G, Siddiqui I, Fervaha G, Agid O, Remington G (2015). Dissecting negative symptoms in schizophrenia: Oppurtunities for translation into new treatments, Journal of Psychopharmacology, 29(2), 116-126.
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ARTICLES (continued) 230. Fracalanza K, Koerner N, Antony MM, (2014). Testing a procedural variant of written imaginal exposure for generalized anxiety disorder, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 28(6), 559-569. 231. Frederick T, Chwalek M, Hughes J, Karabanow J, Kidd SA (2014). How stable is stable? Defining and measuring housing stability, Journal of Community Psychology, 42(8), 964-979. 232. Fucito LM, Bars MP, Forray A, Rojewski AM, Shiffman S, Selby P, West R, Foulds J, Toll BA (2014). Addressing the evidence for FDA nicotine replacement therapy label changes: A policy statement of the Association for the Treatment of Tobacco use and Dependence and the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 16(7), 909-914. 233. Furukawa Y, Kish SJ (2014). Parkinsonism in GTP cyclohydrolase 1-deficient DOPA-responsive dystonia, Brain, 138(5), e351-e351. 234. Gagliano SA, Paterson AD, Weale ME, Knight J (2015). Assessing models for genetic prediction of complex traits: a comparison of visualization and quantitative methods, BMC Genomics, 16(405), 2-11. 235. Gagliano SA, Tiwari AK, Freeman N, Lieberman JA, Meltzer HY, Kennedy JL, Knight J, Müller DJ (2014). Protein kinase cAMP-dependent regulatory type II beta (PRKAR2B) gene variants in antipsychotic-induced weight gain, Hum Psychopharmacol., 29(4), 330-335. 236. Gajaria A, Conn DK, Madan R, (2015). Telepsychiatry: effectiveness and feasibility, Smart Homecare Technology and Telehealth, 3, 59-67. 237. Gallagher D, Cooney C, Murphy S, Freyne A, Wrigley M, (2015). Mental healthcare for hospitalized older adults: a national survey of consultation-liaison services provided by old age psychiatrists in Ireland, Int Psychogeriatr, 27(2), 347-348. 238. Gallagher D, Herrmann N, (2015). Agitation and aggression in Alzheimer’s disease: an update on pharmacological and psychosocial approaches to care, Neurodegener Dis Manag, 5(1), 77-83. 239. Gallagher D, Herrmann N, (2014). Antiepileptic drugs for the treatment of agitation and aggression in dementia: do they have a place in therapy?, Drugs, 74(15), 1747-1755. 240. Gamaleddin IH, Trigo JM, Gueye AB, Zvonok A, Makriyannis A, Goldberg SR, Le Foll B (2015). Role of the endogenous cannabinoid system in nicotine addiction: novel insights, Front Psychiatry, 6, 41-41. 241. Garcia K, Le AD, Tyndale RF, Garcia K, Tyndale RF (2014). Effect of food training and training dose on nicotine selfadministration in rats, Behavioral Brain Research, 274(1), 10-18. 242. Garcia LJ, McCleary, L, Emerson V, Leopoldoff H, Dalziel W, Drmmond N, Cohen C, Koehn S, Silvius J, (2014). The Pathway to Diagnosis of Dementia for Francophones Living in a Minority Situation, The Gerontologist, 54(6), 964-975. 243. Garfield LD, Dixon D, Nowotny P, Lotrich FE, Pollock BG, Kristjansson SD, Doré PM, Lenze EJ, (2014). Common SSRI side-effects in older adults associated with genetic polymorphisms in the serotonin transporter and receptors: Data from a randomized controlled trial, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 22(10), 971-79. 244. Garrett DD, McIntosh AR, Grady CL (2014). Brain signal variability is parametrically modifiable, Cerebral Cortex, 24(11), 2931-2940.
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ARTICLES (continued) 245. Gauthier LR, Young A, Dworkin RH, Rodin G, Zimmermann C, Warr D, Librach SL, Moore M, Shepherd FA, Pillai Riddell R, Macpherson A, Melzack R, Gagliese L (2014). Validation of the short-form McGill pain questionnaire-2 in younger and older people with cancer pain, Journal of Pain, 15(7), 756-770. 246. Gebara MAI, Shea MLO, Lipsey K, Teitelbaum S, Civitelli R, Müller DJ, Reynolds CF III, Mulsant BH, Lenze EJ, (2014). Depression, antidepressants and bone health in older adults: a systematic review, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 68(8), 1434-1441. 247. Geist R, (2015). The Capacity to Consent to Treatment in Youth: A Retrospective Lens, Health Law in Canada, 35(3), 7984. 248. George C, Makoroka L, Husbands W, Adam BD, Remis R, Rourke SB, Read S, (2014). Sexual health determinants in black men-who-have-sex-with-men living in Toronto, Canada, Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 6(4), 151-162. 249. Georgiades S, Boyle M, Szatmari P, Hanna S, Duku E, Zwaigenbaum L, Bryson S, Fombonne E, Volden J, Mirenda P, Smith I, Roberts W, Vaillancourt T, Waddell C (2014). Modeling the phenotypic architecture of autism symptoms from time of diagnosis to age 6, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 44(12), 3045-3055. 250. Geraci J, Downar J, Bakker N, Dunlop K, Giacobbe P, Kennedy S, (2014). A Novel Machine Learning Method for the Analysis of Graph Theory Measures of fMRIs for Biomarker Discovery, Biol Psychiatry, 75(9), 262S-S. 251. Germani T, Zwaigenbaum L, Bryson S, Brian H, Smith i, Roberts W, Szatmari P, Roncadin C, Sacrey LA, Garon N, Vaillancourt T (2014). Brief Report: Assessment of Early Sensory Processing in Infants at high-risk of autism spectrum disorder, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 44(12), 3264-3270. 252. Gerretsen P, Menon M, Mamo DC, Fervaha G, Remington G, Pollock BG, Graff-Guerrero A (2014). Impaired insight into illness and cognitive insight in schizophrenia spectrum disorders: resting state functional connectivity,Schizophr Res, 160(1-3), 43-50. 253. Gerretsen P, Flint AJ, Whyte E, Rothschild AJ, Meyers BS, Mulsant BH, (2014). Impaired insight into delusional symptoms predicts treatment outcome during a randomized clinical trial for psychotic depression: The STOP-PD study, Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 76, 427-433. 254. Gerretsen P, Menon M, Chakravarty MM, Lerch JP, Mamo DC, Remington G, Pollock BG, Graff Guerrero A, (2015). Illness Denial in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: A Function of Left Hemisphere Dominance, Human Brain Mapping, 36(1), 213-25. 255. Gerretsen P, Remington G, Borlido C, Quilty L, Hassan S, Polsinelli G, Teo C, Mar W, Simon R, Menon M, Pothier DD, Nakajima S, Caravaggio F, Mamo DC, Rajji TK, Mulsant BH, Deluca V, Ganguli R, Pollock BG, Graff-Guerrero A, (2014). The VAGUS insight into psychosis scale - Self-report & clinician-rated versions, Psychiatry Research, 220(3), 10841089. 256. Gewurtz R, Cott C, Rush BR, Kirsh B (2015). How does outcome-based funding affect service delivery? An analysis of consequences within employment services for people living with serious mental illness, Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 42(1), 19-28. 257. Ghai A, Milosevic I, Laliberte M, Taylor VH, McCabe RE, (2014). Body Image Concerns In Obese Women Seeking Bariatric Surgery, Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 7(2), 96-107.
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ARTICLES (continued) 258. Ghisi GM, Britto R, Motamedi N, Grace SL (2015). Disease-related knowledge in cardiac rehabilitation enrollees: Correlates and changes, Patient Education & Counseling, 98(4), 533-539. 259. Ghisi GM, Grace SL, Thomas S, Evans M, Oh P (2015). Behavior determinants among cardiac rehabilitation patients receiving educational interventions: an application of the Health Action Process Approach, Patient Education & Counselling, 98(5), 612-621. 260. Ghisi GM, Grace SL, Thomas S, Evans M, Oh P (2015). Development and psychometric validation of the second version of the Coronary Artery Disease Questionnaire (CADE-Q II), Patient Education and Counselling, 98(3), 378-483. 261. Gibbins S, Stevens B, Dionne K, Yamada J, Pillai Riddell R, McGrath P, Asztalos E, O’Brien K, Beyene J, McNamara P, Johnston C (2015). Perceptions of health professionals on pain in extremely low gestational age infants, Qualitative Health Research, 25(6), 763-774. 262. Gildengers AG, Butters MA, Aizenstein HJ, Marron MM, Emanuel J, Anderson SJ, Weissfeld LA, Becker JT, Lopez OL, Mulsant BH, Reynolds CF 3rd, (2014). Longer lithium exposure is associated with better white matter integrity in older adults with bipolar disorder, Bipolar Disord, 17(3), 248-256. 263. Gillespie P, O’Shea E, Cullinan J, Buchanan J, Bobula J, Lacey L, Gallagher D, Mhaolain AN, Lawlor B, (2015). Longitudinal costs of caring for people with Alzheimer’s disease, Int Psychogeriatr, 27(5), 847-56. 264. Glancy G, Ash P, Bath EPJ, Buchanan A, Pederoff P, Frierson RL, Harris VL, Hatters Friedman SJ, Hauser MJ, Knoll J, Norko M, Pinals D, Price M, Recupero P, Scott CL, Zonana HV (2015). American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Practice Guideline for Forensic Psychiatric Assessment, J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 43(2), s3-s53. 265. Goldman J, Reeves S, Kitto S, Silver I, Wu R, MacMillan K, (2015). Medical residents and interprofessional interactions in discharge: an ethnographic exploration of factors that affect negotiation, Journal of General Internal Medicine, 30(363), 1188. 266. Goldner E, Jenkins E, Fischer B, (2014). A review of recent developments in knowledge translation and implications for mental healthcare providers, Can J Psychiatry, 59(3), 160-169. 267. Goldner E, Lusted A, Roerecke M, Rehm J, Fischer B, (2014). Prevalence of Axis-1 psychiatric disorder and symptomatology among non-medical prescription opioid users in substance use treatment: Systematic review and meta-analysis, Addictive Behaviours, 39(3), 520-531. 268. Goldstein BI, Schaffer A, Wang S, Blanco C, (2015). Excessive and premature new-onset cardiovascular disease among adults with bipolar disorder in the US NESARC cohort, Journal Clinical Psychiatry, 76(2), 163-169. 269. Golombek DA, Pandi-Perumal SR, Brown GM, Cardinali DP, (2015). Some implications of melatonin use in chronopharmacology of insomnia, European Journal of Pharmacology, 762, 42-48. 270. Gomez L, Wigg K, Zhang K, Lopez L, Sandor P, Malone M, Barr CL (2014). Association of the KCNJ5 gene with Tourette Syndrome and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, Genes Brain Behav, 13(6), 535-542. 271. Goncalves VF, Andreazza AC, Kennedy JL (2015). Mitochondrial dysfunction in schizophrenia: an evolutionary perspective, Hum Genet., 134(1), 13-21. 272. Gorczynski P, Faulkner G, Cohn T, Remington G (2014). Examining strategies to improve accelerometer compliance for individuals living with schizophrenia, Psychiatr Rehabil J, 37(4), 333-335.
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ARTICLES (continued) 273. Gorman D, Gardner D, Murphy A, Feldman M, Bélanger M, Steele M, Boylan K, Cochrane-Brink K, Goldade R, Soper P, Ustina J, Pringsheim T, (2015). Canadian guidelines on pharmacotherapy for disruptive and aggressive behaviour in children and adolescents with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, or conduct disorder, Can J Psychiatry, 60(2), 62-76. 274. Gorman DA, Abi-Jaoude E, (2014). Obsessive-compulsive disorder, CMAJ, 186(11), E435. 275. Grace SL, Parsons TL, Duhamel T, Somanader D, Suskin N (2014). The quality of cardiac rehabilitation in Canada: A report of the Canadian Cardiac Rehab Registry, Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 30(11), 1452-1455. 276. Grace SL, Poirier P, Norris CM, Oakes G, Somanader D, Suskin N (2014). Pan-Canadian development of cardiac rehabilitation and secondary prevention quality indicators, Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 30(8), 945-948. 277. Grace SL, Yee J, Reid R, Stewart DE (2014). Measurement of depressive symptoms among cardiac outpatients: Should sex differences be considered?, Journal of Health Psychology, 19(7), 943-952. 278. Grady CL, Luk G, Craik FIM, Bialystok E (2015). Dynamic range of brain network activity in monolingual and bilingual older adults, Neuropsychologia, 66(1), 170-181. 279. Grady CL, St-Laurent M, Burianova H (2015). Age differences in brain activity related to unsuccessful declarative memory retrieval, Brain Research, 1612, 30-47. 280. Gravely S, Anand SS, Stewart DE, Grace SL (2014). Effect of referral strategies on access to cardiac rehabilitation among women, European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 21(8), 1018-1025. 281. Greenlee H, Balneaves LG, Carlson LE, Cohen M, Deng, G, Hershman D, Mumber M, Perlmutter J, Seely D, Sen A, Zick SM, Tripathy D (2015). Clinical practice guidelines on the use of integrative therapies as a supportive care in patients treated for breast cancer., Journal of the National Cancer Institute Monographs, 2015(50), 346-358. 282. Greutmann M, Tobler D, Kovacs AH, Greutmann-Yantiri M, Haile SR, Held L, Ivanov J, Williams WG, Oechslin E, Silversides CK, Colman JM, (2015). Increasing mortality burden among adults with complex congenital heart disease, Congenital Heart Disease, 1, 117-127. 283. Grigoriadis S, (2014). The effects of antidepressant medications on mothers and babies, Popul Ther Clin Pharmacol., 21(3), 533-541. 284. Gros DF, Farmer AS, McCabe RE, Antony MM, (2015). Psychometric evaluation of the Multidimensional Assessment of Social Anxiety before and after cognitive behavioral therapy for social anxiety disorder, Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 37(1), 144-152. 285. Grossman D, Rootenberg M, Perri GA, Yogaparan T, DeLeon M, Calabrese S, Grief C, Moore J, Gill A, Stilos K, Daines P, Mazzotta P, (2014). Enhancing Communication in End-of-life Care: The Creation of a Clinical Tool to Translate the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) adn Palliative Performance Scale (PPS), Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 62(8), 1562-1567. 286. Guaiana G, Barbui C, Bighelli I, Trespidi C, Chiodo D, Davies SJC, Koesters M (2015). Antidepressants and benzodiazepines for panic disorder in adults, The Cochrane Library, 2015(3), 11567-11567. 287. Guild EB, Cripps JM, Anderson ND, Al-Aidroos N, (2014). Recollection can support hybrid visual search,Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 21(1), 142-148.
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ARTICLES (continued) 288. Guild EB, Vasquez BP, Maione AM, Mah L, Ween J, Anderson ND, (2014). Dynamic working memory performance in individuals with single-domain amnestic mild cognitive impairment, Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 36(7), 751-760. 289. Guilloux JP, Bassi S, Ding Y, Walsh C, Turecki G, Tseng G, Cyranowski JM, Sibille E (2015). Testing the predictive value of peripheral gene expression for nonremission following citalopram treatment for major depression,Neuropsychopharmacology, 4, 701-710. 290. Hales S, Chiu A, Husain A, Gagliese L, Zimmermann C, Rodin G (2014). The quality of dying and death in metastatic solid tumour cancers and its relationship to specialized palliative care and place of death, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 48(5), 839-851. 291. Halko MA, Farzan F, Eldaief MC, Schmahmann JD, Pascual-Leone A (2014). Intermittent theta-burst stimulation of the lateral cerebellum increases functional connectivity of the default network, J Neuroscience, 34(36), 12049-12056. 292. Hall E, Steiner M (2015). Psychiatric symptoms and disorders associated with reproductive cyclicity in women: advances in screening tools, Women’s Health, 11(3), 397-415. 293. Hall JN, Woods N, Hanson MD, (2014). Is Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) Premedical Education Marginalized in the Medical School Admission Process? A Review and Contextualization of the Literature,Academic Medicine, 87(7), 1075-1086. 294. Hamani C, Amorim BO, Wheeler AL, Diwan M, Driesslein K, Covolan L, Butson CR, Nobrega JN (2014). Deep brain stimulation in rats: Different targets induce similar antidepressant-like effects but influence different circuits,Neurobiology of Disease, 71, 205-214. 295. Hannon B, Hannon B, Dyck M, Pope A, Swami N, Banerjee S, Mak E, Bryson J, Rodin G, Ridley J, Lo C, Le LW, Zimmermann C (2015). Modified Edmonton Symptom Assessment System including constipation and sleep: Validation in outpatients with cancer, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 49(5), 945-952. 296. Hannon B, Swami N, Pope A, Rodin G, Dougherty E, Mak E, Banerjee S, Bryson J, Ridley J, Zimmermann C (2015). The oncology palliative care clinic at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre: An early intervention model for patients with advanced cancer, Supportive Care in Cancer, 23(4), 1073-1080. 297. haqanee Z, Peterson-Badali M, Skilling T (2015). Making “”what works”“ work: Examining probation officers’ experiences addressing the criminogenic needs of juvenile offenders, Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 54(1), 37-59. 298. Hara KM, Westra HA, Aviram A, Button ML, Constantino MJ, Antony MM, (2015). Therapist awareness of client resistance in cognitive-behavioural therapy for generalized anxiety disorder, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, 44(2), 162174. 299. Hardeland R, Cardinali DP, Brown GM, Cardinali DP, (2015). Melatonin and brain inflammaging, Progress in Neurobiology, 127, 46-63. 300. Harkness KL, Bagby RM, Stewart JG, Larocque CL, Mazurka R, Strauss JS, Ravindran A, Rector NA, Wynne-Edwards KE, Kennedy JL (2015). Childhood emotional and sexual maltreatment moderate the relation of the serotonin transporter gene to stress generation, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 124(2), 275-287. 301. Harris GT, Lowenkamp CT, Hilton NZ (2015). Evidence for risk estimate precision: Implications for individual risk communication, Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 33(1), 111-127.
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ARTICLES (continued) 302. Harris GT, Rice ME (2015). Progress in Violence Risk Assessment Communication: Hypothesis versus Evidence,Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 33(1), 128-145. 303. Hart AB, Gamazon ER, Engelhardt BE, Sklar P, Kähler AK, Hultman CM, Sullivan PF, Neale BM, Faraone SV; Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: ADHD Subgroup, de Wit H, Cox NJ, Palmer AA, (2014). Genetic variation associated with euphorigenic effects of d-amphetamine is associated with diminished risk for schizophrenia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 22:111(16), 5968-5973. 304. Hart TL, Blacker S, Panjwani A, Torbit L, Evans M (2015). Development of multimedia informational tools for breast cancer patients with low levels of health literacy, Patient Education and Counseling, 98(3), 370-377. 305. Hart TL, Coon DW, Kowalkowski MA, Zhang K, Hersom JI, Goltz HH, Wittmann DA, Latini DM (2014). Changes in sexual roles and quality of life for gay men after prostate cancer: challenges for sexual health providers, The journal of sexual medicine., 11(9), 2308-2317. 306. Hatch J, Collinger K, Moody A, Olowoyeye O, Zhan JQ, Goldstein BI, (2014). Non-invasive vascular imaging is associated with cardiovascular risk factors among adolescents with bipolar disorder, Pediatric Cardiology, 36(1), 158164. 307. Hawa R, (2015). A Case of an RLS Mimic Treated with an Antipsychotic, Journal of Sleep Disorders & Therapy, 4(3), 12. 308. Hawa R, Sockalingam S, (2014). Lithium Toxicity Following Roux-En-Y Gastric Bypass- Perioperative Lithium Dosing Protocol, Bariatric Surgery Practice and Patient Care, 9(3), 127-128. 309. Hawley L, Schwartz D, Bieling P, Irving J, Corcoran K, Farb N, Adamson A, Segal Z (2014). Mindfulness Practice, Rumination and Clinical Outcome in Mindfulness-Based Treatment, Cognitive Therapy and Research, 38(1), 1-9. 310. Hawley L, Zuroff D, Brozina K, Ringo Ho M, Dobson K (2014). Self-Critical Perfectionism and Stress Reactivity Following Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depression, International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 7(3), 287-303. 311. Haydour Q, Alahdad F, Farah M, Borrioneuvo M, Vertigan A, Nwcombe P, Pringsheim T, Chang A, Rubin B, McGarvey L, Weir K, Altman K, Feinstein A, Murad Mohammad, Irwin R (2014). Management and diagnosis of psychogenic cough, habit cough and tic cough. A systemic review, Chest, 142(2), 355-372. 312. Hayes D, Lipsman N, Chen D, Woodside DB, Davis K, Lozano A, Hodaie M, (2015). Subcallosal Cingulate Connectivity in Anorexia Nervosa Patients Differs From Healthy Controls: A Multi-tensor Tractography Study,Brain Stimulation, 1-11. 313. Helmus L, O’ Ciardha C, Seto MC (2015). The Screening Scale for Pedophilic Interests (SSPI): Construct, predictive, and incremental validity, Law and Human Behavior, 39(1), 35-43. 314. Hendershot CS, (2015). Pharmacogenetic approaches in the treatment of alcohol use disorders: Addressing clinical utility and implementation thresholds, Addiction Science and Clinical Practice, 9(20), 1-8. 315. Hendershot CS, Wardell JD, Strang NM, Markovich MSD, Claus ED, Ramchandani VA (2015). Application of an alcohol clamp paradigm to examine inhibitory control, subjective responses and acute tolerance in late adolescence,Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, 23(3), 147-158. 316. Henderson J, Sword W, Niccols A, Dobbins M, (2014). Implementing stakeholder-informed research: Strategies used by Connections, a Canadian national knowledge translation and exchange project, Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy, 9(21), 1-5.
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ARTICLES (continued) 317. Hensel J, Flint AJ (2015). Addressing the Access Problem for Patients with Serious Mental Illness who Require Tertiary Medical Care, Journal of health care for the poor and underserved, 26(1), 35-48. 318. Hensel J, Lunsky Y, Dewa CS (2015). Exposure to aggressive behaviour and burnout in direct support providers: The role of positive work factors, Research in Developmental Disabilities, 36(1), 404-412. 319. Hensel J, Ruiz C, Finney C, Dewa CS (2015). Meta†Analysis of Risk Factors for Secondary Traumatic Stress in Therapeutic Work With Trauma Victims, Journal of Traumatic Stress, 28(2), 83-91. 320. Hensel J, Flint AJ, (2015). The access problem for patients with serious mental illness who require tertiary medical care, Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 26, 35-48. 321. Hensel J, Lunsky Y, Dewa C, (2014). The mediating effect of severity of client aggression on burnout between hospital inpatient and community residential staff who support adults with intellectual disabilities, Journal of Clinical Nursing, 23(9-10), 1332-1341. 322. Hensel JM, Lunsky Y, Dewa CS, (2014). Staff perception of aggressive behaviour in community services for adults with intellectual disabilities, Commnuity Mental Health Journal, 50(6), 743-751. 323. Herrmann N, Harimoto T, Balshaw R, Lanctôt KL, the COSID study investigators, (2015). Risk factors for progression of Alzheimer’s disease in a Canadian population: The Canadian Outcomes Study in Dementia (COSID), Can J Psychiatry, 60(4), 189-199. 324. Hettige NC, Zai C, Hazra M, Borlido C, Kennedy JL, Strauss J, Le Foll B, Wong A, Remington G, De Luca V (2014). Use of candidate gene markers to guide antipsychotic dosage adjustment., Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry, 54, 315-320. 325. Hicks JW, Parkes J, Tong J, Houle S, Vasdev N, Wilson AA (2014). Radiosynthesis and ex vivo evaluation of [(11)Ccarbonyl]carbamate- and urea-based monoacylglycerol lipase inhibitors, Nucl Med Biol, 41(8), 688-694. 326. Hicks JW, Sadovski O, Parkes J, Houle S, Hay BA, Carter RL, Wilson AA, Vasdev N (2015). Radiosynthesis and ex vivo evaluation of [F-18]-(S)-3-(6-(3-fluoropropoxy) benzo[d]isoxazol-3-yl)-5-(methoxymethyl)oxazoli din-2-one for imaging MAO-B with PET, Bioorg Med Chem Lett, 25(2), 288-291. 327. Hilton NZ, Ball LC (2015). Voices of mothers with mental illness: Intersectional identities in a psychiatric hospital,Canadian Journal of Psychiatric Nursing Research, 9(1), 50-62. 328. Hilton NZ, Ham E (2015). Cost-effectiveness of electronic training in domestic violence risk assessment: ODARA 101, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 30(6), 1065-1073. 329. Hilton NZ, Ham E, Lang C, Harris GT (2015). Weight gain and its correlates among forensic inpatients, Can J Psychiatry, 60(5), 232-238. 330. Hilton NZ, Harris GT, Rice ME (2015). The step-father effect in child abuse: Comparing discriminative parental solicitude and antisociality, Psychology of Violence, 5(1), 8-15. 331. Hilton NZ, Scurich N, Helmus LM (2015). Communicating the risk of violent and offending behavior: Review and introduction to this special issue, Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 33(1), 1-18. 332. Hirschtritt ME, Lee PC, Pauls DL, Dion Y, Grados MA, Illmann C, King RA, Sandor P, McMahon WM, Lyon GJ, Cath DC, Kurlan R, Robertson MM, Osiecki L, Scharf JM, Mathews CA for the Tourette Syndrome Association International
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ARTICLES (continued) Consortium for Genetics (215). Lifetime Prevalence, Age of Risk, and Genetic Relationships of Comorbid Psychiatric Disorders in Tourette Syndrome, JAMA Psychiatry, 72(4), 325-333. 333. Hodges BD, (2015). Sea monsters & whirlpools: Navigating between examination and reflection in medical education, Medical Teacher, 37(3), 261-266. 334. Hodges BD, (2014). When I say...critical theory, Medical Education, 48(11), 1043-1044. 335. Hopkins K, Meyer M, Shera W, Petters C, (2014). Leadership challenges facing noprofit human service organizations in a post-recession era, Human Service Organizations: Management, Leadership and Governance, 38(5), 419-422. 336. Horton RE, Riddell RP, Flora D, Moran G, Pederson D (2015). Distress regulation in infancy: attachment and temperament in the context of acute pain, Journal of Development and Behavioral Pediatrics, 36(1), 35-44. 337. Huang X, Law S, Li D, Yu X, Li B (2014). Mercury poisoning: a case of a complex neuropsychiatric illness, The American journal of psychiatry, 171(12), 1253-1256. 338. Im-Bolter N, Anam M, Cohen N J (2015). Mother-child synchrony and child problem behavior, Journal of Child and Family Studies, 24(3), 1876-1885. 339. Imtiaz S, Shield K, Fischer B, Rehm J, (2014). Harms of prescription opioid use in the United States, Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention and Policy, 9(43), 1-5. 340. Isenberg-Grzeda E, Ellis J (2015). Supportive care and psychological issues around cancer, Current Opinion in Supportive and Palliative Care, 9(1), 38-39. 341. Ismail Z, Arenovich T, Granger R, Grieve C, Willett P, Patten S, Mulsant BH, (2014). Associations of medical comorbidity, psychosis, pain, and capacity with psychiatric hospital length of stay in geriatric inpatients with and without dementia, Int Psychogeriatr, 1-9. 342. Jackson TD, Saleh F, Quereshy FA, Sockalingam S, Urbach D, Okrainec A, (2014). Short-term morbidity associated with removal and revision of the laparoscopic adjustable gastric band, Surg Obes Relat Dis, 10(6), 1110-1115. 343. James-Abra S, Tarasoff LA, Marvel S, Green D, Epstein R, Anderson S, Steele LS, Ross LE, (2015). Trans people’s experiences with assisted reproduction services: A qualitative study, Human Reproduction, 30(6), 1365-1374. 344. Jang RW, Caraiscos VB, Swami N, Banerjee S, Mak E, Kaya E, Rodin G, Bryson J, Ridley JZ, Le LW, Zimmermann C (2014). Simple prognostic model for patients with advanced cancer based on performance status,Journal of Oncology Practice, 10(5), e355-e341. 345. Jenney A, Mishna F, Alaggia R, Scott K (2014). Doing the Right Thing? (Re)Considering risk assessment and safety planning in child protection work with domestic violence cases, Children and Youth Services Review, 47, 92-101. 346. Jennings J, Khanlou N, Su C (2014). Public health policy and social support for immigrant mothers raising disabled children in Canada, Disability and Society, 29(10), 1645-1657. 347. Jones B, Chopra K, Grummitt J, Ravindran A, Levitan R, (2014). Adult Attachment style predicts depression relapse following a 28-Day Alternate Inpatient Milieu Program, Asian J. Psychiatry, 104-105. 348. Jones JM, Damji AN, Bies K, Alibhai SMH (2015). Bone health management in men undergoing ADT: examining enablers and barriers to care, Osteoporosis International, 26(3), 951-959.
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ARTICLES (continued) 349. Kadmon G, Chung SA, Shapiro CM, (2014). I’M SLEEPY: a short pediatric sleep apnea questionnaire, Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol, 78(12), 2116-20. 350. Kaduri P, Voci S, Zawertailo L, Chaiton M, McKenzie K, Selby P (2015). Real-world effectiveness of Varenicline versus nicotine replacement therapy in patients with and without psychiatric disorders, Journal of Addiction Medicine, 9(3), 169-176. 351. Kalache SM, Mulsant BH, Davies SJ, Liu AY, Voineskos AN, Butters MA, Miranda D, Menon M, Kern RS, Rajji TK (2015). The impact of aging, cognition, and symptoms on functional competence in individuals with schizophrenia across the lifespan, Schizophrenia Bulletin, 41(2), 374-381. 352. Kalahani-Bargis K, Foussias G, Remington G, Zakzanis K, Jeffay E (2014). C-23 longitudinal analysis of verbal fluency in chronic schizophrenia, Arch Clin Neuropsychol, 29(6), 580-581. 353. Kao AC, Rojnic Kuzman M, Tiwari AK, Zivkovic MV, Chowdhury NI, Medved V, Kekin I, Zai CC, Lieberman JA, Meltzer HY, Bozina T, Bozina N, Kennedy JL, Sertic J, Müller DJ, (2014). Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene variants and antipsychotic-induced weight gain and metabolic disturbances, J Psychiatr Res, 54, 36-42. 354. Karp JF, Butters MA, Begley AE, Miller MD, Lenze EJ, Blumberger DM, Mulsant BH, Reynolds CF, (2014). Safety, tolerability, and clinical effect of low-dose buprenorphine for treatment-resistant depression in midlife and older adults, Journal Clinical Psychiatry, 75(8), 785-796. 355. Karthikeyan R, Marimuthu G, Ramasubramanian C, Arunachal G, BaHammam AS, Spence DW, Cardinali DP, Brown GM, Pandi-Perumal SR (2014). Association of Per3 length polymorphism with bipolar I disorder and schizophrenia, Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, 1, 2325-2330. 356. Karthikeyan R, Marimuthu G, Spence DW, Pandi-Perumal SR, BaHammam AS, Brown GM, Cardinali DP, (2014). Should we listen to our clock to prevent type 2 diabetes mellitus?, Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice, 106(2), 182-190. 357. Kashyap M, Mulsant BH, Tannenbaum, (2015). Small longitudinal study of anticholinergic activity and cognitive change in community-dwelling older adults, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 23(3), 326-329. 358. Kashyap M, Mulsant BH, Tannenbaum C, (2015). Small longitudinal study of serum anticholinergic activity and cognitive change in community-dwelling older adults, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 23(3), 326-9. 359. Katzman MA, (2014). Managing major depressive disorder through the use of adjunct therapies, Psychiatry Research, 220(Sup1), S1-S2. 360. Katzman MA, Anand L, Furtado M, Chokka P, (2014). Food for thought: Improving management algorithms for major depressive disorder, Psychiatry Research, 220(Sup1), S3-S14. 361. Katzman MA, Bleau P, Blier P, Chokka P, Kjernisted K, Van Ameringen M; Canadian Anxiety Guidelines Initiative Group on behalf of the Anxiety Disorders Association of Canada/Association Canadienne des troubles anxieux and McGill University, Antony MM, Bouc, (2014). Canadian clinical practice guidelines for the management of anxiety, posttraumatic stress and obsessive-compulsive disorders, BMC Psychiatry, 14, 1-86. 362. Katzman MA, Furtado M, Anand L, (2014). Acne as a possible adverse effect of duloxetine, Bulletin of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 24(4), 408-410.
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ARTICLES (continued) 363. Katzman MA, Furtado M, Copeland A, Tsirgielis D, D’Ambrosio C, Anand L, Epstein I, (2014). Review of the Current Clinical Use of Quetiapine and Extended Release Quetiapine in the Management of the Anxiety and Related Disorders, Current Psychopharmacology, 3(2), 113-125. 364. Katzman MA, Sternat T, (2014). A review of OROS methylphenidate (Concerta) in the treatment of attentiondeficit/hyperactivity disorder, CNS Drugs, 28(11), 1005-1033. 365. Kenk M, Selvanathan T, Rao N, Suridjan I, Rusjan P, Remington G, Meyer JH, Wilson AA, Houle S, Mizrahi R, (2015). Imaging neuroinflammation in gray and white matter in schizophrenia: an in-vivo PET study with [18F]FEPPA, Schizophrenia Bulletin, 41(1), 85-93. 366. Kennedy SH, Avedisova A, Gimenez-Montesinos N, Belaidi C, Christian de B, (2014). A placebo controlled study of three agomelatine dose regimens (10mg, 25mg, 25-50mg) in patients with major depressive disorder, Eur J Neuropsychopharmacol, 24, 553-563. 367. Khaled MA, Pushparaj A, Di Ciano P, Diaz J, Le Foll B (2014). Dopamine D3 receptors in the basolateral amygdala and the lateral habenula modulate cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine seeking, Neuropsychopharmacology, 39(13), 3049-3058. 368. Khanlou N, Haque N, Sheehan S, Jones G (2014). It is an issue of not knowing where to go: Service providers’ perspective on challenges in accessing social support and services by immigrant mothers of children with disabilities. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 1-8. 369. Khanlou N, Wray R (2014). A whole community approach toward child and youth resilience promotion: A review of resilience literature, International Journal of Mental Health & Addiction, 12(1), 64-79. 370. Khanna A, Pascual-Leone A, Farzan F (2014). Reliability of resting-state microstate features in electroencephalography, PLoS One, 9(12), e114163. 371. Khanna A, Pascual-Leone A, Michel CM, Farzan F (2015). Microstates in resting-state EEG: current status and future directions, Neurosci Biobehav Rev, 49, 105-113. 372. Kidd SA, Hasan N, Trapp J, Spavor J, Collins A, Smith A (2015). Exploring the use of digital picture frames on schizophrenia inpatient wards, Psychiatric Services, 66(3), 330-330. 373. Kidd SA, Herman Y, Barbic S, Ganguli R, George TP, Hassan S, McKenzie K, Maples N, Velligan DI (2014). Testing a modification of Cognitive Adaptation Training: Streamlining the Model for Broader Implementation,Schizophr Res, 156(1), 46-50. 374. Kidd SA, Kaur J, Virdee G, George TP, McKenzie K, Herman Y (2014). Cognitive remediation for individuals with psychosis in a supported education setting: A randomized controlled trial, Schizophr Res, 157(1-3), 90-98. 375. Kim HK, Andreazza AC, Yeung PY, Isaacs-Trepanier C, Young LT (2014). Oxidation and nitration in dopaminergic areas of the prefrontal cortex from patients with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, J Psychiatry Neurosci., 39(4), 276-285. 376. Kim HK, Chen W, Andreazza AC (2015). The Potential Role of the NLRP3 Inflammasome as a Link between Mitochondrial Complex I Dysfunction and Inflammation in Bipolar Disorder, Neural Plast., 2015, 408136. 377. Kim J, Yu H, Ryan N, Axelson DA, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR,Diler RS, Monk K, Hickey M, Sakolsky D, Birmaher B, (2014). Longitudinal trajectories of ADHD symptomatology in offspring of parents with bipolar disorder and community controls, The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 76, 599-606.
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ARTICLES (continued) 378. Kim S, Al-Haj M, Chen S, Fuller S, Jain U, Carrasco M, Tannock R (2014). Colour vision in ADHD: part 1—testing the retinal dopaminergic hypothesis, Behav Brain Funct., 10(38), 1-12. 379. Kim S, Al-Haj M, Fuller S, Chen S, Jain U, Carrasco M, Tannock R (2014). Color vision in ADHD: part 2—does attention influence color perception?, Behav Brain Funct., 10(39), 1-9. 380. Kim S, Banaschewski T, Tannock R (2015). Color vision in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: A pilot visual evoked potential study, J Optom., 8(2), 116-130. 381. Kim S, Liu Z, Glizer D, Tannock R, Woltering S (2014). Adult ADHD and working memory: neural evidence of impaired encoding, Clin Neurophysiol., 125(8), 1596-1603. 382. King N, Balneaves LG, Levin G, Nguyen T, Nation J, Card C, Carlson LC (2015). Surveys of cancer patients and cancer care providers regarding complementary therapy use, communication and information needs, Integrative Cancer Therapies, 20(5), 1-1. 383. Kirk U, Brown KW, Downar J, (2015). Adaptive neural reward processing during anticipation and receipt of monetary rewards in mindfulness meditators, Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci, 10(5), 752-759. 384. Kitto S, Goldman J, Etchells E, Silver I, Peller J, Sargeant J, Reeves S, Bell M, (2015). Quality Improvement, Patient Safety, and Continuing Education: A Qualitative Study of the Current Boundaries and Opportunities for Collaboration Between These Domains, Academic Medicine, 90(2), 240-245. 385. Kleinman A, Caetano SC, Brentani H, Rocca CC, dos Santos B, Andrade ER, Zeni CP, Tramontina S, Rohde LA, Lafer B (2015). Attention-based classification pattern, a research domain criteria framework, in youths with bipolar disorder and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 49(3), 255-265. 386. Knights D, Silverberg MS, Weersma RK, Gevers D, Dijkstra G, Huang H, Tyler AD, van Sommeren S, Imhann F, Stempak JM, Huang H, Vangay P, Al-Ghalith GA, Russell C, Sauk J, Knight J, Daly MJ, Huttenhower C, Xavier RJ (2014). Complex host genetics influence the microbiome in inflammatory bowel disease, Genome Med, 6(12), 107-107. 387. Ko A, Swampillai B, Timmins V, Scavone A, Collinger K, Goldstein BI, (2014). Clinical Characteristics Associated with Lithium Use among Adolescents with Bipolar Disorder, Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, 24, 1-8. 388. Kocovski N, Fleming J, Hawley L, Ringo Ho M, Antony M (2015). Mindfulness and acceptance-based group therapy and traditional cognitive behavioral group therapy for social anxiety disorder: Mechanisms of change,Behaviour Research and Therapy, 70(1), 11-22. 389. Kolla NJ, Dunlop K, Downar J, Links P, Bagby M, Simpson A, et al, (2015). Ventral Striatum Monoamine Oxidase-A Is Associated with Ventral Striatum Functional Connectivity in Antisocial Personality Disorder: A PET/FMRI Study, Biol Psychiatry, 77(9), 366S-S. 390. Korczak DJ, Szatmari P, Morrison K, Duku E, Lipman E, (2014). Child and adolescent psychopathology predicts increased adult BMI: Results from a prospective community sample, Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, 35(2), 108-117. 391. Koshimori Y, Segura B, Christopher L, Lobaugh N, Duff-Canning S, Mizrahi R, Hamani C, Lang AE, Aminian K, Houle S, Strafella AP (2015). Imaging changes associated with cognitive abnormalities in Parkinson’s disease, Brain Struct Funct, 220(4), 2249-2261.
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ARTICLES (continued) 392. Kovacs AH, McCrindle BW, (2014). So hard to say good-bye: Transition from pediatric cardiology to adult care,Nature Rev Cardiol, 11(1), 51-62. 393. Kovacs AH, Moons P, (2014). Psychosocial functioning and quality of life in adults with congenital heart disease and heart failure, Heart Failure Clin, (10), 35-42. 394. Kowal T, Chessex C, Lee DS, Grace SL (2015). Integrated cardiovascular rehabilitation: How do non-cardiac and polyvascular disease patients fare? Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention, 35(2), 114-123. 395. Kral MJ, (2015). Critical suicidology as an alternative to mainstream revolving-door suicidology, Social Epistemology, 4(6), 10-11. 396. Kral MJ, (2014). The relational motif in participatory qualitative research, Qualitative Inquiry, 20(4), 143-149. 397. Kral MJ, Idlout L, Minore JB, Dyck RJ, Kirmayer LJ (2014). Unikkaartuit: Meanings and experiences of suicide among Inuit in Nunavut, Canada, International Journal of Indigenous Health, 10(3), 55-67. 398. Krause S, Rydall A, Hales S, Rodin G, Lo C (2015). Initial validation of the Death and Dying Distress Scale for the assessment of death anxiety in advanced cancer, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 49(1), 126-134. 399. Kröger C, Schulz J, Kosfelder J, Schweiger U, McMain S, Kliem S (2014). Factorial invariance of the EmotionDysregulation-Scale for Canadian and German Treatment seeking adults with borderline personality disorder, major depression or substance dependence, Personality and Individual Differences, 71, 124-129. 400. Kunyk D, Els C, Papadakis S, Selby P (2014). Tobacco use disorder treatment in primary care: Implementing a clinical system pathway in Alberta, Canadian Family Physician, 60(7), 646-655. 401. Kurdyak P, Newman A, Segal Z, (2014). Impact of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy on Health Care Utilization: A population-based controlled comparison, Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 77(2), 85-89. 402. Kurdyak P, Stukel TA, Goldbloom D, Kopp A, Zagorski B, Mulsant BH, (2014). Universal Coverage Without Universal Access: a study of psychiatrist supply and practice patterns in Ontario, Open Medicine, 8(3), 87-99. 403. Lai KS, Herrmann N, Saleem M, Lanctôt KL, (2015). Cognitive Outcomes following Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation: A Systematic Review, Cardiovasc Psychiatry Neurol, 2015, 209569. 404. Lai MH, Chan LF, Maniam T, Ravindran AV, (2014). Caught in the web: A review of internet-based suicide prevention, Journal of Medical Internet Research, 16(1), e30. 405. Lake JK, Perry A, Lunsky Y (2014). Mental health services for individuals with high functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder, Autism Research and Treatment, 2014(2014), 1-9. 406. Lake JK, Weiss JA, Dergal J, Lunsky Y (2014). Child, parent, and services predictors of psychotropic polypharmacy among adolescents and young adults with an autism spectrum disoder, Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, 24(9), 486-493. 407. Lake JK, Vogan V, Sawyer A, Weiss JA, Lunsky Y, (2015). Psychotropic medication use among adolescents and young adults with an autism spectrum disorder, Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, 25(3), 260-268. 408. Lam RW, Kennedy SH (2015). STAR*D and Measurement based care for depression: Don’t toss out the baby, Can J Psychiatry, 60(1), 6-8.
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ARTICLES (continued) 409. Lam RW, Kennedy SH, McIntyre RS, Khullar A (2014). Cognitive dysfunction in major depressive disorder: Effects on psychosocial functioning and implications for treatment, Can J Psychiatry, 59(12), 649-654. 410. Lam RW, Parikh SV, Michalak EE, Dewa CS, Kennedy SH (2015). Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments (CANMAT) consensus recommendations for functional outcomes in major depressive disorder, Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 27(2), 142-149. 411. Lanctôt K, O’Regan J, Schwartz Y, Swardfager W, Saleem M, Oh PI, Herrmann N, (2014). Assessing cognitive effects of anticholinergic medications in patients with coronary artery disease, Psychosomatics, 55, 66-68. 412. Lanctot KL, Chan SA, Herrmann N, Drye LT, Rosenberg PB, Scherer RW, Black SE, Vaidya V, Bachman DL, Mintzer JE, (2014). Effect of methylphenidate on attention in apathetic AD patients in a randomized placebo-controlled trial, International Psychogeriatrics, 26, 239-246. 413. Laposa JM, Collimore K, Hawley L, Rector N (2015). Distress tolerance in OCD and anxiety disorders, and its relationship with anxiety sensitivity and intolerance of uncertainty, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 33(1), 8-14. 414. Laposa JM, Collimore K, Rector NA (Senior Author) (2014). Is post-event processing a social anxiety specific or transdiagnostic cognitive process in the anxiety spectrum?, Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 42(6), 706-717. 415. Laposa JM, Rector NA (2014). Effects of videotaped feedback in group cognitive behavioral therapy for social anxiety disorder, International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 7(4), 360-372. 416. Lau T, Zamani D, Lee E, Asli K, Gill J, Brager N, Hawa R, Song W, Gill, E, Fitzpatrick R, Menezes NM, Pham VH, Douglass AB, Allain S, Meterissian GB, Gagnon N, Toeg H, Murphy C (2015). Factors Affecting Recruitment into Psychiatry: a Canadian Perspective, Academic Psychiatry, 39(3), 246-252. 417. Laver B, Diwan M, Nobrega JN, Hamani C (2014). Augmentative therapies do not potentiate the effects of deep brain stimulation in rats, Journal of Affective Disorders, 161, 87-90. 418. Lawson A, Murphy KE, Sloan E, Uleryk E, Dalfen A (2015). The relationship between sleep and postpartum mental disorders: A systematic review, J Affect Disord., 176(1), 65-77. 419. Le AD, Funk D, Coen K (2014). The role of kappa opioid receptors in stress-induced reinstatement of alcohol seeking in rats, Brain and Behaviour, 4(3), 356-367. 420. Le AD, Funk D, Lo S, Coen K (2014). Operant self-administration of alcohol and nicotine in a preclinical model of coabuse, Psychopharmacology, 231(20), 4019-4029. 421. Le AD, Uslaner JM, Winrow CJ, Gotter AL, Roecker AJ, Coleman PJ, Hutson PH, Renger JJ (2014). Selective orexin 2 receptor antagonism blocks cue-induced reinstatement, but not nicotine self-administration or nicotine-induced reinstatement, Behavioral Brain Research, 269(1), 61-65. 422. Le Foll B, Loheswaran G (2014). Alcohol inhalation, CMAJ, 186(10), E399-E399. 423. Le Foll B, Ng E, Di Ciano P, Trigo JM (2015). Psychiatric disorders as vulnerability factors for nicotine addiction: what have we learned from animal models?, Curr Top Behav Neurosci, 24, 155-170. 424. Le Foll B, Pushparaj A, Pryslawsky Y, Forget B, Vemuri K, Makriyannis A, Trigo JM (2014). Translational strategies for therapeutic development in nicotine addiction: rethinking the conventional bench to bedside approach,Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry, 52, 86-93.
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ARTICLES (continued) 425. Le Foll B, Tyndale RF (2015). Cannabinoids: Friend or foe? Clin Pharmacol Ther, 97(6), 528-531. 426. Le Foll B, Collo G, Rabiner EA, Boileau I, Merlo Pich E, Sokoloff P, (2014). Dopamine D3 receptor ligands for drug addiction treatment: update on recent findings, Prog Brain Res., 211, 255-75. 427. Le Foll B, Wilson AA, Graff A, Boileau I, Di Ciano P, (2014). Recent methods for measuring dopamine D3 receptor occupancy in vivo: importance for drug development, Front Pharmacol., 5, 161. 428. Le Strat Y, Dubertret C, Le Foll B (2015). Impact of age at onset of cannabis use on cannabis dependence and driving under the influence in the United States, Accid Anal Prev, 76, 1-5. 429. Leblond CS, Nava C, Polge A, Gauthier J, Huguet G, Szatmari P, et al (2014). Meta-analysis of SHANK Mutations in Autism Spectrum Disorders: a gradient of severity in cognitive impairments, PLoS Genetics, 10(9), 00-00. 430. Lee J, Korczak DJ, (2014). Factors associated with parental satisfaction with a pediatric crisis clinic, Journal of Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 23(2), 118-124. 431. Lee TC, Herbert M, Manassis K, (2014). Do anxious boys and girls differ in emotion recognition accuracy: disgust recognition implicated, Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 23, 61-64. 432. Leggio GM, Camillieri G, Platania CB, Castorina A, Marrazzo G, Torrisi SA, Nona CN, D’Agata V, Nobrega J, Stark H, Bucolo C, Le Foll B, Drago F, Salomone S (2014). Dopamine D3 receptor is necessary for ethanol consumption: an approach with buspirone, Neuropsychopharmacology, 39(8), 2017-2028. 433. Leonard C, Laird L, Burianova H, Graham S, Grady CL, Simic T, Rochon E (2015). Behavioural and Neural Changes after a “Choice†Therapy for Naming Deficits in Aphasia: Preliminary Findings, Aphasiology, 29(4), 506-525. 434. Lerman C, Schnoll RA, Hawk LW Jr, Cinciripini P, George TP, Wileyto EP, Heitjan D, Glick H, Leone FT, Benowitz N, Tyndale RF (2015). Nicotine Metabolic Ratio is Associated with Treatment Response in a Double-Blind, Placebo Controlled Trials of Transdermal Nicotine and Varenicline for Smoking Cessation, Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 3(1), 331-338. 435. Leszcz, M, (2014). The effective group psychotherapist, Groepen, 9(2), 9-20. 436. Leung T, Bergen A, Munafo MR, De Ruyck K, Selby P, De Luca V (2015). Effect of the rs1051730-rs16969968 variant and smoking cessation treatment: A meta-analysis, Pharmacogenomics, 16(7), 713-720. 437. Levitan RD, Rivera J, Silveira PP, Steiner M, Gaudreau H, Hamilton J, Kennedy JL, Davis C, Dube L, Fellows L, Wazana A, Matthews S, Meaney MJ, MAVAN Study Team (2015). Gender differences in the association between stop-signal reaction times, body mass indices and/or spontaneous food intake in pre-school children: an early model of compromised inhibitory control and obesity, Int J Obes (Lond), 39(4), 614-619. 438. Levkovitz Y, Isserles M, Padberg F, Lisanby SH, Bystritsky A, Xia G, Tendler A, Daskalakis ZJ, Winston JL, Dannon P, Hafez HM, Reti IM, Morales OG, Schlaepfer TE, Hollander E, Berman JA, Husain MM, Sofer U, Stein A, Adler S, Deutsch L, Deutsch F, Roth Y (2015). Efficacy and safety of deep transcranial magnetic stimulation for major depression: a prospective multicenter randomized controlled trial, World J Psychiatry, 14(1), 64-73. 439. Lewis CC, Stanick C, Martinez R, Weiner BJ, Kim M, Barwick M, Comtois KA, (2015). The Society for Implementation Research Collaboration Instrument Review Project: A Methodology to Promote Rigorous Evaluation, Implementation Science, 10(2).
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ARTICLES (continued) 440. Lewis CJ, Lewis CJ, Maier F, Horstkötter N, Eggers C, Visser-Vandewalle V, Moro E, Zurowski M, Kuhn J, Woopen C, Timmermann L (2015). The impact of subthalamic deep brain stimulation on caregivers of Parkinson’s disease patients: an exploratory study, Journal of Neurology, 262(2), 337-345. 441. Li CH, Stratford Jr RE, Velez de Mendizabal N, Cremers TIFH , Pollock BG, Mulsant B, Remington G, Bies RR, (2014). Prediction of Brain Clozapine and Norclozapine Concentrations in Humans from a Scaled Pharmacokinetic Model for Rat Brain and Plasma Pharmacokinetics, Journal of Translational Medicine, 12, 203. 442. Li CY, Chung L, Hsiung PC, Chen TJ, Liu SK, Pan AW (2014). A Psychometric Study of the Kinetic-House-Tree-Person Scoring System for People with Psychiatric Disorders in Taiwan, Hong Kong Journal of Occupational Therapy, 24(1), 20-27. 443. Lin CW, Chang LC, Tseng GC, Kirkwood CM, Sibille EL, Sweet RA (2015). VSNL1 Co-Expression Networks in Aging Include Calcium Signaling, Synaptic Plasticity, and Alzheimer’s Disease Pathways, Frontiers in Phsychiatry, 6, 1-9. 444. Lin E, Balogh R, Isaacs B, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Selick A, Wilton AS, Cobigo V, Lunsky Y (2014). Strengths and limitations of health and disability support administrative databases for population-based health research in intellectual and developmental disabilities, Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, 11(4), 235-244. 445. Lipsman N, Sankar T, Downar J, Kennedy SH, Lozano AM, Giacobbe P, (2014). Neuromodulation for treatmentrefractory major depressive disorder, CMAJ, 186(1), 33-39. 446. Lister J, Nobrega JN, Fletcher PJ, Remington G (2014). Oxidative stress and the antipsychotic-induced vacuous chewing movement model of Tardive Dyskinesia: Evidence for antioxidant-based prevention strategies,Psychopharmacology, 231(11), 2237-2249. 447. Liu S, Brooks D, Thomas S, Eysenbach G, Nolan RP, (2014). Lifesource XL-18 pedometer for measuring steps under controlled and free-living conditions, Journal of Sports Sciences, 33(10), 1001-1006. 448. Liu S, Hodgson C, Zbib AM, Payne AY, Nolan RP, (2014). The effectiveness of loyalty rewards to promote the use of an internet-based heart health program, Journal of Medical Internet Research, 16(7), e163. 449. Lo C, (2014). Cultural values and alexithymia, Sage Open, 1-6. 450. Lo C, Hales S, Jung J, Chiu A, Panday T, Rydall A, Nissim R, Malfitano C, Petricone-Westwood D, Zimmermann C, Rodin G (2014). Managing Cancer And Living Meaningfully (CALM): Phase 2 trial of a brief individual psychotherapy for patients with advanced cancer, Palliative Medicine, 28(3), 234-242. 451. Lobo DSS, Aleksandrova L, Knight J, Casey DM, el-Guebaly N, Nobrega JN, Kennedy J (2014). Addiction-related genes in Gambling Disorders: new insights from parallel human and pre-clinical models, Molecular Psychiatry, 1-7. 452. Lobo DSS, Quilty LC, Martins SS, Tavares H, Vallada H, Kennedy JL, Bagby BM (2014). Pathological gambling subtypes: A comparison of treatment-seeking and non-treatment-seeking samples from Brazil and Canada, Addictive Behaviors, 39(7), 1172-1175. 453. Loftus C, Wiesenfeld L , Afriyie-Boateng M (2015). Fresh Eyes on a Chronic Problem: Using Chart Audits to Understand the Current State of Delirium Care and Inform Quality Improvement Activities, The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 23(3), 176-177.
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ARTICLES (continued) 454. Logan AC, Katzman MA, Balanzá-MartÃnez V, (2015). Natural environments, ancestral diets and microbial ecology: is there a modern “paleo- deficit disorder”? Part I, Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 34(1), 1-18. 455. Logan AC, Katzman MA, Balanzá-MartÃnez V, (2015). Natural environments, ancestral diets and microbial ecology: is there a modern “paleo- deficit disorder”? Part II, Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 34(1), 1-21. 456. Loheswaran G, Soklaridis S, Selby P, Le Foll B (2015). Screening and Treatment for Alcohol, Tobacco and Opioid Use Disorders: A Survey of Family Physicians across Ontario, PLoS One, 10(4), e0124402-e0124402. 457. Lowther C, Costain G, Bassett AS, (2015). Reproductive genetic testing and human genetic variation in the era of genomic medicine, American Journal of Bioethics, 15(6), 25-26. 458. Lowther C, Costain G, Stavropoulos DJ, Melvin R, Silversides CK, Andrade DM, So J, Faghfoury H, Lionel AC, Marshall CR, Scherer SW, Bassett AS, (2015). Delineating the 15q13.3 microdeletion phenotype: a case series and systematic review of the literature, Genetics in Medicine, 17(2), 149-157. 459. Lunsky Y, Lake JK, Durbin J, Perry A, Bullock H, Morris S, Lee JS (2014). Understanding and improving care for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the emergency department, International Review of Research in Developmental Disabilities, 47(1), 1-37. 460. Lunsky Y, Balogh R, Jaakkimainen L, Sullivan W, (2014). Periodic health exams for adults with developmental disabilities: Are we doing enough?, Canadian Family Physician, 60(2), 109-110. 461. Lunsky Y, Hastings RP, Hensel J, Arenovich T, Dewa C S, (2014). Perception of positive contributions and burnout in community developmental disability workers, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 52(4), 249-257. 462. Lunsky Y, Tint A, Robinson S, Gordeyko M, Ouellette-Kuntz H, (2014). System-wide information about family caregivers of adults with intellectual/developmental disabilities – a scoping review of the literature, Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, 11(1), 8-18. 463. Lykins AD, Cantor JM (2014). Vorarephilia: A case study in masochism and erotic consumption, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43(1), 181-186. 464. Maahs DM, Daniels SR, de Ferranti SD, Dichek HL, Flynn J, Goldstein BI, Kelly AS, Nadeau KJ, Martyn-Nemeth P, Osganian SK, Quinn L, Shah AS, Urbina E, (2014). Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors in Youth With Diabetes Mellitus: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association, Circulation, 130(17), 1532-58. 465. Mabrouk R, Rusjan PM, Mizrahi R, Jacobs MF, Koshimori Y, Houle S, Ko JH, Strafella AP (2014). Image derived input function for [F-18]-FEPPA: application to quantify translocator protein (18 kDa) in the human brain, PLoS One, 9(12), 120. 466. MacDonalad DE, McFarlane T, Olmsted MP (2014). Diagnostic shift from eating disorder not otherwise specified to bulimia nervosa using DSM-5 proposed criteria: A clinical comparison with DSM-IV bulimia, Eating Behaviors, 15, 6062. 467. MacDonald DE, Trottier K, McFarlane T, Olmsted MP (2015). Empirically defining rapid response to intensive treatment to maximize prognostic utility for bulimia nervosa and purging disorder, Behaviour Research and Therapy, 68(5), 48-53. 468. MacDougall AG, McKinnon MC, Herdman KA, King MJ, Kiang M (2015). The relationship between insight and autobiographical memory for emotional events in schizophrenia, Psychiatry Research, 226(1), 392-395.
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ARTICLES (continued) 469. Macedo J, Khanlou N, Lui M (2015). Use of vignettes in qualitative research on drug use: Scoping review and case example from Brazil, International Journal of Mental Health & Addiction, 1-14. 470. MacFarlane J, Morin C, Montplaisir J (2014). Hypnotics in Insomnia: The Experience of Zolpidem, Clinical Therapeutics, 36(11), 1676-1701. 471. Machado-Vieira R, Frey BN, Andreazza AC, Quevedo J (2015). Translational Research in Bipolar Disorders, Neural Plast., 2015, 576978-576981. 472. MacIntosh BJ, Swardfager WL, Robertson AD, Tchistiakova E, Saleem M, Oh PI, Herrmann N, Stefanovic B, Lanctôt KL, (2015). Regional cerebral arterial transit time hemodynamics correlate with vascular risk factors and cognitive function in men with coronary artery disease, AJNR Am J Neuroradiol, 36(2), 295-301. 473. Mackowick KM, Barr MS, Rabin RA, Wing VC, Ouellet-Plamondon C, George TP (2014). Neurocognitive Endophenotypes and Tobacco and Cannabis Addiction in Schizophrenia, Progress Neuropsychopharmacol. Biol. Psychiatry, 52(1), 79-85. 474. Maclean L, Brown LJ, Astell AJ (2014). The effect of rhythmic musical training on healthy older adults’ gait and cognitive function, The Gerontologist, 54(4), 624-633. 475. MacLeod K, Brownlie EB (2015). Mental health and transitions from adolescence to emerging adulthood: developmental and diversity considerations, Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 33(1), 77-86. 476. MacLeod MA, Bauer GR, MacKay J, Robinson M, Ross LE, (2015). Notes on measuring posttraumatic stress disorder in bisexuals using the PTSD Checklist- Civilian Version (PCL-C), Journal of Bisexuality, 15(1), 69-81. 477. MacLeod MA, Bauer GR, Robinson M, MacKay J, Ross LE, (2015). Biphobia and anxiety among bisexuals in Ontario, Canada, Journal of Gay and Lesbian Mental Health (published online first May 27, 2015), 19(3), 217-243. 478. MacSwain M, Farrell MacDonald S, Cheverie M, Fischer B, (2014). Assessing the impact of opioid maintenance treatment (OMT) on post-release recidivism among male federal correctional inmates in Canada, Criminal Justice and Behavior, 41(3), 380-394. 479. Madigan S, Vaillancourt K, McKibbon A, Benoit D (2015). Trauma and traumatic loss in pregnant adolescents: the impact of trauma focused cognitive behavior therapy on maternal unresolved states of mind and post traumatic stress disorder, Attachment and Human Development, 17(2), 175-198. 480. Madigan S, Wade M, Plamondon A, Vaillancourt K, Jenkins J, Shouldice M, Benoit D (2014). Course of depression and anxiety symptoms during the transition to parenthood for female adolescents with histories of maltreatment,Child Abuse and Neglect, 38(7), 1160-1170. 481. Maheu C, Meschino W, Hu W Honeyford J, Ambus I, Kidd M, Benea A, Gao X, Azadbakhsh M, Rochefort C Esplen MJ (2015). Pilot testing of a psycho-educational telephone intervention for women receiving uninformative BRCA1/2 genetic test results, Canadian Journal of Nursing Research, 47(1), 53-71. 482. Maier R, Moser G, Chen GB, Ripke S, Cross-Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC), Coryell W, Potash JB, Scheftner WA, Shi J, Weissman MM, Hultman CM, Landen M, Levinson DF, Kendler KS, Smoller JW, Wray NR, Lee SH, (2015). Joint analysis of psychiatric disorders increases accuracy of risk prediction for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder, Am J Hum Genet, 96(2), 283-294.
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ARTICLES (continued) 483. Mak L, Streiner DL, Steiner M (2015). Is serotonin transporter polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) allele status a predictor for obsessive-compulsive disorder? A meta-analysis, Arch Womens Ment Health, 18(3), 435-445. 484. Maller JJ, Thomson RHS, Rosenfeld JV, Anderson R, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB (2015). Occipital bending in depression, Brain, 231(1), 8-14. 485. Maller JJ, Anderson R, Thomson RH, Rosenfeld JV, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB, (2015). Occipital bending (Yakovlevian torque) in bipolar depression, Psychiatry Research, 231(1), 8-14. 486. Manassis K, Lee TC, Bennett K, Yan Zhao X, Duda S, Saini M, Wilansky P, Baer S, et al (2014). Types of Parental Involvement in CBT with Anxious Youth: A Preliminary Meta-Analysis, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 82, 1-11. 487. Mansfield E, Stergio-Kita M, Kirsh B (2014). After the storm: The social relations of return to work following electrical injury, Qualitative Health Research, 24(9), 1183-1197. 488. Maoz H, Goldstein T, Goldstein BI, Axelson DA, Fan J, Hickey MB, Monk K, Sakolsky D, Diler RS, Brent D, Kupfer DJ, Birmaher B., (2014). The Effects of Parental Mood on Reports of Their Children’s Psychopathology,Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 53(10), 1111-1122.e5. 489. Marras C, Hincapei CA, Kristman VL, Cancelliere C, Soklaridis S, Li A, Borg J, af Geijerstam JL, Cassidy JD (2014). A systematic review of the risk of Parkinson’s disease after mild traumatic brain injury: Results of the International Collaboration on MTBI Prognosis, Archives of Physical and Rehabilitation, 95(3), 238-245. 490. Marshall C, Henderson J, (2014). The influence of family context on adolescent depression: A literature review,Canadian Journal of Family and Youth, 6(1), 163-187. 491. Martin MS, Dorken SK, Simpson AIF, McKenzie K, Colman I, (2014). The predictive validity of the Depression Hopelessness Suicide screening form for self-harm among prisoners, Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology, 25(6), 733-747. 492. Martinez Y J, Tannock R, Manassis K, Garland,EJ, Clark S, McInnes A (2015). The Teachers’ Role in the Assessment of Selective Mutism and Anxiety Disorders, Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 30(2), 1-19. 493. Mason R, Berman H (2014). Vulnerability, Risk, Harm and Benefit: The Business of Institutional Review Boards,Humanities & Social Sciences Review, 3(5), 517-524. 494. Mason R, O’Rinn S (2014). Co-occurring Intimate Partner Violence, Mental Health, and Substance Use Problems: A scoping review, Global Health Action, 7, 1-17. 495. Maunder R, L Wiesenfeld, S Rawkins (2015). Paths to barriers and difficulty in mental health care: The role of childhood abuse and neglect, Psychosomatic Medicine, 77(3), a47. 496. Mazereeuw G, Herrmann N, Xu H, Fai S, Oh PI, Bennett SAL, Lanctôt KL, (2014). Platelet activating factors are associated with cognitive deficits in depressed coronary artery disease patients: a hypothesis-generating study, J Neuroinflammation, 11(1), 119-119. 497. McAuley T, Crosbie J, Charach A, Schachar R, (2014). The persistence of cognitive deficits in remitted and unremitted ADHD: a case for the state-independence of response inhibition, J Child Psychol Psychiatry, 55(3), 292-300.
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ARTICLES (continued) 498. McCormick PN, Fletcher PJ, Wilson VS, Browne JDC, Nobrega JN, Remington GJ (2015). Low dose pramipexole causes D2/D3 receptor-independent reduction of locomotion and responding for a conditioned reinforcer,Neuropharmacology, 89(Feb), 225-231. 499. McCormick S, Peterson-Badali M, Skilling TA (2015). Mental health and justice system involvement: A conceptual analysis of the literature, Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 21(2), 213-225. 500. McDonald SD, McKinney B, Foster G, Taylor V, Lutsiv O, Pullenayegum E, (2015). The combined effects of maternal depression and excess weight on neonatal outcomes, Int J Obes (Lond), 39(7), 1033-1040. 501. McDonald SD, Park CK, Pullenayegum E, Bracken K, Sword W, McDonald H, Neupane B, Taylor VH, Beyene J, Mueller V, Brouwers M, (2015). Knowledge translation tool to improve pregnant women’s awareness of gestational weight gain goals and risks of gaining outside recommendations: a non-randomized intervention study, BMC Pregnancy Childbirth, 15, 105. 502. McFarlane T, McDonald DE, Trottier K, Olmsted MP (2015). The Effectiveness of an Individualized Form of Day Hospital Treatment for Eating Disorders, Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention, 23(3), 191-205. 503. McGrath LM, Yu D, Marshall C, Davis LK, Thiruvahindrapuram B, Li B, Cappi C, Gerber G, Wolf A, Schroeder FA, Osiecki L, O’Dushlaine C, Kirby A, Illmann C, Haddad S, Gallagher P, Fagerness JA, Barr CL, Bellodi L, Benarroch F, Bienvenu OJ, Black DW, Bloch MH, Bruun RD, (2014). Copy number variation in obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette syndrome: a cross-disorder study, J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 53(8), 910-919. 504. McIntyre RS, Soczynska JK, Cha D, Woldeyohannes H, Dale R, Alsuwaidan MT, Gallaugher LA, Mansur R, Muzina DJ, Carvalho A, Kennedy SH (2014). The prevalence and illness characteristics of DSM-5 defined “Mixed Feature Specifier†in adults with Major Depressive Disorder: Results from the International Mood Disorders Collaborative Project, Journal of Affective Disorders, 172, 259-264. 505. McIntyre RS, Soczynska JZ, Woldeyohannes HO, Alsuwaidan MT, Cha DS, Carvalho AF, Jerrell JM, Dale RM, Gallaugher LA, Muzina DJ, Kennedy SH (2015). The impact of cognitive impairment on perceived workforce performance: results from the International Mood Disorders Collaborative Project, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 56, 279-282. 506. McKinney BC, Lin CW, Oh H, Tseng GC, Lewis DA, Sibille E (2015). Hypermethylation of BDNF and SST Genes in the Orbital Frontal Cortex of Older Individuals: A Putative Mechanism for Declining Gene Expression with Age,Neuropsychopharmacology, 2015, 1-10. 507. McMain S, Boritz T, Leybman M (2015). Common Strategies for Cultivating a Positive Therapy Relationship in the Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder, Journal of Psychotherapy Integration, 25(1), 20-29. 508. McMain S, Newman M, Segal Z, DeRubeis R (2015). Cognitive Behavior Therapy: Current Status and Future Research Directions, Psychotherapy Research, 25(3), 321-329. 509. Meidan E, Ray JG, Vigod SN (2015). Perinatal outcomes among women with bipolar disorder: a population-based cohort study, Am J Obstet Gynecol, 212(3), 367. 510. Melin A, Klungland Torstveit M, Burke L, Marks SI, Sundgot-Borgen J (2014). Disordered Eating and Eating Disorders in the Aquatic Sports, International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 24(4), 450-459. 511. Merico D, Costain G, Butcher N, Warnica W, Ogura L, Alfred SE, Brzustowicz LM, Bassett AS, (2014). MicroRNA target genes and risk for schizophrenia in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, Frontiers in Neurology, 5, 238-238.
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ARTICLES (continued) 512. Midence L, Mola A, Terzic C, Thomas R, Grace SL (2014). Ethnocultural diversity in cardiac rehabilitation: A call to action, Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention, 34(6), 437-444. 513. Miranda M, Hamani C, Almeida AC, Amorim B, Macedo C, Fernandes MJ, Nobrega JN, Aarao M, Antonio AP, Rodrigues A, Andersen ML, Tufik S, Mello LE, Covolan L (2014). Role of adenosine in the antiepileptic effects of deep brain stimulation, Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 8(Oct), 1-6. 514. Mishna F, Bogo M, Root J, Fantus S (2014). Here to Stay: Cyber communication as a complement in social work practice, Families in Society, 95(3), 179-186. 515. Mishna F, Bogo M, Sawyer J (2015). Cyber counseling: Illuminating benefits and challenges. Clinical Social Work Journal, Clinical Social Work Journal, 43(2), 169-17. 516. Mishna F, Schwan K, Lefebrvre R, Bhole P, Johnston D (2014). Students in distress: Unanticipated findings in a cyber bullying study, Children and Youth Services Review, 44, 341-348. 517. Mlynarski E, Sheridan MB, Xie M, Guo T, Racedo SE, McDonald-McGinn D, Gai X, Chow EWC, Vorstman J, Swillen A, Devriendt K, Breckpot J, Digilio MC, Marino B, Dallapiccola B, Philip N, Simon TJ, Roberts A, Piotrowicz M, Bearden CE, Eliez S, Gothelf D, Coleman K, Kates WR, Devoto M, Zackai E, Heine-Suner D, Shaikh TH, Bassett AS, Goldmuntz E, Morrow BE, Emanuel BS, and the International Chromosome 22q11.2 Consortium (2015). Copy number variation of the glucose transporter gene SLC2A3 and congenital heart defects in the 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome, American Journal of Human Genetics, 96(5), 753-764. 518. Modi M, McMorris C, Palucka A, Raina P, Lunsky Y (2015). Predictors of specialized inpatient admissions for adults with intellectual disability, American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 120(1), 46-57. 519. Mohr DC, Ho J, Hart TL, Baron KG, Berendsen M, Beckner V, Cai X, Cuijpers P, Spring B, Kinsinger SW, Schroder KE, Duffecy J (2014). Control condition design and implementation features in controlled trials: a meta-analysis of trials evaluating psychotherapy for depression, Translational behavioral medicine, 4(4), 407-423. 520. Mollayeva T, Kendzerska T, Mollayeva S, Shapiro C, Colantonio A, Cassidy JD, (2014). A systematic review of fatigue in patients with traumatic brain injury: The course, predictors and consequences, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, (47), 684-716. 521. Moores J, Uppal S, Hernandez A, Wilansky P (2014). Telemedicine as a tool to mitigate cardiometabolic risk associated with serious mental illness, Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare, 20(8), 436-440. 522. Moreno S, Farzan F (2015). Music training and inhibitory control: a multidimensional model, Ann N Y Acad Sci, 1337, 147-152. 523. Morrison KM, Shin S, Tarnopolsky M, Taylor VH, (2014). Association of depression & health related quality of life with body composition in children and youth with obesity, J Affect Disord, 172, 18-23. 524. Moscovitch DA, Rowa K., Paulitzky JR, Antony MM, McCabe RE, (2015). What if I appear boring, anxious, or unattractive? Validation and treatment sensitivity of the Negative Self Portrayal Scale in clinical samples, Cognitive Therapy and Research, 39(2), 178-192. 525. Mountjoy ML, FINA Nutrition Expert Panel, Mountjoy, Margo Canada Chairman - FINA, Burke, Louise Australia Scientific Lead, Maughan, Ron Great Britain Scientific Lead, Marks, Saul Canada, et al (2014). FINA-Yakult Consensus Statement on Nutrition, International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 24(4), 349-350.
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ARTICLES (continued) 526. Mountjoy ML, Junge, A, Benjamen, B, Boyd, B, Diop, M, Gerrard, D, CeesRein van den Hoogenband, Marks, SI, et al (2015). Competing with injuries: injuries prior to and during the 15th FINA World Championships 2013 (aquatics), British Journal of Sports Medicine, 49(1), 37-43. 527. Mulsant BH, Blumberger DM, Ismail Z, Rabheru K, Rapoport MJ, (2014). A systematic approach to the pharmacotherapy of geriatric major depression., Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 30(3), 517-534. 528. Munson B, Crocker L, Pierrehumbert JB, Owen-Anderson A, Zucker KJ (2015). Gender typicality in children’s speech: A comparison of boys with and without gender identity disorder, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 137(4), 1995-2003. 529. Musa R, Roszaman R, Yazmie AWA, Khadijah MBS, Hayati MY, Midin M, Jaafar NRN, Das S, Sidi H, Ravindran A, (2014). A preliminary study of the psychological differences in infertile couples and their relation to the coping styles, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55, S65-S69. 530. Nadler M, Jones JM, Alibhai AMH, Catton CN, Catton P (2014). The Impact of Bone Mineral Density testing, Fracture Assessment, & Osteoporosis Education in Men Treated by Androgen Deprivation for Prostate Cancer: a pilot study, J Support Cancer Cancer, 22(9), 2409-2415. 531. Nakajima S, Caravaggio F, Mamo DC, Mulsant BH, Chung JK, Plitman E, Iwata Y, Gerretsen P, Uchida H, Suzuki T, Mar W, Wilson AA, Houle S, Graff-Guerrero A (2015). Dopamine D2/D3 receptor availability in the striatum of antipsychoticfree older patients with schizophrenia-A [C-11]-raclopride PET study, Schizophr Res, 164(1), 263-267. 532. Nakajima S, Takeuchi H, Fervaha G, Plitman E, Chung J, Caravaggio F, Iwata I, Mihashi Y, Gerretsen P, Remington G, Graff-Guerrero A (2015). Comparative efficacy between clozapine and other antipsychotics on depressive symptoms in patients with schizophrenia: analysis of the CATIE Phase 2E data, Schizophr Res, 161(2-3), 429-433. 533. Nakajima S, Takeuchi H, Plitman E, Fervaha G, Gerretsen P, Caravaggio F, Chung JK, Iwata Y, Remington G, GraffGuerrero A (2015). Neuroimaging findings in treatment-resistant schizophrenia: a systematic review. Lack of neuroimaging correlates of treatment-resistant schizophrenia, Schizophr Res, 164(1-3), 164-175. 534. Nakajima SL, Caravaggio F, Mamo DC, Mulsant BH, Chung JK, Plitman E, Iwata Y, Gerretsen P, Uchida H, Suzuki T, Mar W, Wilson AA, Houle S, Graff-Guerrero A, (2015). Dopamine D2/3 receptor availability in the striatum of antipsychoticfree older patients with schizophrenia - A [11C]-raclopride PET study, Schizophr Res, 45(3), 907-919. 535. Nasimento C, Kim HK, Young LT, Mendonca KM, Grinberg LT, Lafer B, Andreazza A, (2015). Glutathione-medicated effects of lithium in decreasing protein oxidation induced by mitochondrial complex I dysfunction, J Neural Transm, 122(6), 741-6. 536. Nazeri A, Chakravarty MM, Rotenberg DJ, Rajji TK, Rathi Y, Michailovich OV, Voineskos AN (2015). Functional Consequences of Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density in Humans across the Adult Lifespan, Journal of Neuroscience, 35(4), 1753-1762. 537. Nazeri A, Chakravarty MM, Rajji TK, Felsky D, Rotenberg DJ, Mason M, Xu LN, Lobaugh NJ, Mulsant BH, Voineskos AN, (2015). Superficial white matter as a novel substrate of age-related cognitive decline, Neurobiology of Aging, 36(6), 2094-2106. 538. Nery FG, Miranda-Scippa A, Nery-Fernandes F, Kapczinski F, Lafer B (2014). Prevalence and clinical correlates of alcohol use disorders among bipolar disorder patients: results from the Brazilian Bipolar Research Network,Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(5), 1116-1121.
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ARTICLES (continued) 539. Network and Pathway Analysis Subgroup of Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC), (2015). Psychiatric genome-wide association study analyses implicate neuronal, immune and histone pathways, Nat Neurosci, 18(2), 199-209. 540. Ng SL, Kinsella EA, Friesen F, Hodges B (2015). Reclaiming a theoretical orientation to reflection in medical education research: a critical narrative review, Medical Education, 49(5), 461-475. 541. Nicholls T, Crocker AG, Seto MC, Wilson CM, Cote G (2015). The National Trajectory Project of Individuals found Not Criminally Responsible on account of Mental Disorder in Canada. Part 5: How essential are gender-sensitive forensic psychiatric services?, Can J Psychiatry, (60), 135-145. 542. Nikolova Y, Koenen KC, Galea S, Wang CM, Seney ML, Sibille E, Williamson DE, Hariri AR (2014). Beyond genotype: serotonin transporter epigenetic modification predicts human brain function, Nature Neuroscience, 17(9), 1153-1159. 543. Nissim R, Rodin G, Schimmer A, Minden M, Rydall A, Yuen D, Mischitelle A, Fitzgerald P, Lo C, Gagliese L, Zimmermann C (2014). Finding new bearings: A qualitative study on the transition from inpatient to ambulatory care of patients with acute myeloid leukemia, Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(9), 2435-2443. 544. Noda Y, Daskalakis ZJ, Downar J, Croarkin PE, Fitzgerald PB, Blumberger DM (2014). Magnetic Seizure Therapy in an Adolescent with Refractory Bipolar Depression: A Case Report, Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, 1, 20492055. 545. Noda Y, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB, Downar J, Rajji TK, Blumberger DM (2015). Magnetic Seizure Therapy induced Mania: A Report of Two Cases, Journal of ECT, 31(1), e4-e6. 546. Nolan RP, Liu S, Payne AY, (2014). E-counseling as an emerging preventive strategy for hypertension, Current Opinion in Cardiology, 29(4), 319-323. 547. Nona C, Creed MC, Hamani C, Nobrega JN (2015). Effects of high frequency stimulation of the nucleus accumbens on the development and expression of ethanol sensitization in mice, Behavioural Pharmacology, 26(1-2), 184-192. 548. Nosyk B, Fischer B, Sun H, Marsh D, Kerr T, Rehm J, Anis A, (2014). High levels of opioid analgesic co-prescription among methadone maintenance treatment clients in British Columbia, Canada: Results from a population-level retrospective cohort study, American Journal of Addictions, 23(3), 257-264. 549. O’Brien K, Davis A, Gardner S, Bayoumi A, Rueda S, Hart T, Cooper C, Solomon P, Rourke SB, Hanna S (2014). Relationships between dimensions of disability experienced by adults living with HIV: A structural equation model analysis, AIDS and Behavior, 18(2), 357-367. 550. O’Brien K, Davis A, Gardner S, Bayoumi A, Rueda S, Hart T, Cooper C, Solomon P, Rourke SB, Hanna S (2014). Validation of the Episodic Disability Framework with adults living with HIV, Disability and Rehabilitation, 36(4), 319-329. 551. O’Donnell KA, Gaudreau H, Mileva-Seitz V, Colalillo S, Bouvette-Turcot AA, Pennestri MH, Deslauriers J, O’Donnell K, Wendland B, Fleming A, Steiner M, Silveira PP, Lydon J, Wazana A, Minde K, Matthews SG, Atkinson L, Goldberg S, Moss E, Sokolowski M, Ke (2014). Maternal adversity, vulnerability and neurodevelopment project: theory and methodology, Can J Psychiatry, 59(9), 497-508. 552. O’Regan J, Lanctôt KL Mazereeuw G, Herrmann N, (2014). Cholinesterase inhibitor discontinuation in patients with Alzheimer’s disease: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials, J Clin Psychiatry. 553. Olmsted MP, MacDonald DE, McFarlane T, Trottier K, Colton P (2015). Predictors of rapid relapse in bulimia nervosa, International Journal of Eating Disorders, 48(3), 337-340.
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ARTICLES (continued) 554. Olsen RK, Lee Y, Kube, J, Rosenbaum RS, Grady CL, Moscovitch M, Ryan JD (2015). The role of relational binding in item memory: evidence from face recognition in a case of developmental amnesia, Journal of Neuroscience, 35(13), 5342-5350. 555. Olsen RK, Pangelinan MM, Bogulski C, Chakravarty M, Luk G, Grady CL, Bialystok E (2015). Lifelong bilingualism is associated with greater white matter volume in the frontal lobes, Brain Research, 1612, 128-139. 556. Onyura B, Légaré F, Baker L, Reeves S, Rosenfield J, Kitto S, Hodges B, Silver I, Curran V, Armson H, Leslie K (2015). Affordances of knowledge translation in medical education: a qualitative exploration of empirical knowledge use among medical educators, Academic Medicine, 90(4), 518-524. 557. Onyura B, Bohnen J, Wasylenki D, Jarvis A, Giblon B, Hyland R, Silver I, Leslie K, (2015). Re-imagining the Self at Late Career Stages: How Identity Threat Influences Academic Physician’s Retirement Considerations, Academic Medicine, 90(6), 794-801. 558. Oremus M, Tarride JE, Pullenayegum E, Clayton N, Mugford G, Godwin M, Huan A, Bacher Y, Villalpando JM, Gill SS, Lanctôt KL, Herrmann N, Canadian Willingness-To-Pay Study Group, Raina P (2015). Caregivers’ willingness-to-pay for Alzheimer’s disease medications in Canada, Dementia (London), 14(1), 63-79. 559. Ostergaard SD, Meyers BS, Flint AJ, Mulsant BH, Whyte EM, Ulbricht C, Bech P, Rothschild AJ, for the STOP-PD Study Group, (2014). The Psychotic Depression Assessment Scale (PDAS) takes both depressive and psychotic symptoms into account, Journal of Affective Disorders, 16, 68-73. 560. Ostergaard SD, Meyers BS, Flint AJ, Mulsant BH, Whyte EM, Ulbricht C, Bech P, Rothschild AJ, for the STOP-PD Study Group, (2014). Towards a rating scale measuring the severity of both psychotic and depressive symptoms in psychotic depression, Acta Psychiatr Scand, 129, 211-220. 561. Ostojic D, Charach A, Henderson J, Crosbie J, (2014). Childhood ADHD and addictive behaviors in adolescence: A Canadian sample, Journal of Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 23(2), 128-135. 562. Ou X, Crane DE, MacIntosh BJ, Young LT, Arnold P, Ameis S, Goldstein BI, (2015). CACNA1C rs 1006737 genotype and bipolar disorder: Focus on intermediate phenotypes and cardiovascular comorbidity, Neurosci Biobehav Rev, 55, 198210. 563. Ouellet-Plamondon C, Mohamed N, Sharif-Razi M, Simpkin E, George TP (2015). Treatment of Tobacco Addiction in People with Co-Morbid Substance Use and Psychiatric Disorders, Curr. Addict. Rep., 1(1), 61-68. 564. Ouellette-Kuntz H, Blinkhorn A, Rouette J, Blinkhorn M, Lunsky Y, Weiss J (2014). Family resilience - An important indicator when planning services for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities, Journal on Developmental Disabilities, 20(2), 55-66. 565. Ouellette-Kuntz H, Cobigo V, Balogh R, Wilton A, Lunsky Y (2015). The uptake of secondary prevention by adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities, Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 28(1), 43-54. 566. Pabba M, Sibille E (2015). Sigma-1 and N-Methyl- D -Aspartate Receptors: A Partnership with Beneficial Outcomes, Molecular Neuropsychiatry, 1(1), 47-51. 567. Paquette-Smith M, Weiss J, Lunsky Y (2014). History of suicide attempts in adults with Asperger Syndrome, Crisis, 35(4), 273-277.
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ARTICLES (continued) 568. Parikh SV, Hawke LD, Velyvis V, Zaretsky A, Beaulieu S, Patelis-Siotis I, MacQueen G, Young LT, Yatham LN, Cervantes P, (2015). Combined treatment: impact of optimal psychotherapy and medication in bipolar disorder, Bipolar Disord, 17(1), 86-96. 569. Park EM, Sockalingam S, Ravindranath D, Aquino PR, Aggarwal R, Nemeroff SP, Gerkin JS, Gitlin DF, (2015). Psychosomatic Medicine training as a bridge to practice: training and professional practice patterns of early career Psychosomatic Medicine specialists, Psychosomatics, 56(1), 52-58. 570. Park JS, Lee J, Han S, Meyer JH, Yim DS (2014). Serotonin and Dopamine Transporter Occupancy of SKL10406 in Human: Comparison of Naïve Pooled Method and Nonlinear Mixed Effect Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Modeling in the Estimation of the Occupancy Parameters, Transl Clin Pharmacol, 22(2), 83-91. 571. Park MT, Pipitone J, Baer LH, Winterburn JL, Shah Y, Chavez S, Schira MM, Lobaugh NJ, Lerch JP, Voineskos AN, Chakravarty MM (2014). Derivation of high-resolution MRI atlases of the human cerebellum at 3T and segmentation using multiple automatically generated templates, Neuroimage, 95, 217-231. 572. Paschou P, Yu D, Gerber G, Evans P, Tsetsos F, Davis LK, Karagiannidis I, Chaponis J, Gamazon E, Mueller-Vahl K, Stuhrmann M, Schloegelhofer M, Stamenkovic M, Hebebrand J, Noethen M, Nagy P, Barta C, Sandor P, Barr, Scharf JM (2014). Genetic association signal near NTN4 in Tourette Syndrome, Ann Neurol, 76(2), 310-315. 573. Paul R, Smith NG, Mohr JJ, Ross LE, (2014). Measuring dimensions of bisexual identity: Initial development of the Bisexual identity Inventory, Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity, 1(4), 452-460. 574. Payer D, Balasubramaniam G, Boileau I, (2014). What is the role of the D3 receptor in addiction? A mini review of PET studies with [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO, Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry, 52, 4-8. 575. Payer DE, Guttman M, Kish SJ, Tong J, Strafella A, Zack M, Adams JR, Rusjan P, Houle S, Furukawa Y, Wilson AA, Boileau I (2015). [C-11]-(+)-PHNO PET imaging of dopamine D2/D3 receptors in Parkinson’s disease with impulse control disorders, Mov Disord, 30(2), 160-166. 576. Pereira Junior B, Tortella G, Lafer B, Nunes P, Benseñor IM, Lotufo PA, Machado-Vieira R, Brunoni AR (2015). The bipolar depression electrical treatment trial (BETTER): design, rationale, and objectives of a randomized, shamcontrolled trial and data from the pilot study phase, Neural Plast., 1-10. 577. Perron J, Cleverley K, Kidd SA (2014). Resilience, loneliness, and psychological distress among homeless youth,Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, 28(4), 226-229. 578. Peterkin A, Baker A, Bloom R, Marks N (2014). Reflecting on healthcare and self-care in the Intensive Care Unit: our story, Encyclopaedia, 18(39), 74-82. 579. Peterson-Badali M, Skilling T, Haqanee Z (2015). Examining implementation of risk assessment in case management for youth in the justice system, Criminal Justice and Behavior, 42(3), 304-320. 580. Petrican R, Todorov A, Burris CT, Rosenbaum RS, Grady CL (2015). The Look that Binds: Partner-Directed Altruistic Motivation and Biased Perception in Married Couples, Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 39(1), 165-179. 581. Pfennig A, Alda M, Young T, MacQueen G, Rybakowski J, Suwalska A, Simhandl C, Koenig B, Hajek T, O’Donovan C, Wittekind D, von Quillfeldt S, Ploch J, Sauer C, Bauer M, (2014). Prophylactic lithium treatment and cognitive performance in patients with a long history of bipolar illness: no simple answers in complex disease-treatment interplay, Int J Bipolar Disord, 2(1).
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ARTICLES (continued) 582. Pillai Riddell R, Flora DB, Stevens SA, Greenberg S, Garfield H (2014). The role of infant pain behaviour in predicting parent pain ratings, Pain Research and Management, 19(5), e124-e132. 583. Pipitone J, Park MT, Winterburn J, Lett TA, Lerch JP, Pruessner JC, Lepage M, Voineskos AN, Chakravarty MM, Alzheimer Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (2014). Multi-atlas segmentation of the whole hippocampus and subfields using multiple automatically generated templates, Neuroimage, 101, 494-512. 584. Pitzul KB, Jackson T, Crawford S, Kwong JC, Sockalingam S, Hawa R, Urbach D, Okrainec A, (2014). Understanding Disposition After Referral for Bariatric Surgery: When and Why Patients Referred Do Not Undergo Surgery, Obes Surg, 24(1), 134-140. 585. Plamondon A, Akbari E, Atkinson L, Steiner M, Meaney M, Fleming AS, on behalf of the MAVAN research team (2015). Spatial working memory and attention skills are predicted by maternal stress during pregnancy, Early Human Development, 91(1), 23-29. 586. Plitman E, Nakajima S, de la Fuente-Sandoval C, Gerretsen P, Chakravarty MM, Kobylianskii J, Chung JK, Caravaggio F, Iwata Y, Remington G, Graff-Guerrero A (2014). Glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity in schizophrenia: a review, Eur J Neuropsychopharmacol, 24(10), 1591-1605. 587. Porter MM, Smith GA, Cull AW, Myers AM, Bedard M, Gelinas I, Korner-Bitensky N, Man-Son-Hing M, Mazer BL, Marshall SC, Naglie G, Rapoport MJ, Tuokko H, Vrkljan BH, (2015). Older driver estimates of driving exposure compared to in-vehicle data in the Candrive II study, Traffic Injury Prevention, 16, 24-27. 588. Pouget JG, Gonçalves VF, Nurmi EL, P Laughlin C, Mallya KS, McCracken JT, Aman MG, McDougle CJ, Scahill L, Misener VL, Tiwari AK, Zai CC, Brandl EJ, Felsky D, Leung AQ, Lieberman JA, Meltzer HY, Potkin SG, Niedling C, Steimer W, Leucht S, Knight J, Müller D, Kennedy (2015). Investigation of TSPO variants in schizophrenia and antipsychotic treatment outcomes, Pharmacogenomics, 16(1), 5-22. 589. Pourhabib S, Kentner AC, Grace SL (2014). The impact of patient-healthcare provider disussions on enrollment in cardiovascular rehabilitation, Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 46(9), 924-931. 590. Prescott NJ, Lehne B, Stone K, Lee JC, Taylor K, Knight J, et al (2015). Pooled sequencing of 531 genes in inflammatory bowel disease identifies an associated rare variant in BTNL2 and implicates other immune related genes, PLoS Genet., 11(2), e1004955-e1004955. 591. Pringsheim T, Hirsch L, Gardner D, Gorman D, (2015). The pharmacological management of oppositional behaviour, conduct problems, and aggression in children and adolescents with disruptive behaviour disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Part 1: psychostimulants, alpha-2 agonists, and atomoxetine, Can J Psychiatry, 60(2), 42-51. 592. Pringsheim T, Hirsch L, Gardner D, Gorman D, (2015). The pharmacological management of oppositional behaviour, conduct problems, and aggression in children and adolescents with disruptive behaviour disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Part 2: antipsychotics and traditional mood stabilizers, Can J Psychiatry, 60(2), 52-61. 593. Pullman LE, Leroux EJ, Motayne G, Seto MC (2014). Examining the developmental trajectories of adolescent sexual offenders, Child Abuse and Neglect, 38(7), 1249-1258. 594. Pushparaj A, Kim AS, Musiol M, Trigo JM, Le Foll B (2015). Involvement of the rostral agranular insular cortex in nicotine self-administration in rats, Behav Brain Res, 29, 77-83.
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ARTICLES (continued) 595. Quilty LC, Dozois DJA, Lobo DSS, Ravindran LN, Bagby RM (2014). Cognitive structure and processing during cognitive behavioural therapy vs. pharmacotherapy for depression, International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 7(3), 235-250. 596. Quilty LC, MacKew L, Bagby RM (2014). Distinct profiles of behavioral inhibition and activation system sensitivity in unipolar vs. bipolar mood disorders, Psychiatry Research, 219(1), 228-231. 597. Quraan MA, Protzner A, Giacobbe P, Kennedy SH, Lozano A, McAndrews P, (2014). Power asymmetry and functional connectivity of patients with major depressive disorder after DBS surgery, Neuropsychopharmacology, 39, 1270-81. 598. Rabin RA, George TP (2015). A Review of Co-Morbid Tobacco and Cannabis Use Disorders: Possible Mechanisms to Explain High Rates of Co-Use, Am. J. Addict., 24(1), 105-116. 599. Rabin RA, Goodman MS, Barr MS, George TP (2014). Neurobiology of Co-Morbid Substance Use Disorders in Mental Illness: A Closer Look at the Commonalities between Cannabis and Schizophrenia, Curr. Addict. Rep., 1(1), 261-271. 600. Radhu N, Garcia Dominguez L, Farzan F, Richter MA, Semeralul MO, Chen R, Fitzgerald PB, Daskalakis ZJ (2015). Evidence for inhibitory deficits in the prefrontal cortex in schizophrenia, Brain, 138(2), 483-497. 601. Rajji TK, Gerretsen P, Plitman E, Graff-Guerrero A (2014). The effects of aging on insight into illness in schizophrenia: a review, International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 29(11), 1145-1161. 602. Rajji TK, Ismail Z, Arenovich T, Grieve C, Willett P, Addington D, Mulsant BH (2015). Predicting hospital length of stay for geriatric and adult patients with schizophrenia, Journal of Hospital Adminstration, 4(1), 1-8. 603. Rajji TK, Price R, Salavati B, Graff-Guerrero A, Blumberger DM, Mulsant BH, Daskalakis ZJ, Rajji TK (2014). Effects of antipsychotic D2 antagonists on long-term potentiation in animals and implications for human studies, Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biological Psychiatry, 54, 83-91. 604. Rajji TK, Salavati B, Price R, Graff-Guerrero A, Daskalakis ZJ (2015). Imaging-based Neurochemistry in Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review and Implications for Dysfunctional Long-Term Potentiation, Schizophrenia Bulletin, 41(1), 44-56. 605. Rajji TK, Mulsant BH, Davies S, Kalache SM, Tsoutsoulas C, Pollock BG, Remington G, (2015). Clozapine to NDesmethylclozapine Plasma Concentrations Ratio Predicts Working Memory Performance in Schizophrenia, Am J Psychiatry, 41(2), 374-381. 606. Rajji TK, Mulsant BH, Davies S, Kalache SM, Tsoutsoulas C, Pollock BG, Remington G, (2015). Prediction of working memory performance in schizophrenia by plasma ratio of clozapine to N-desmethylclozapine, Am J Psychiatry, 172(6), 579-585. 607. Rapoport MJ, Herrmann N, Haider S, Zucchero-Sarracini C, Molnar F, Frank C, Masellis M, Tang-Wai D, Kiss A, Pimlott N, Naglie G, (2014). Physician gender is a predictor of reporting drivers with mild cognitive impairment and mild dementia to transportation authorities, Journal of American Geriatrics Society, 62, 201-203. 608. Rapoport MJ, Naglie G, Herrmann N, Zucchero Sarracini C, Mulsant BH, Frank C, Kiss A, Seitz D, Vrkljan B, Masellis M, Tang-Wai D, Pimlott N, Molnar F, (2014). Developing physician consensus on the reporting of patients with mild cognitive impairment and mild dementia to transportation authorities in a region with mandatory reporting legislation, Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, 22(12), 1530-1543. 609. Rasasingham RR, (2014). Efficacy and Safety of Antipsychotics for the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder in Adolescents and Adults: Current Issues and Clinical Perspective, OJPsych, 4(3), 182-188.
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ARTICLES (continued) 610. Rasasingham RR, (2015). Substance Use and Early Psychosis, MOJ Addictions Medicine and Therapy, 1(1). 611. Rasasingham RR, (2015). The Risk and Protective Factors of School Absenteeism, OJPsych, 5(2), 195-203. 612. Raskin J, Baer L, Ball S, Sparks J, Dubé S, Ferguson M, Fava M (2014). Further evidence for the reliability and validity of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cognitive and Physical Functioning Questionnaire (CPFQ), Ann Clin Psychiatry, 26(4), 270-280. 613. Raskin J, Irving G, Tanenberg R, Malcolm S, Risser R (2014). Comparative Safety and Tolerability of Duloxetine versus Pregabalin versus Duloxetine Plus Gabapentin in Patients with Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathic Pain, Int J Clin Pract, 68(9), 1130-1140. 614. Raskin J, Liu-Seifert H, Siemers E, Sundell K, Price K, Han B, Selzler K, Aisen P, Cummings J, Mohs R (2015). Cognitive and functional decline and their relationship in patients with mild Alzheimer’s dementia, J Alzheimers Dis, 43(3), 949955. 615. Ravitz P, Watson P (2014). Interpersonal Psychotherapy: Healing with a Relational Focus, FOCUS., 12(3), 275-284. 616. Ravitz P, Wondimagegn D, Pain C, Araya M, Alem A, Baheretibeb Y, Hanlon C, Fekadu A, Park J, Fefergrad M, Leszcz M, (2014). Psychotherapy Knowledge Translation and Interpersonal Psychotherapy: Using Best-Education Practices to Transform Mental Health Care in Canada and Ethiopia, American Journal of Psychotherapy, 68(4), 463-88. 617. Ray JV, Kimonis ER, Seto MC (2014). Personality and behavioral correlates of child pornography use in a community sample, Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment, 26(6), 523-545. 618. Razack S, Hodges B, Steinert Y, Maguire M (2015). Seeking inclusion in an exclusive process: discourses of medical school student selection, Medical Education, 49(1), 36-47. 619. Rector NA, Richter MA, Lerman B, Regev R (2015). A pilot test of the additive benefits of physical exercise to CBT for OCD, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, 44(4), 328-340. 620. Rector NA, Man V, Lerman B, (2014). The expanding CBT Treatment umbrella for the anxiety disorders: Targeting unique versus common features, Can J Psychiatry, 59(6), 301-309. 621. Rehm J, Kailasapillai S, Larsen E, Rehm M, Samokhvalov AV, Shield KD, Roerecke M, Lachenmeier DW (2014). A systematic review of unrecorded alcohol with a focus on prevalence of consumption and health, Addiction, 109(6), 880-893. 622. Rehm J, Anderson P, Gual A, Kraus L, Marmet S, Nutt DJ, Room R, Samokhvalov AV, Scafato E, Shield KD, Trapencieris M, Wiers RW, Gmel G, (2014). The tangible common denominator of substance use disorders: A reply to commentaries to Rehm et al, Alcohol and Alcoholism, 49(1), 118-22. 623. Rehm J, Fischer B, (2015). Cannabis legalization with strict regulation, the overall superior policy option for public health, Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 97(6), 541-544. 624. Reis C, Sinyor M, Schaffer A, (2014). Medications Without a Patient, Crisis, 1-3. 625. Rej S, Segal M, Low N, Mucsi I, Holcroft C, Shulman K, Looper K, (2014). The McGill geriatric lithium- induced diabetes insipidus clinical study, The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 59(6), 327-334.
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ARTICLES (continued) 626. Rekkas PV, Wilson AA, Houle S, Rusjan P, Stewart DE, Meyer JH (2014). Greater Monoamine Oxidase-A Binding in Perimenopausal Age as measured With Carbon 11-Labeled Harmine Positron Emission Tomography, JAMA Psychiatry, 71(8), 873-879. 627. Remington G, Agid O, Foussias G, Fervaha G, Takeuchi H, Lee J, Hahn M (2015). What does schizophrenia teach us about antipsychotics?, Can J Psychiatry, 60(3), S14-S18. 628. Remington G, Fervaha G, Agid O, Takeuchi H, Foussias G (2014). Effect of antipsychotic medicaation on overall life satisfaction among individuals with chronic schizophrenia: Findings from the NIMH CATIE study, Eur J Neuropsychopharmacol, 24(7), 1078-1085. 629. Remington G, Fervaha G, Foussias G, Agid O, Turrone P (2014). Antipsychotic dosing: found in translation, Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, 39(1), 223-231. 630. Remington G, Lee J (2015). Schizophrenia as a lifelong illness: implications for care, Ann Acad Med Singapore, 44(1), 26-28. 631. Remington G, Lee J (2014). Schizophrenia: no health without physical health, Ann Acad Med Singapore, 43(5), 248249. 632. Remington G, Lee J, Fervaha G, Takeuchi H, Powell V (2015). Positive symptoms are associated with clincians’ global impression in treatment-resistant schizophrenia, J Clin Psychopharmacol, 35(3), 237-241. 633. Remington G, Lee J, Powell V (2014). Mean platelet volume in schizophrenia after 1 year of clozapine exposure, Schizophr Res, 157(13), 134-136. 634. Remington G, Lee J, Powell V (2014). Therapeutic drug monitoring of clozapine: sampling error as a source of variance, Ther Drug Monit, 36(6), 829-831. 635. Remington G, Lee J, Takeuchi H (2014). Comparing dopamine D2 receptor occupancies for use in clinical practice: attractive proposition but fraught with pitfalls, J Clin Psychopharmacol, 34(4), 530-532. 636. Remington G, Lee J, Takeuchi H, Fervaha G, Bhaloo A, Powell V (2014). Relationship between clinical improvement and functional gains with clozapine in schizophrenia, Eur J Neuropsychopharmacol, 24(10), 1622-1629. 637. Reznikov R, Diwan M, Nobrega JN, Hamani C (2015). Towards a better preclinical model of PTSD: Characterizing animals with weak extinction, maladaptive stress responses and low plasma corticosterone, Journal of Psychiatry Research, 61, 158-165. 638. Rhodes AE, Boyle MH, Bridge JA, Sinyor M, Links PS, Tonmyr L, Skinner R, Bethell JM, Carlisle C, Goodday S, Salway Hottes T, Newton A, Bennett K, Sundar P, Cheung AH, Szatmari P, (2014). Antecedents and sex/gender differences in youth suicidal behavior, World J Psychiatry, 22(4), 120-132. 639. Rhodes AE, Lu H, Skinner R, (2014). Time Trends in Medically Serious Suicide-Related Behaviours in Boys and Girls, Can J Psychiatry, 59(10), 556-560. 640. Ribolsi M, Daskalakis ZJ, Siracusano A, Koch G (2014). Abnormal Asymmetry of Brain Connectivity in Schizophrenia, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 1010. 641. Ringash J, Bernstein LJ, Cella D, Logemann J, Moysas B, Murphy B, Trotti A, Wells N, Yueh B, Ridge J (2015). Outcomes toolbox for head and neck cancer research, Head and Neck, 37(3), 425-439.
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ARTICLES (continued) 642. Risinger R, Bhagwagar Z, Luo F, Cahir M, Miler L, Mendonza AE, Meyer JH, Zheng M, Hayes W (2014). Evaluation of safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of BMS-820836 in healthy subjects: a placebocontrolled, ascending single-dose study, Psychopharmacology, 231(11), 2299-2310. 643. Rizvi SJ, Cyriac A, Grima E, Tan M, Lin P, Gallagher LA, McIntyre RS, Kennedy SH (2015). Depression and employment status in primary and tertiary care settings, Can J Psychiatry, 60(1), 14-22. 644. Rizvi SJ, Geraci J, Ravindran A, Kennedy SH (2014). Predictors of response to adjunctive osmotic release methylphenidate or placebo in patients with Major Depressive Disorder. Effects of apathy/anhedonia and fatigue, Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 34(6), 755-759. 645. Rizvi SJ, Grima E, Tan M, Rotzinger S, Lin P, McIntyre RS, Kennedy SH (2014). Treatment Resistant Depression in Primary Care Across Canada, Can J Psychiatry, 59(7), 349-357. 646. Rizvi SJ, Zaretsky A, Schaffer A, Levitt A (2015). Is immediate adjunctive CBT more beneficial than delayed CBT in treating depression? Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 21(2), 107-113. 647. Robin J, Hirshhorn M, Rosenbaum SR, Winocur G, Moscovitch M, Grady CL (2015). Functional connectivity of hippocampal and prefrontal networks during episodic and spatial memory based on real-world environments,Hippocampus, 25(1), 81-93. 648. Robinson GE, (2015). Controversies about the use of antidepressant drugs in pregnancy, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders, 203(3), 159-163. 649. Robinson GE, (2015). Insurance, stigma and women’s mental health, American J Psych, 172(1), 1-2. 650. Rodin G, (2014). Effective treatment for depression in patients with cancer, The Lancet, 384(9948), 1076-1078. 651. Rogasch NC, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB (2015). Cortical inhibition of distinct mechanisms in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex are related to working memory performance: a TMS-EEG study, Cortex, 64, 68-77. 652. Rogasch NC, Thomson RH, Farzan F, Fitzgibbon BM, Bailey NW, Hernandez-Pavon JC, Daskalakis ZJ, Fitzgerald PB (2014). Removing artefacts from TMS-EEG recordings using independent component analysis: Importance for assessing prefrontal and motor cortex network properties, Neuroimage, 101, 425-439. 653. Rohrer JD, Nicholas J, Cash D, van Swieten J, Dopper E, Jiskoot L, Rombouts S, Cardoso MJ, Clegg S, Espak M, Mead S, Thomas D, Masellis M, Black SE, Chow T, Freedman M, Kere R, (2015). Presymptomatic cognitive and neuroanatomical changes in genetic frontotemporal dementia: the Genetic Frontotemporal dementia Initiative (GENFI), The Lancet Neurology, 14(3), 253-262. 654. Romans SE, Kreindler D, Einstein G, Laredo S, Petrovic MJ, Stanley J, (2015). Sleep quality and the menstrual cycle, Sleep Med, 16(4), 489-95. 655. Romero K, Black S, Lobough N, Feinstein A (2014). Old wine in new bottles: Validating the clinical utility of SPECT in predicting cognitive performance in mild TBI, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 231(1), 15-24. 656. Romero K, Black SE, Feinstein A (2014). Differences in cerebral perfusion deficits in mild traumatic brain injury and depression using single photon emission computed tomography, Frontiers in Neurology, 5(1), 1-8.
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ARTICLES (continued) 657. Rosenkranz S, Muller R, Henderson J, (2014). The role of complex PTSD in mediating childhood maltreatment and substance abuse severity among youth seeking substance abuse treatment, Journal of Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy, 6(1), 22-33. 658. Ross LE, Bauer GR, MacLeod MA, Robinson M, MacKay J, Dobinson C, (2014). Mental health and substance use among bisexual youth and non-youth in Ontario, Canada, PLoS One, 9(8), e101604. 659. Rossi A, Burkhart C, Dell-Kuster S, Pollock BG, Strebel SP, Monsch AU, Kern C, Steiner LA, (2014). Serum Anticholinergic Activity and Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction in Elderly Patients, Anesth Analg, 119(4), 947-55. 660. Rourke S, Brizay U, Golob L, Globerman J, Gogolishvili D, Bird M, Rios-Ellis B, Rourke SB, Heidari S (2015). Communityacademic partnerships in HIV-related research: a systematic literature review of theory and practice, Journal of the International AIDS Society, 18(1), 19354-19354. 661. Rourke S, Burchell AN, Grewal R, Allen VG, Gardner SL, Moravan V, Bayoumi AM, Kaul R, McGee F, Millson MP, Remis RS, Raboud J, Mazzulli T, Rourke SB, OHTN Cohort Study Team (2014). Modest rise in chlamydia and gonorrhoea testing did not increase case detection in a clinical HIV cohort in Ontario, Canada, Sexually transmitted infections, 90(8), 608-614. 662. Rourke S, Vardy J, Dhillon HM, Pond GR, Rourke SB, Xu W, Dodd A, Renton C, Park A, Bekele T, Ringash J, Zhang H, Burkes R, Clarke SJ, Tannock IF (2014). Cognitive function and fatigue after diagnosis of colorectal cancer, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology / ESMO, 25(12), 2404-2412. 663. owa K, Gifford S, McCabe R, Antony MM, Purdon C, (2014). Treatment fears in anxiety disorders: Development and validation of the Treatment Ambivalence Questionnaire, Journal of Clinical Psychology, 70(10), 979-993. 664. Rowa K, Paulitzki JR, Ierullo MD, Chiang B, Antony MM, McCabe RE, Moscovitch DA, (2015). A false sense of security: Safety behaviors erode objective speech performance in individuals with social anxiety disorder, Behavior Therapy, 46(3), 304-314. 665. Royal S, Wnuk S, Warwick K, Hawa R, Sockalingam S (2015). Night eating and loss of control over eating in bariatric surgery candidates, Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medication Settings, 22(1), 14-19. 666. Rudzinski K, Dawe M, McGuire F, Shuper P, Rehm J, Fischer B, (2014). Reflections and Expectancies Regarding Future Cannabis Use among High-Frequency Cannabis Users in a Canadian Setting, Journal of Research on Adolescence, 24(4), 598-607. 667. Rueda S, Law S, Rourke SB (2014). Psychosocial, mental health, and behavioral issues of aging with HIV, Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS, 9(4), 325-331. 668. Rueda S, Smith P, Bekele T, O’Brien K, Husbands W, Li A, Jose-Boerbridge M, Mittmann N, Rachlis A, Conyers L, Boomer KB, Rourke SB (2015). Is any job better than no job? Labor market experiences and depressive symptoms in people living with HIV, AIDS Care, 27(7), 907-915. 669. Ruocco A, Lam J, McMain S (2014). Subjective Cognitive Complaints and Functional Disability in Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder and their Non-Affected First-Degree Relatives, Can J Psychiatry, 59(6), 335-344. 670. Rush, (2014). Alternative models and measures for evaluating collaboration among substance use services with mental health, primary care and other services and sectors, Nordic Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 31(1), 27-44.
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ARTICLES (continued) 671. Sacher J, Rekkas PV, Wilson AA, Houle S, Romano L, Hamidi J, Rusjan P, Fan I, Stewart DE, Meyer JH (2015). Relationship of monoamine oxidase-A distribution volume to postpartum depression and postpartum crying, Neuropsychopharmacology, 40(2), 429-435. 672. Sacrey L, Zwaigenbaum L, Bryson S, Brian J, Smith IM, Roberts W, Szatmari P, Roncadin C, Garon N, Novak C, Vaillancourt T, McCormick T, MacKinnon B, Jilderda S, Armstrong V (2015). Can parents concerns predict autism spectrum disorder? A prospective study of high-risk siblings from 6 to 36 months of age, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 54(6), 470-478. 673. Sala R, Goldstein BI, Wang S, Blanco C, (2014). Childhood maltreatment and the course of bipolar disorders among adults: epidemiologic evidence of dose-response effects, Journal of Affective Disorders, 165, 74-80. 674. Salomons TV, Dunlop K, Kennedy S, Flint A, Geraci J, Giacobbe P, Downar J, (2014). Resting state cortico-thalamicstriatal connectivity predicts response to dorsomedial prefrontal rTMS in major depressive disorder, Neuropsychopharmacology, 39(2), 488-498. 675. Salway Hottes T, Ferlatte O, Gesink D, (2014). Suicide and HIV as leading causes of death among gay and bisexual men: a comparison of estimated mortality and published research, Critical Public Health, 1-14. 676. Samayoa L, Grace SL, Gravely S, Benz Scott L, Marzolini S, Colella T (2014). Sex differences in cardiac rehabilitation enrolment: A meta-analysis, Journal of Cardiology, 30(7), 793-800. 677. Samokhvalov AV, Selby P, Bondy SJ, Chaiton M, Ialomiteanu A, Mann R, Rehm J (2014). Smokers who seek help in specialized cessation clinics: How special are they compared to smokers in general population? Journal of Smoking Cessation, 9(2), 76-84. 678. Samokhvalov AV, Rehm J, (2014). Premature mortality in epilepsy and the role of psychiatric comorbidity, The Lancet, 383(9916), 511. 679. Sampaio AS, Hounie AG, Petribu K, Cappi C, Morais I, Vallada H, do Rosario MC, Stewart SE, Fargeness J, Mathews C, Arnold P, Hanna GL, Richter M, Kennedy J, Fontenelle L, de Braganca Pereira CA, Pauls DL, Miguel EC, (2015). COMT and MAO-A polymorphisms and obsessive-compulsive disorder: a family-based association study, PLoS One, 10(3), e0119592. 680. Sampasa-Kanyinga H, Roumeliotis P, Xu H, (2014). Associations between cyberbullying and school bullying victimization and suicidal ideation, plans and attempts among Canadian school children, PLoS One, 9(7), 1-9. 681. Samsom JN, Wong AH (2015). Schizophrenia and depression co-morbidity: What have we learned from animal models, Frontiers in Psychiatry, 6(13), 1-24. 682. Santa Mina D, Guglietti CL, De Jesus DR, Azargive S, Matthew AG, Alibhai SMH, Trachtenberg J, Daskalakis ZJ, Ritvo P (2014). The Acute Effect of Exercise on Neurophysiological and Psychosocial Outcomes in Men Treated for Prostate Cancer: A Randomized Controlled Trial, Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 6, 332-332. 683. Sapag J, Rush BR, Barnsley J (2015). Evaluation dimensions for collaborative mental health services in primary care systems in Latin America: Results of a Delphi group, Administration and Policy in Mental health Services and Mental Health Services Research, 42(3), 252-264. 684. Saverino C, Grigg O, Churchill N, Grady CL (2015). Age Differences in the Default Network at Rest and the Relation to Self-Referential Processing, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 10(2), 231-239.
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ARTICLES (continued) 685. Sawyer A, Lake JK, Lunsky Y, Liu SK, Desarkar P, (2014). Psychopharmacological treatment of challenging behaviours in adults with autism and intellectual disabilities: A systematic review, Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 8(7), 803-813. 686. Schaffer A, Isometsa ET, Tondo L, H Moreno D, Turecki G, Reis C, Cassidy F, Sinyor M, Azorin JM, Kessing LV, Ha K, Goldstein T, Weizman A, Beautrais A, Chou YH, Diazgranados N, Levitt AJ, Zarate CA Jr, Rihmer Z, Yatham LN, (2015). International Society for Bipolar Disorders Task Force on Suicide: meta-analyses and meta-regression of correlates of suicide attempts and suicide deaths in bipolar disorder, Bipolar Disord, 17(1), 1-16. 687. Schaffer A, Sinyor M, Reis C, Goldstein BI, Levitt AJ, (2014). Suicide in bipolar disorder: characteristics and subgroups, Bipolar Disord, 16(7), 732-40. 688. Schneider M, Debbane M, Bassett AS, Chow EWC, Fung WLA, Van den Bree MBM, Owen M, Murphy KC, Niarchou M, Kates WR, Antshel KM, Fremont W, McDonald-McGinn DM, Gur RE, Zackai EH, Vorstman J, Duijff SN, Klaassen PWJ, Swillen A, Gothelf D, Green T, Weizman A, Van Amelsvoort T, Evers L, Boot E, Shashi V, Hooper SR, Bearden CE, Jalbrzikowski M, Armando M, Vicari S, Murphy DG, Ousley O, Campbell LE, Simon TJ, Eliez S, the International 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome Consortium (2014). Psychiatric disorders from childhood to adulthood in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS): Results from the International Consortium on Brain and Behavior in 22q11.2DS, Am J Psychiatry, 171(6), 627-639. 689. Schnoll RA, George TP, Hawk LW, Cinciripini P, Wileyto P, Tyndale RF (2014). The Relationship between the Nicotine Metabolite Ratio and Three Measures of Nicotine Dependence Across Sex and Race, Psychopharmacology, 231(1), 2515-2323. 690. Scola G, Andreazza AC (2014). Current state of biomarkers in bipolar disorder, Curr Psychiatry Rep., 16(12), 514. 691. Scola G, Andreazza AC (2015). The role of neurotrophins in bipolar disorder, Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry, 56, 122-128. 692. Scola G, Kim HK, Young LT, Salvador M, Andreazza AC (2014). Lithium reduces the effects of rotenone-induced complex I dysfunction on DNA methylation and hydroxymethylation in rat cortical primary neurons, Psychopharmacology, 231(21), 4189-4198. 693. Scola G, Laliberte VL, Kim HK, Pinguelo A, Salvador M, Young LT, Andreazza AC, (2014). Vitis labrusca extract effects on cellular dynamics and redox modulations in a SH-SY5Y neuronal cell model: a similar role to lithium, Neurochem Int, 79, 12-9. 694. Seeman MV, (2014). Diagnosis and treatment of sleep apnoea in women with schizophrenia, Journal of Mental Health, 23(4), 191-196. 695. Seeman MV, (2014). Eating disorders and psychosis: Seven hypotheses, World J Psychiatry, 4(4), 112-119. 696. Seeman MV, (2015). On delusion formation, Can J Psychiatry, 60(2), 87-90. 697. Seeman MV, (2014). Paying attention to language, Psychiatric Services, 65(9), 1164-1166. 698. Seeman MV, (2014). Pseudocyesis, delusional pregnancy, and psychosis: The birth of a delusion, World Journal of Clinical Cases, 2(8), 338-344. 699. Seeman MV, (2014). Substitute consent in women with psychosis, Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 20(6), 491-497.
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ARTICLES (continued) 700. Seeman MV, (2015). The Jewish psychiatric hospital, Zofiówka, in Otwock, Poland, History of Psychiatry, 26(1), 98104. 701. Seeman MV, (2014). Zofiowka sanatorium, Am J Psychiatry, 171(6), 625-626. 702. Seeman MV, Gladstone BM, Boydell KM, McKeever P (2014). Analysis of a support group for children of parents with mental illnesses: Managing stressful situations, Qualitative Health Research, 24(9), 1171-1182. 703. Seeman MV, Hudson C, Seeman P (2014). Substitute consent in women with psychosis, Parkinson’s Disease, 1-6. 704. Seeman MV, Kennedy SH, Giacobbe P, Placenza FM, Hudson CJ, Seeman P (2014). Depression treatment by withdrawal of short-term low-dose antipsychotic, a proof-of-concept randomized double-blind study, Journal of Affective Disorders, 166(9), 139-143. 705. Seeman MV, Salavati, B, Agha, M, Atenafu, E, Chung J, Nathan PC, Barrera, M (2014). Which siblings of children with cancer benefit most from support groups? Children’s Health Care, 43(3), 221-233. 706. Seeman MV, Seeman P (2014). Is schizophrenia a dopamine supersensitivity reaction?, Progress in NeuroPsychoparmacology & Biological Psychiatry, 48(1), 155-160. 707. Seeman MV, Vigod, SN, Kurdyak, PA, Dennis, CL, Gruneir A, Newman A MV, Rochon PA, Anderson GM, Grigoriadis S, Ray JG (2014). Maternal and newborn outcomes among women with schizophrenia: a retrospective population-based cohort study, BJOG, 121(5), 566-574. 708. Seko Y, Kidd SA, Wiljer D, McKenzie K (2014). Youth Mental Health Interventions via Mobile Phones: A Scoping Review, Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking, 17(9), 591-602. 709. Selby P, Goncharenko K, Barker M, Fahim M, Timothy V, Dragonetti R, Kemper K, Herie M, Hays JT (2015). Review and evaluation of online tobacco dependence treatment training programs for health care practitioners,Journal of Medical Internet Research, 17(4), e97-0000. 710. Seney ML, Sibille E (2014). Sex differences in mood disorders: perspectives from humans and rodent models, Biology of Sex Differences, 5(17), 1-10. 711. Seney ML, Tripp A, McCune S, Lewis D, Sibille E (2015). Laminar and cellular analyses of reduced somatostatin gene expression in the subgenual anterior cingulate cortex in major depression, Neurobiology of Disease, 73, 213-219. 712. Setiawan E, Wilson AA, Mizrahi R, Rusjan PM, Miler,L, Rajkowska G, Suridjan I, Kennedy JL, Rekkas PV, Houle S, Meyer JH (2015). Role of translocator protein density, a marker of neuroinflammation, in the brain during major depressive episodes, JAMA Psychiatry, 72(3), 268-275. 713. Seto MC, Ahmed AG (2014). Treatment and Management of child pornography use, Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 37(2), 207-214. 714. Seto MC, Babchishin KM, Pullman LE, McPhail IV (2015). The puzzle of intrafamilial child sexual abuse: A meta-analysis comparing intrafamilial and extrafamilial offenders with child victims, Clinical Psychology Review, 39, 42-57. 715. Seto MC, Eke AW (2015). Predicting recidivism among adult male child pornography offender: Development of the Child Pornography Offender Risk Tool (CPORT), Law and Human Behavior, 39(4), 416-429.
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ARTICLES (continued) 716. Seto MC, Hermann CA, Kjellgren C, Priebe G, Svedin CG, Langstrom N (2015). Viewing Child Pornography: Prevalence and Correlates in a Representative Community Sample of Young Swedish Men, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 44(1), 6769. 717. Seto MC, Kingston DA, Bourget D (2014). Assessment of the Paraphilias, Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 37(2), 149-161. 718. Shakory S, Van Exan J, Mills JS, Sockalingam S, Keating L, Taube-Schiff M, (2015). Binge eating in bariatric surgery candidates: the role of insecure attachment and emotion regulation, Appetite, 91, 69-75. 719. Shanmugasegaram S, Terzic C, Xiang J, Grace SL (2014). Cardiac rehabilitation services in low and middle-income countries: A scoping review, Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, 29(5), 454-463. 720. Shanthakumari RS, Chandra PS, Riazantseva E, Stewart DE, (2014). ‘Difficulties come to humans and not trees and they need to be faced’: a study on resilience among Indian women experiencing intimate partner violence, Int J Soc Psychiatry, 60(7), 703-10. 721. Shapiro J,Timmins V, Swampillai B, Scavone A, Collinger KA, Boulos C, Goldstein BI, (2014). Correlates of Psychiatric Hospitalization in a Clinical Sample of Canadian Adolescents with Bipolar Disorder, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(8), 1855-1861. 722. Shaw W, Kristman VL, Williams-Whitt K, Soklaridis S, Huang YH, Cote P, Loisel P (2014). The job accommodation scale (JAS): Psychometric evaluation of a new measure of employer support for temporary job modifications, Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation, 24(4), 755-765. 723. Shikatani B, Antony MM, Kuo JR, Cassin SE, (2014). The impact of cognitive restructuring and mindfulness strategies on postevent processing and affect in social anxiety disorder, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 28(6), 570-579. 724. Shiozawa P, Fregni F, Bensenor IM, Lotufo PA, Berlim MT, Daskalakis ZJ, Cordeiro Q, Brunoni AR (2014). Transcranial direct current stimulation for major depression: an updated systematic review and meta-analysis, Int J Neuropsychopharmacol, 17(9), 1443-1452. 725. Shorter E, (2015). Improving the mental health system by addressing core problems, Psychiatric Times, 32(3), 1-2. 726. Shorter E, (2014). Psychiatric turf war: Social versus neurological explanations for delusion (book review, Gold and Gold, Suspicious Minds), Literary Review of Canada, 22(7). 727. Shorter E, (2014). Sexual Sunday School: The DSM and the gatekeeping of morality, AMA Journal of Ethics, 16(17), 932-937. 728. Shorter E, (2014). The 25th anniversary of the launch of Prozac gives pause for thought: where did we go wrong? (editorial), British Journal of Psychiatry, 204(5), 331-332. 729. Shorter E, (2015). The history of nosology and the rise of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience, 17(1), 59-68. 730. Shorter E, (2014). The history of psychiatry as a clinical science, Leidschrift: Historisch Tijdschrift, 29(2), 7-17. 731. Shulman RW, (2015). Financial Elder Abuse, Incapacity, and Inconsistencoes in Implementation of Ontario Legislation, Health Law in Canada, 35(3), 64-72.
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ARTICLES (continued) 732. Siegel RS, Hoeppner B, Yen S, Stout RL, Weinstock LM, Hower HM, Birmaher B, Goldstein TR, Goldstein BI, Hunt JI, Strober M, Axelson DA, Gill MK, Keller MB, (2015). Longitudinal associations between interpersonal relationship functioning and mood episode severity in youth with bipolar disorder, The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 203(3), 194-204. 733. Simeonov D, Steele LS, Anderson S, Ross LE, (2015). Perceived satisfaction with mental health services in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and transsexual communities in Ontario, Canada: An internet-based survey, Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health, 34(1), 31-44. 734. Simpson AIF, (2015). Commentary: Civil commitment and its reform, Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 43(1), 48-51. 735. Simpson AIF, Grimbos T, Chan C, Penney SR, (2015). Developmental typologies of serious mental illness and violence: Evidence from a forensic psychiatric setting, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1-12. 736. Simpson AIF, Penney SR, Fernane S, Wilkie T, (2015). The impact of structured decision making on absconding by forensic psychiatric patients: Results from an A-B design study, BMC Psychiatry, 15, 103. 737. Simpson W, Glazer M, Michalski N, Steiner M, Frey BN (2014). Comparative efficacy of the GAD-7 and EPDS as screening tools for generalized anxiety disorder in pregnancy and postpartum, Can J Psychiatry, 59(8), 434-440. 738. Sinyor M, Schaffer A, Cheung AH, (2014). An observational study of bullying as a contributing factor in youth suicide in Toronto, Can J Psychiatry, 59(12), 632-638. 739. Sinyor M, Schaffer A, Hull I, Peisah C, Shulman K, (2015). Last wills and testaments in a large sample of suicide notes: implications for testamentary capacity, British Journal of Psychiatry, 206(1), 72-6. 740. Sinyor M, Schaffer A, Remington G, (2015). Suicide in schizophrenia: an observational study of coroner records in Toronto, J Clin Psychiatry, 76(1), e98-e103. 741. Siu C, Agid O, Remington G (2015). Meta-analysis of treatment response in antipsychotic clinical trials, JAMA Psychiatry, 72(5), 514-515. 742. Skilling TA, Sorge G (2014). Measuring antisocial values and attitudes in justice-involved male youth: Evaluating the usefulness of the Pride in Delinquency and Criminal Sentiments Scale, Criminal Justice and Behavior, 41(8), 9921007. 743. Slawson G, Milloy M-J, Balneaves LG, Simo A, Guillemi S, Hogg R, Montaner J, Wood E, Kerr T (2015). High-intensity cannabis use and adherence to antiretroviral therapy among people who use illicit drugs in a Canadian setting, AIDS and Behavior, 19(1), 120-127. 744. Sockalingam S, Tan A, Hawa R, Pollex H, Abbey S, Hodges BD (2014). Interprofessional education for delirium care: a systematic review, Journal of Interprofessional Care, 19(2), 161-181. 745. Sockalingam S, Wnuk S, Hawa R, Okrainec A, Meaney C (2015). Employment outcomes one year after bariatric surgery: the role of patient and psychosocial factors, Obesity Surgery, 25(3), 514-522. 746. Sockalingam S, Khan A, Tan A, Hawa R, Abbey S, Jackson T, Zaretsky A, Okrainec A, (2014). A Framework for Understanding International Medical Graduate Fellows Challenges During Transition, Teach Learn Med, 26(4), 401-408.
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ARTICLES (continued) 747. Sockalingam S, Sheehan K, Feld J, Shah H, (2015). Psychiatric care during hepatitis C treatment: the changing role in the era of directing acting antivirals, Am J Psychiatry, 172(6), 512-516. 748. Soczynska JK, Ravindran L, Styra R, McIntyre RS, Cyriac A, Manierka MS, Kennedy SH (2014). The effect of bupropion XL and escitalopram on memory and functional outcomes in adults with major, Psychiatry Research, 22, 245-250. 749. Soderlund H, Moscovitch M, Kumar N, Daskalakis J, Flint A, Herrmann N, Levine B, (2014). Autobiographical episodic memory in major depressive disorder, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 123, 51-60. 750. Soklaridis S, Conforti T (2015). What happens at the hospital does not stay at the hospital: The informal, indirect and unintended benefits of having a dog therapy program in a psychiatric hospital, Canadian Journal of Volunteer Resources Management, 23(1). 751. Soklaridis S, Hunter J, Ravitz P (2014). Twelve tips for asking and responding to difficult questions during a challenging clinical encounter, Med Teach., 36(9), 769-774. 752. Soklaridis S, Lopez J (2014). Women for a change: Closing the leadership gap, Academic Psychiatry, 38(6), 731-736. 753. Soklaridis S, Lopez J, Charach N, Broad K, Teshima J, Fefergrad M (2015). Developing a mentorship program for psychiatry residents, Academic Psychiatry, 39(1), 10-15. 754. Soklaridis S, Lopez J, Czcyzewski K, Dragonetti R, Selby P (2015). R u a smkn m0m?: Aspects of a Text Messaging Smoking Cessation/Reduction Intervention for Younger Mothers, Journal of Smoking Cessation, 10(1), 35-43. 755. Soklaridis S, Hunter JJ, Ravitz P, (2014). 12 tips on how to ask and respond to difficult questions during a challenging clinical encounter: Practical tips for medical trainees, Medical Teacher, 36(9), 769-774. 756. Soreni N, Streiner D, McCabe R, Bullard C, Swinson R, Greco A, Pires P, Szatmari P (2014). Dimensions of perfectionism in children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder, Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 23(2), 136-143. 757. Sorge GB, Andrade BF, (2015). Cognitive-behavioral intervention for disruptive behavior in children with ADHD, Perspectives on Language and Literacy, 41(1), 33-38. 758. Soumier A, Sibille E (2014). Opposing effects of acute versus chronic blockade of frontal cortex somatostatin-positive inhibitory neurons on behavioral emotionality in mice, Neuropsychopharmacology, 32, 2252-2262. 759. Spaniol J, Bowen H, Wegier P, Grady CL (2015). Neural responses to monetary incentives in younger and older adults, Brain Research, 1612, 70-82. 760. St Jacques P, Grady C, Davidson P, Chow T (2015). Emotional evaluation and memory in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, Neurocase, 21(4), 429-437. 761. Stack S, Kral MJ, Borowski T (2014). Exposure to suicide movies and suicide attempts: A research note, Sociological Focus, 47(3), 61-70. 762. Stergio-Kita M, Mansfield E, Bayley M, Cassidy D, Colantonio A, Gomez M, Jeschke M, Kirsh B, Kristman V, Mood J, Vartanian O (2014). Returning to work following electrical injuries: Workers perspectives and advice to others, Journal of Burn Care Research, 35(6), 498-507.
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ARTICLES (continued) 763. Stergiopoulos V, Cusi A, Bekele T, Skosireva A, Latimer E, Schutz C, Fernando I, Rourke SB (2015). Neurocognitive impairment in a large sample of homeless adults with mental illness, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica, 131(4), 256-268. 764. Stergiopoulos V, Gozdzik A, Salehi R, O’Campo P, Hwang SW (2015). Cardiovascular risk factors and 30-year cardiovascular risk in homeless adults with mental illness, BMC public health, 15, 165-165. 765. Stergiopoulos V, Kirst M, Zerger S, Misir V, Hwang S (2015). The impact of a Housing First randomized controlled trial on substance use problems among homeless individuals with mental illness, Drug and alcohol dependence, 146, 2429. 766. Stergiopoulos V, Macnaughton E, Stefancic A, Nelson G, Caplan R, Townley G, Aubry T, McCullough S, Patterson M, Vallee C, Tsemberis S, Fleury MJ, Piat M, Goering P (2015). Implementing Housing First Across Sites and Over Time: Later Fidelity and Implementation Evaluation of a Pan-Canadian Multi-site Housing First Program for Homeless People with Mental Illness, American journal of community psychology, 55(3-4), 279-291. 767. Stergiopoulos V, Nelson G, Patterson M, Kirst M, Macnaughton E, Isaak CA, Nolin D, McAll C, Townley G, MacLeod T, Piat M, Goering PN (2015). Life changes among homeless persons with mental illness: a longitudinal study of housing first and usual treatment, Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.), 66(6), 592-597. 768. Stergiopoulos V, O’Campo P, Zerger S, Gozdzik A, Jeyaratnam J (2015). Strategies to balance fidelity to housing first principles with local realities: lessons from a large urban centre, Journal of health care for the poor and underserved, 26(2), 536-553. 769. Stergiopoulos V, Skosireva A, O’Campo P, Zerger S, Chambers C, Gapka S (2014). Different faces of discrimination: perceived discrimination among homeless adults with mental illness in healthcare settings, BMC health services research, 14, 376. 770. Stergiopoulos V, Hwang SW, Gozdzik A, Nisenbaum R, Latimer E, Rabouin D, Adair CE, Bourque J, Connelly J, Frankish J, Katz LY, Mason K, Misir V, O’Brien K, Sareen J, Schutz CG, Singer A, Streiner DL, Vasiliadis HM, Goering PN, (2015). Effect of scattered-site housing using rent supplements and intensive case management on housing stability among homeless adults with mental illness: a randomized trial, JAMA, 313(9), 905-915. 771. Stergiopoulos V, Zerger S, Bacon S, Corneau S, Skosireva A, McKenzie K, Gapka S, O’Campo P, Sarang A (2014). Differential experiences of discrimination among ethnoracially diverse persons experiencing mental illness and homelessness, BMC psychiatry, 14, 353-353. 772. Stergiopoulos V, Zerger S, Francombe Pridham K, Jeyaratnam J, Connelly J, Hwang S, O’Campo P (2014). The role and meaning of interim housing in housing first programs for people experiencing homelessness and mental illness, The American journal of orthopsychiatry, 84(4), 431-437. 773. Stergiou-Kita M, Grigorovich A, Tseung V, Milosevic E, Hebert D, Phan S, Jones J (2015). Development and preliminary evaluation of rehabilitation consult for survivors of head and neck cancer: An intervention mapping protocol, Journal of Cancer Survivorship: Research and Practice, 10(1), 6. 774. Stevens BJ, Yamada J, Estabrooks CA, Stinson J, Campbell F, Scott SD, Cummings G; CIHR Team in Children’s Pain: Barwick M, Chambers C, Cohen J, Finley GA, Harrison D, Johnston C, Latimer M, Lee S, Le May S, McGrath P, Rashotte J, Rosmus C, Sawatzky-Dickso, (2014). Pain in hospitalized children: Effect of a multidimensional knowledge translation strategy on pain process and clinical outcomes, Pain, 155(1), 60-68.
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ARTICLES (continued) 775. Stevens BJ, Yamada J, Promislow S, Stinson J, Harison D, Victor JC, CIHR Team in Children’s Pain, (2014). Implementation of multidimensional knowledge translation strategies to improve procedural pain in hospitalized children, Implementation Science, 9(120). 776. Stewart DE, (2015). Electroconvulsive therapy during pregnancy revisited, Arch Womens Ment Health, 18(4), 655-656. 777. Stewart DE, (2015). The importance of intimate partner violence and suicidal ideation in pregnant women, Arch Womens Ment Health, 18(4), 571-572. 778. Stoner SA, Arenella PB, Hendershot CS (2015). Randomized controlled trial of a mobile phone intervention for improving adherence to naltrexone for alcohol use disorders, PLoS One, 10(4), e0124613. 779. Stortz J, Lake JK, Cobigo V, Ouellette-Kuntz H, Lunsky Y, (2014). Lessons learned from our elders: How to study polypharmacy in populations with IDD, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 52(1), 60-77. 780. Strang NM, Claus ED, Ramchandani VA, Graff-Guerrero A, Boileau I, Hendershot CS, (2014). Dose-dependent effects of intravenous alcohol administration on cerebral blood flow in young adults, Psychopharmacology, 232(4), 733-744. 781. Strike C, Jairam J, Kolla G, Millson P, Shepherd S, Fischer B, Watson T, Bayoumi A, (2014). Increasing pubilc support for supervised injection facilities in Canada, Addiction, 109(6), 946-953. 782. Strimas R, Dionne MM, Cassin S, Wnuk S, Taube-Schiff M, Sockalingam S (2014). Psychopathology in severely obese women from a Canadian bariatric setting, Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 7(2), 72-85. 783. Stuart H, Chen S, Christie R, Dobson K, Kirsh B, Knaak S, Koller M, Krupa T, Lauria-Horner B, Luong D, Modgill G, Patten S, Pietrus M, Whitley R, Szeto A (2014). Opening Minds in Canada: Targeting Change, Can J Psychiatry, 59(10), S13-S18. 784. Stuart H, Chen S, Christie R, Dobson K, Kirsh B, Knaak S, Koller M, Krupa T, Lauria-Horner B, Luong D, Modgill G, Patten S, Pietrus M, Whitley R, Szeto A (2014). Opening Minds in Canada: Background and rationale, Can J Psychiatry, 59(10), S8-S13. 785. Su P, Li S, Chen S, Lipina TV, Lai T, Wang M, Lai T, Lee F, Zhai D, Zhang H, Ferguson SSG, Nobrega JN, Wong AHC, Roder JC, Fletcher PJ, Liu F (2014). A Dopamine D2 Receptor-DISC1 Protein Complex May Contribute to Antipsychoticlike Effects, Neuron, 84(6), 1302-1316. 786. Sun Y, Farzan F, Garcia Dominguez L, Barr MS, Giacobbe P, Lozano AM, Wong W, Daskalakis ZJ (2014). A Novel Method for Removal of Deep Brain Stimulation Artifact From Electroencephalography, Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 237(1), 33-40. 787. Suridjan I, Rusjan PM, Voineskos AN, Selvanathan T, Setiawan E, Strafella AP, Wilson AA, Meyer JH, Houle S, Mizrahi R (2014). Neuroinflammation in healthy aging: A PET study using a novel Translocator Protein 18kDa (TSPO) radioligand, [(18) F]-FEPPA, Neuroimage, 84, 868-875. 788. Suridjan I, Rusjan PM, Kenk M, Verhoeff NP, Voineskos AN, Rotenberg D, Wilson AA, Meyer JH, Houle S, Mizrahi R, (2014). Quantitative imaging of neuroinflammation in human white matter: A positron emission tomography study with translocator protein 18 kDa radioligand, [(18) F]-FEPPA, Synapse, 68(11), 536-47. 789. Swardfager W, Herrmann N, Mazereeuw G, Lanctôt KL, (2015). Reply to: Serum zinc and the risk of depression in men: observations from a 20-year follow-up study, Biol Psychiatry, 77(3), 13-14.
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ARTICLES (continued) 790. Sylco S. Hoppenbrouwers, Danilo R. De Jesus, MD; Yinming Sun, MSc; Tania Stirpe, PhD; Dennis Hofman, PhD; Jeff McMaster, MD; Ginny Hughes, BSc; Zafiris J. Daskalakis, MD, PhD*; Dennis J.L.G. Schutter, PhD* (2014). Abnormal interhemispheric connectivity in male psychopathic offenders, Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, 39(1), 22-30. 791. Szatmari P, Georgiades S, Duku E, Bryson S, Fombonne E, Volden J, Mirenda P, Smith I, Roberts W, Vaillancourt T, Waddell C, Zwaigenbaum L, Elsabbagh M, Thompson A (2015). Developmental Trajectories of Symptoms Severity and Adaptive Functioning in an Inception Cohort of Preschool Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder, JAMA Psychiatry, 22(1), 55-69. 792. Taddio A, Shah V, Wang J, Parikh C, Smart S, Ipp M, Pillai Riddell R, Franck LS (2015). Usability and knowledge testing of educational tools about infant vaccination pain management directed to postnatal nurses, BMC Medical Education, 15(1), 45-45. 793. Taddio A, Smart S, Sheedy M, Yoon EW, Vyas C, Parikh C, Pillai Riddell R, Shah V (2014). Impact of prenatal education on maternal utilization of analgesic interventions at future infant vaccinations: a cluster randomized trial, Pain, 155(7), 1288-1292. 794. Tajik-Parvinchi D, Wright L, Schachar R, (2014). Cognitive Rehabilitation for Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD): Promises and Problems, J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry., 23(3), 207-217. 795. Takeuchi H, Fervaha G, Lee J, Agid O, Remington G (2015). Effectiveness of different dosing regimens of risperidone and olanzapine in schziophrenia, Neuropsychopharmacology, 25(3), 295-302. 796. Takeuchi H, Suzuki T, Bies RB, Remington G, Watanabe K, Mimura M, Uchida H (2014). Dose reduction of risperidone or olanzapine and estimated dopamine D2 receptor occupancy in stable patients with schizophrenia: findings from an open-label, randomized controlled study, J Clin Psychiatry, 75(11), 1209-1214. 797. Takeuchi H, Suzuki T, Remington G, Watanabe K, Mimura M, Uchida H (2014). Lack of effect of risperidone or olanzapine dose reduction on metabolic parameters, prolactin, and corrected QT interval in stable patients with schizophrenia, J Clin Psychopharmacol, 34(4), 517-520. 798. Takeuchi H, Suzuki T, Remington G, Watanabe K, Mimura M, Uchida H (2014). Lack of effect of risperidone or olanzapine dose reduction on subjective experiences in stable patients with schizophrenia, Psychiatr Res, 218(1-2), 244-246. 799. Talpur A, George TP (2014). A Review of Drug Policy in the Golden Crescent: Towards the Development of More Effective Solutions, Asian J. Psychiatry, 12(C), 31-35. 800. Tan A, Philipp D, Malat J, Feder V, Kulkarni C, Lawson A, So V, Ravitz R (2014). Lost in Transition: Examining Transitions in Psychotherapy Training, Academic Psychiatry, 1-5. 801. Tang C, Shanmugasegaram S, Chow CM, Cho N, Tan Y, Grace SL (2014). A comparison of psychosocial health in North American and Chinese-Canadian cardiac patients, and ethnocultural correlates of quality of life, Ethnicity & Disease, 24(3), 302-309. 802. Tang S, Ding Y, Sibille E, Mogil J, Lariviere WR, Tseng GC (2014). Imputation of Truncated p-Values For Meta-Analysis Methods and Its Genomic Application, The Annals of Applied Statistics, 8(4), 2150-2174. 803. Tarasoff LA, Epstein R, Green D, Anderson S, Ross LE, (2014). Using theatre to help fertility providers better understand sexual and gender minorities, Medical Humanities, 40(2), 135-141.
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ARTICLES (continued) 804. Tasca GA, Sylvestre J, Balfour L, Chyurlia L, Evans J, Fortin-Langelier B, Francis K, GandhiJ, Huehn L, Hunsley J, Joyce AS, Kinley J, Koszycki D, Leszcz M, Lybanon-Daigle V, Mercer D, Ogrodniczuk JS, Presniak M, Ravitz P, Ritchie K, Talbot (2015). What Clinicians Want: Findings From a Psychotherapy Practice Research Network Survey, Psychotherapy, 52(1), 1-11. 805. Taube-Schiff M, Van Exan J, Tanka R, Wnuk S, Hawa R, Sockalingam S (2015). Attachment style and emotional eating in bariatric surgery candidates: The mediating role of difficulties in emotion regulation, Eating Behaviours, 18(1), 36-40. 806. Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, Kushner SC, Benoit D, Atkinson L (2014). Alexithymia and adult attachment representations: Associations with the five-factor model of personality and perceived relationship adjustment, Comprehensive Psychiatry, 55(5), 1258-1268. 807. Taylor VH, (2014). The impact of weight on self acceptance, Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 7(4). 808. Taylor VH, (2014). Weighty Matters: The Role of Weight in the Lives of Women, Ethnicity and Inequalities in Health and Social Care, 7(2). 809. Tchistiakova E, Anderson ND, Greenwood CE, MacIntosh BJ, (2014). Combined effects of type 2 diabetes and hypertension associated with cortical thinning and impaired cerebrovascular reactivity relative to hypertension in older adults, Neuroimage: Clinical, 5, 36-41. 810. Tchistiakova E, Crane DE, Mikulis DJ, Anderson ND, Greenwood CE, Black SE, MacIntosh BJ, (2015). Vascular risk factor burden correlates with cerebrovascular reactivity but not resting state co-activation in the default mode network, Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 1-8. 811. Teixeira AM, Kleinman A, Zanetti M, Jackowski M, Duran F, Pereira F, Lafer B, Busatto GF, Caetano SC (2014). Preserved white matter in unmedicated pediatric bipolar disorder, Neuroscience Letters, 579(3), 41-45. 812. Tekian A, Hodges BD, Roberts TE, Schuwirth L, Norcini J (2015). Assessing competencies using milestones along the way, Medical Teacher, 37(4), 399-402. 813. Thibodeau MA, Quilty LC, De Fruyt F, De Bolle M, Rouillon F, Bagby RM (2015). Latent classes of non-responders, rapid responders, and gradual responders in depressed outpatients receiving antidepressant medication and psychotherapy, Depression and Anxiety, 32(3), 213-220. 814. Timilshina N, Breunis H, Brandwein JM, Minden MD, Gupta V, O’Neil S, Tomlinson G, Buckstein R, Li M, Alibhai SMH (2014). Do quality of life or physical function at diagnosis predict short-term outcomes during intensive chemotherapy in AML? Annals of Oncology, 25(4), 883-888. 815. Timon CM, Astell AJ, Hwang F, Adlam TD, Smith T, Maclean L, Spurr D, Forster SE, Williams EA (2015). The validation of a novel method of dietary assessment for older adults (The NANA study), British Journal of Nutrition, 113(4), 654-664. 816. Tobe SW, Stone JA, Walker KM, Anderson T, Bhattacharyya O, Cheng AY, Gregoire J, Gubitz G, L’Abbe M, Lau DC, Leiter LA, Oh P, Padwal R, Poirier L, Selby P, Tremblay M, Ward RA, Hua D, Liu PP (2014). Canadian Cardiovascular Harmonized National Guidelines Endeavour (C-CHANGE): 2014 update, Canadian Medical Association Journal, 186(17), 1299-1305. 817. Tong J, Fitzmaurice P, Furukawa Y, Schmunk GA, Wickham DJ, Ang LC, Sherwin A, McCluskey T, Boileau I, Kish SJ (2014). Is brain gliosis a characteristic of chronic methamphetamine use in the human? Neurobiol Dis, 67(Jul), 107118.
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ARTICLES (continued) 818. Trottier K, Carter J, MacDonald DE, McFarlane T, Olmsted MP (2015). Graded body image exposure for eating disorders: A randomized controlled pilot trial in clinical practice, International Journal of Eating Disorders, 48(5), 494504. 819. Tsoi LC, Spain SL, Ellinghaus E, Stuart PE, Capon F, Knight J, et al (2015). Enhanced meta-analysis and replication studies identify five new psoriasis susceptibility loci, Nature Communications, 6(7001), 1-8. 820. Tsuboi T, Suzuki T, Bies RR, Remington G, Pollock BG, Mimura M, Uchida H (2015). Challenging the need for sustained blockade of dopamine D2 receptors estimated from antipsychotic plasma levels in the maintenance treatment of schizophrenia: a single-blind, randomized, controlled trial, Schizophr Res, 164(1-3), 149-154. 821. Tuokko H, Jouk A, Myerst A, Marshall S, Man-Son-Hing M, Porter MM, Bedard M, Gelinas I, Korner-Bitensky N, Mazer B, Naglie G, Rapoport M, Vrkljan B, (2014). Re-examination of Driving-Related Attitudes and Readiness to Change Driving Behavior in Older Adults, Physical and Occupational Therapy in Geriatrics, 32(3), 210-227. 822. Turanyi CZ, Ronai KZ, Zoller R, Veber O, Czira ME, Ujszaszi A, Laszlo G, Szentkiralyi A, Dunai A, Lindner A, Szocs JL, Becze A, Kelemen A, Lendvai Z, Molnar MZ, Mucsi I, Novak M, (2014). Association between lunar phase and sleep characteristics, Sleep Med, 15(11), 1411-1416. 823. urk-Adawi K, Grace SL (2015). Narrative review comparing the benefits of, participation cardiac rehabilitation in high-, middle- and low-income countries, Heart, Lung and Circulation, 24(5), 510-520. 824. Turk-Adawi K, Sarrafzadegan N, Grace SL (2014). Global availability of cardiac rehabilitation, Nature Reviews: Cardiology, 11(10), 586-596. 825. Uchida H, Suzuki T, Graff-Guerrero A, Mulsant BH, Pollock B, Arenovich T, Rajji TK, Mamo DC, (2014). Therapeutic window for striatal dopamine D2/3 receptor occupancy in older patients with schizophrenia: a pilot PET study, Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 22(10), 1007-1016. 826. Ungar TU, Knaak S, Patten S (2015). Seeing is believing: Biological information may reduce mental health stigma amongst physicians, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychaitry, 49(4), 1-2. 827. Urbanoski K, Kenaszchuk C, Veldhuizen S, Rush, BR (2015). The clustering of psychopathology among adults seeking treatment for alcohol and drug addiction, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 49(1), 21-26. 828. Urbanoski KA, Henderson C, Castel S, (2014). Multilevel analysis of the determinants of the global assessment of functioning in an inpatient population, BMC Psychiatry, 14(63), 1-6. 829. accarino O, Levitan R, Ravindran AV (2015). The cortisol response to stress in social anxiety disorder (SAD), Asian J. Psychiatry, Apr(14), 57-60. 830. Vachon, MLS, (2014). The Impact of theDdocument International Work Group in Death, Dying and Bereavement: Assumptions and Principles Underlying Standards for Terminal Care, Omega, 70(1), 27-41. 831. Van Loo HM, van den Heuvel ER, Schoevers RA, Anslemino M, Carney R, Denollet J, Doyle F, Freedland K E, Grace SL, Hosseini SH, Parakh K, Pilote L, Rafanelli C, Roest A, Sato H, Steeds RP, Kessler RC, de Jonge P (2014). Sex-dependent risk factors for mortality after myocardial infarction: Individual patient data meta-analysis, BMC Medicine, 12(1), 242250.
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ARTICLES (continued) 832. VanderLaan DP, Blanchard R, Wood H, Garzon LC, Zucker KJ (2015). Birth weight and two possible types of maternal effects on male sexual orientation: A clinical study of children and adolescents referred to a Gender Identity Service, Developmental Psychobiology, 57(1), 25-34. 833. VanderLaan DP, Leef JH, Wood H, Hughes K, Zucker KJ (2015). Autism spectrum disorder risk factors and autistic traits in gender dysphoric children, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 45(6), 1742-1750. 834. VanderLaan DP, Postema L, Wood H, Singh D, Fantus S, Hyun J, Leef J, Bradley SJ, Zucker KJ (2015). Do children with gender dysphoria have intense/obsessional interests? Journal of Sex Research, 52(2), 213-219. 835. Veldhuizen S, Clinton J, Rodriguez C, Wade T, Cairney J (2015). Concurrent Validity of the Ages and Stages Questionnaires and Bayley Developmental Scales in a General Population Sample, Academic Pediatrics, 15(2), 231237. 836. Veldhuizen S, Urbanoski K, Rush BR (2014). Do you think you have mental health problems?”“ Advantages and disadvantages of a single screening question for identifying people with mental disorders in addiction treatment, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 75(1), 1039-1046. 837. Vernet M, Brem AK, Farzan F, Pascual-Leone A (2014). Synchronous and opposite roles of the parietal and prefrontal cortices in bistable perception: a double-coil TMS-EEG study, Cortex, 64, 77-88. 838. Vigod SN, Dennis CL, Daskalakis Z, Murphy K, Ray J, Oberlander T, Somerton S, Hussain-Shamsy N, Blumberger D (2014). Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for treatment of major depression during pregnancy: study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial, TRIALS, 15, 366. 839. Vigod SN, Gomes T, Wilton AS, Taylor VH, Ray JG (2015). Antipsychotic drug use in pregnancy: high-dimensional propensity-matched population-based cohort study, British Medical Journal, 35, 2298. 840. Vigod SN, Kurdyak PA, Seitz D, Herrmann N, Fung K, Lin E, Perlman C, Taylor VH, Rochon PA, Gruneir A (2015). READMIT: a clinical risk index to predict 30-day readmission after discharge from acute psychiatric units, J Psychiatr Res, 61, 205-213. 841. Vogan V, Lake JK, Weiss JA, Robinson S, Tint A, Lunsky Y (2014). Factors associated with caregiver burden among parents of individuals with ASD: Differences across intellectual functioning, Family Relations, 63(4), 554-567. 842. Voineskos AN, (2015). Genetic underpinnings of white matter ‘connectivity’: Heritability, risk, and heterogeneity in schizophrenia, Schizophr Res, 161(1), 50-60. 843. Voineskos AN, Winterburn JL, Felsky D, Pipitone J, Rajji TK, Mulsant BH, Chakravarty MM, (2015). Hippocampal (subfield) volume and shape in relation to cognitive performance across the adult lifespan, Human Brain Mapping, 36(8), 3020-3037. 844. von Baeyer CL, Stevens BJ, Chambers CT, Craig KD, Finley A, Grunau RE, Johnston CC, Pillai Riddell R, Stinson JN, Dol J, Campbell-Yeo M, McGrath PJ (2014). Training highly qualified health research personnel: The Pain in Child Health consortium, Pain Research and Management, 19(5), 267-274. 845. Vorstman JAS, Breetvelt EJ, Duijff SN, Eliez S, Schneider M, Jalbrzikowski M, Armando M, Vicari S, Shashi V, Hooper SR, Chow EWC, Fung WLA, Butcher NJ, Fu F, McDonald-McGinn DM, Vogels A, van Amelsvoort TA, Gothelf D, Weinberger R, Weizman A, Klassen PWJ, Koops S, Kates WR, Antshel KM, Simon TJ, Ousley OY, Swillen A, Gur RE, Bearden CE, Kahn RS, Bassett AS, International 22q11.2 Brain Behavior Syndrome Consortium (2015). Cognitive
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ARTICLES (continued) decline preceding the onset of psychosis in patients with 22q11.2 deletion Syndrome, JAMA Psychiatry, 72(4), 377385. 846. Wade M, Andrade BF, (2015). Validation of a measure of parental readiness for treatment in a clinical sample of children with disruptive behavior, Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 37(2), 184-195. 847. Wagner LM, Huijbregts M, Sokoloff LG, Wisiewski R, Walsh L, Feldman S, Conn DK, (2014). Implementation of Mental Health Huddles on Dementia Care Units, Canadian Journal on Aging, 33(3), 235-45. 848. Wald RM, Al-Taha MA, Alvarez N, Caldarone CA, Cavalle-Garrido T, Dallaire F, Drolet C, Grewal J, Hancock-Friesen CL, Human DG, Hickey E, Kayedpour C, Khairy P, Kovacs AH, McCrindle BW, Farkouh M, (2014). Rationale and design of the Canadian outcomes registry later after tetralogy of fallot repair: the CORRELATE study, Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 11, 1436-1443. 849. Walton G, Ross LE, Stewart DE, Grigoriadis S, Dennis CL, Vigod SN, (2014). Decisional conflict among women facing decisions regarding antidepressant medication use in pregnancy: a mixed methods analysis, Arch Womens Ment Health, 17(6), 493-501. 850. Walton GD, Ross LE, Stewart DE, Grigoriadis S, Dennis CL, Vigod S, (2014). Decisional conflict among women considering antidepressant medication use in pregnancy, Arch Womens Ment Health, 6, 493-501. 851. Wardell JD, Quilty LC, Hendershot CS (2015). Alcohol sensitivity moderates indirect associations between impulsive traits, impaired control over drinking, and drinking outcomes, Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 76(2), 278-286. 852. Warnica W, Merico D, Costain G, Alfred SE, Wei J, Marshall CR, Scherer SW, Bassett AS, (2015). Copy number variable microRNAs in schizophrenia and their neurodevelopmental gene targets, Biol Psychiatry, 77(2), 158-166. 853. Wassenaar CA, Ye Y, Cai Q, Aldrich MC, Knight J, Spitz MR, Wu X, Blot WJ, Tyndale RF (2014). CYP2A6 reduced activity gene variants confer reduction in lung cancer risk in African American smokers—findings from two independent populations, Carcinogenesis, 36(1), 99-103. 854. Weiss JA, MacMullin JA, Lunsky Y (2015). Empowerment and parent gain as mediators and moderators of distress in mothers of children with autism spectrum disorders, Journal of Child and Family Studies, 24(7), 2038-2045. 855. Weiss JA, Wingsiong A, Lunsky Y (2014). Defining crisis in families of individuals with autism spectrum disorders, Autsim, 18(8), 985-995. 856. Weiss JA, Tint A, Paquette-Smith M, Lunsky Y, (2015). Perceived self-efficacy in parents of adolescents and adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder, Autism, 1-10. 857. Wendland B, Atkinson L, Steiner M, Fleming AS, Pencharz P,Moss E, Gaudreau H, Silveira PP, Arenovich T, Matthews SG, Meaney MJ, Levitan RD, on behalf of the MAVAN Study Team (2014). Low maternal sensitivity at 6 months of age predicts higher BMI in 48 month old girls but not boys, Appetite, 82(1), 97-102. 858. Wentlandt K, Krzyzanowska MK, Swami N, Rodin G, Le LW, Sung L, Zimmermann C (2014). Referral practices of pediatric oncologists to specialized palliative care, Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(9), 2315-2322. 859. Wheeler AL, Creed MC, Voineskos AN, Nobrega JN (2014). Changes in brain functional connectivity after chronic haloperidol in rats: a network analysis, Int J Neuropsychopharmacol, 17(8), 1129-1138.
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ARTICLES (continued) 860. Wheeler AL, Voineskos AN (2014). A review of structural neuroimaging in schizophrenia: from connectivity to connectomics, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 653-653. 861. Wheeler AL, Wessa M, Szeszko PR, Foussias G, Chakravarty MM, Lerch JP, DeRosse P, Remington G, Mulsant BH, Linke J, Malhotra AK, Voineskos AN. Further neuroimaging evidence for deficit subtype of schizophrenia: a cortical connectomics analysis (2015). Further neuroimaging evidence for deficit subtype of schizophrenia: a cortical connectomics analysis, JAMA Psychiatry, 72(5), 446-455. 862. Wheeler AL, Chakravarty MM, Lerch JP, Pipitone J, Daskalakis ZJ, Rajji TK, Mulsant BH, Voineskos AN., (2014). Disrupted prefrontal interhemispheric structural coupling in schizophrenia related to working memory performance, Schizophrenia Bulletin, 40(4), 914-24. 863. White J, Kral MJ, Borowski T (2014). Re-thinking youth suicide: Language, culture, and power, Journal for Social Action in Counseling and Psychology, 6(3), 122-142. 864. Whitehead C, Selleger V, van de Kreeke J, Hodges B (2014). The ‘missing person’ in roles-based competency models: a historical, cross-national, contrastive case study, Medical Education, 48(8), 785-795. 865. Whitehead CR, Kuper A, Hodges B, Ellaway R (2015). Conceptual and practical challenges in the assessment of physician competencies, Medical Teacher, 37(3), 245-251. 866. Wiesenfeld L, Abbey S, Takahashi SG, Abrahams C (2014). Choosing Psychiatry as a Career: Motivators and Deterrents at a Critical Decision-Making Juncture, Can J Psychiatry, 59(8), 450-454. 867. Wilcox AC, Stephenson, E, Allen, J, Bourque, F, Drossos, A, Elgaroy, S, Kral, MJ, Mauro, I, Moses, J, Pearce, T, MacDonald, JP, Wexler, L (2014). Examining relationships between climate change and mental health in the circumpolar north: An emerging priority? Regional Environmental Change, 15(4), 169-182. 868. Williams, G, Daros AR, Graves B, McMain SF, Links PS, Ruocco AC (2015). Executive functions and social cognition in highly lethal self-injuring patients with borderline personality disorder, Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 6(2), 107-116. 869. Wilson CM, Crocker AG, Nicholls TL, Charette Y, Seto MC (2015). The use of risk and need factors in forensic mental health decision-making and the role of gender and index offense severity, Behavioral Sciences and the Law, (33), 1938. 870. Wing VC, Payer DE, Houle S, George TP, Boileau I (2015). Measuring cigarette smoking-induced cortical dopamine release: A [C-11]FLB-457 PET study, Neuropsychopharmacology, 40(6), 1417-1427. 871. Wing VC, Payer DE, Houle S, George TP, Boileau I (2015). Measuring smoking-induced extrastriatal dopamine release and D2/3 receptor availability in human smokers: A [11C]FLB-457 Positron Emission Tomography Study,Neuropsychopharmacology, 40(1), 4017-4027. 872. Wnuk S, Greenberg l, Dolhanty J (2015). Emotion focused group therapy for women with symptoms of bulimia nervosa, Eating Disorders: Journal of Treatment and Prevention, 23(3), 253-261. 873. Woodbury-Smith M, Paterson AD, Lionel AC Marshall CR, Merico D, Fernandez BA, Duku E, Szatmari P, et al (2015). Using extended pedigrees to identify novel autism spectrum disorder (ASD) candidate genes, Human Genetics, 134(2), 191-201.
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ARTICLES (continued) 874. Wu CS, Wang SC, Liu SK (2015). Clozapine use reduced psychiatric hospitalization and emergency room visits in patients with bipolar disorder independent of improved treatment regularity in a three-year follow-up period, Bipolar Disord, 17(4), 415-423. 875. Yamada J, Shorkey A, Barwick M, Widger K, Stevens B, (2015). The effectiveness of toolkits as knowledge translation strategies for integrating evidence into clinical care: A systematic review, BMJ Open, 5(4). 876. Yeung E, Woods N, Dubrowski A, Hodges B, Carnahan H (2015). Establishing assessment criteria for clinical reasoning in orthopedic manual physical therapy: a consensus building study, The Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy, 23(1), 27-36. 877. Yilmaz Z, Davis C, Loxton NJ, Kaplan AS, Levitan RD, Carter JC, Kennedy JL (2015). Association between MC4R rs17782313 polymorphism and overeating behaviors, Int J Obes (Lond), 39(1), 114-120. 878. Yilmaz Z, Kaplan AS, Tiwari AK, Levitan RD, Piran S, Bergen AW, Kaye WH, Hakonarson H, Wang K, Berrettini WH, Brandt HA, Bulik CM, Crawford S, Crow S, Fichter MM, Halmi KA, Johnson CL, Keel PK, Klump KL, Magistretti P, Mitchell JE, Strober M, Thornton LM (2014). The role of leptin, melanocortin, and neurotrophin system genes on body weight in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, J Psychiatr Res, 55, 77-86. 879. Yourganov G, Schmah T, Churchill NW, Berman MG, Grady CL, Strother SC (2014). Pattern classification of fMRI data: Applications for analysis of spatially distributed cortical networks, Neuroimage, 96(1), 117-132. 880. Yu D, Mathews CA, Scharf JM, Neale BM, Davis LK, Gamazon ER, Derks EM, Evans P, Edlund CK, Crane J, Fagerness JA, Osiecki L, Gallagher P, Gerber G, Haddad S, Illmann C, McGrath LM, Mayerfeld C, Arepalli S, Barlassina C, Barr CL, Bellodi L, Benarroch F, Berrió G (2015). Cross-Disorder Genome-Wide Analyses Suggest a Complex Genetic Relationship Between Tourette’s Syndrome and OCD, Am J Psychiatry, 172(1), 82-93. 881. Yuen RK, Thiruvahindrapuram B, Merico D, Waler S, Tammimies K, Hoang N, Chrysler C, Zwaigenbaum L, Ray PN, Szatmari P, et al (2015). Whole-genome sequencing of quartet families with autism spectrum disorder, National Medicine, 21(2), 185-191. 882. Zai CC, Goncalves VF, Tiwari AK, Gagliano SA, Hosang G, de Luca V, Shaikh SA, King N, Chen Q, Xu W, Strauss J, Breen G, Lewis CM, Farmer AE, McGuffin P, Knight J, Vincent JB, Kennedy JL (2015). A genome-wide association study of suicide severity scores in bipolar disorder, J Psychiatr Res, 65, 23-29. 883. Zai CC, Manchia M, Sønderby IE, Yilmaz Z, De Luca V, Tiwari AK, Squassina A, Zai GC, Shaikh SA, Strauss J, King N, Le Foll B, Kaplan AS, Finseth PI, Vaaler AE, Djurovic S, Andreassen OA, Vincent JB, Kennedy JL (2015). Investigation of the genetic interaction between BDNF and DRD3 genes in suicidical behaviour in psychiatric disorders, World J Biol Psychiatry, 16(3), 171-179. 884. Zai G, Zai C, Arnold P, Freeman N, Burroughs E, Kennedt JL, Richter MA, (2015). Meta-Analysis and Association of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) Gene with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Psychiatric Genetics, 25(2), 95-96. 885. Zalai D, Sherman M, McShane K, Shapiro CM, Carney CE, (2015). The importance of fatigue cognitions in chronic hepatitis C infection, J Psychosom Res, 78(2), 193-8. 886. Zawertailo L, Voci S, Selby P (2015). Depression status as a predictor of quit success in a real-world effectiveness study of nicotine replacement therapy, Psychiatry Research, 226(1), 120-127.
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ARTICLES (continued) 887. Zhai D, Lee FHF, D’Souza C, Su P Zhang S, Jia J, Zhang L, Wong AHC, Liu F (2015). Blocking the GluR2-GAPDH Interaction Ameliorates Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis, Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, 2(4), 388-400. 888. Zhang B, Cohen JE, Bondy SJ, Selby P (2015). Duration of nicotine replacement therapy use and smoking cessation: A population-based longitudinal study, American Journal of Epidemiology, 181(7), 513-520. 889. Zhang K, Feng Y, Wigg KG, Sandor P, Barr CL (2015). Association study of the SLITRK5 gene and Tourette syndrome, Psychiatr Genet, 25(1), 31-34. 890. Zhao W, Law S, Luo X, Chow W, Zhang J, Zhu Y, Liu S, Ma X, Yao S, Wang X (2015). First adaptation of a family-based ACT model in mainland China: a pilot project, Psychiatric services (Washington, DC), 66(4), 438-441. 891. Zhou C, Azin A, Al-Ozairi E, Okrainec A, Hawa R, Sockalingam S, (2015). Examining the barriers to accessing body contouring surgery: a qualitative study, Bariatric Surgical Practice and Patient Care, 10(1), 24-29. 892. Zhou X, Ravindran AV, Qin B, Del Giovane C, Li Q, Bauer M, Liu Y, Fang Y, da Silva T, Zang Y, Fang L, Wang X, Xie P (2015). Comparative efficacy, acceptability, and tolerability of augmentation agents in treatment-resistant depression: systematic review and network meta-analysis, Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 76(4), 487-498. 893. Zimmermann C, Swami N, Krzyzanowska M, Hannon B, Leighl N, Oza A, Moore M, Rydall A, Rodin G, Tannock I, Donner A, Lo C (2014). Early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer: A cluster randomized controlled trial, The Lancet, 383(9930), 1721-1730. 894. Zipursky RB, (2014). Why are the outcomes in patients with schizophrenia so poor? J Clin Psychiatry, 75(Spl2), 20-24. 895. Zipursky RB, Agid O (2015). Recovery, not progressive deterioration, should be the expectation in schizophrenia, World J Psychiatry, 14(1), 94-96. 896. Zipursky RB, Menezes NM, Streiner DL (2014). Risk of symptom recurrence with medication discontinuation in first episode psychosis: a systematic review, Schizophr Res, 152(2-3), 408-414.
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BOOKS Clark C, Classen CC, Fourt A, Shetty M, Treating the trauma survivor: an essential guide to trauma-informed care, Routledge, 2015. Egan SJ, Wade TD, Shafran R, Antony MM, Cognitive-behavioral treatment of perfectionism, Guilford Press, 2014. Ellis D, Stuckless N, Smith C, Marital separation and lethal domestic violence, Routledge, 2015. Fivaz-Depeursinge E, Philipp DA, The baby and the couple: Understanding and treating young families, Routledge, 2014. Harris GT, Rice ME, Quinsey VL, Cormier CA, Violent Offenders: Appraising and Managing Risk (3rd Edition), American Psychological Association, 2015. Jones JM, Howell D, ESMO Handbook on Rehabilitation Issues During Cancer Treatment and Follow-Up, European Society of Medical Oncology, 2014. Krupa K, Kirsh B, Psychosocial Frames of Reference: Core for Occupation-Based Practice, Slack, 2015. Leszcz M, Pain C, Hunter J, Ravitz P (Eds), Maunder R, Psychotherapy Essentials to Go: Achieving Psychotherapy Effectiveness, WW Norton & Company, 2015. Li M, Kennedy EB, Byrne N, Gerin-Lajoie C, Green E, Katz MR, Keshavarz H, Sellick SM, Management of Depression in Patients with Cancer, Program in Evidence-Based Care, 2015. Mishna F, Van Wert M, Bullying in Canada, Oxford University Press Canada, 2015. Nelson S, Tassone M, Hodges B, Creating the Health Care Team of the Future: The Toronto Model for Interprofessional Education and Care, Cornell University Press, 2014. Philipp DA, Hayos C, Reflective Family Play: A manual for family-based intervention with infants and young children, Hincks-Dellcrest Institute, 2015. Prentky RA, Barbaree H E, Janus E S, Sexual Predators: Society, Risk, and the Law, Routledge, 2015. Reuben DB, Herr KA, Pacala JT, Pollock BG, Potter JF, Semla TP et al, Geriatrics At Your Fingertips: 17th Edition, The American Geriatrics Society, 2015. Reuben DB, Herr KA, Pacala JT, Pollock BG, Potter JF, Semla TP et al., Geriatrics At Your Fingertips: 16th Edition, The American Geriatrics Society, 2014. Righthand S, Baird B, Way I, Seto MC, Effective Intervention with adolescents who have offended sexually: Translating research into practice, Safer Society Press, 2014. Rourke SB, Learning and Teaching Community-Based Research: Linking Pedagogy to Practice, CBR without walls: Fostering learning with on-line collaboration in the Universities Without Walls health training programs, University of Toronto Press, 2014. Shorter E, What Psychiatry Left Out of the DSM-5: Historical Mental Disorders Today, Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 2015. Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, Caretti V, Schimmenti A, La valutazione dell’alessitima con la TSIA, Raffaello Cortina Editore, 2014.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS Albert M, Laberge S, Hodges BD, “Who Wants to Collaborate with Social Scientists? Biomedical and Clinical Scientists’ Perceptions of Social Science” In: Penders B, Vermeulen N, Parker JN, Collaboration Across Health Research and Medical Care. Healthy Collaboration, Surrey, Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2015, 59-80. Albert M, Paradis E, “Social scientists in the health research field: A clash of epistemic habitus” In: Kleinman D,Moore K, Handbook of Science, Technology, and Society, Routledge, 2014, 369-387. Ameis S, Szatmari P, “Common psychiatric comorbidities in ASD and their assessment” In: Clinician’s Manual: Autism Spectrum Disorder, Springer Healthcare, 2015. Bagby RM, Taylor GJ, “Toronto Structured Interview for Alexithymia. Selezione degli item, struttura fattoriale, affidabilita e validita concorrente” In: Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, Caretti V, Schimmenti A, La valutazione dell’alessitimia con la TSIA, Milano, Raffaello Cortina Editore, 2014, 113-131. Blumberger DM, Barr MS, Daskalakis ZJ, “Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Psychiatric Disorders Other Than Depression” In: NA, NA, Neuromodulation in Psychiatry, 2015. Bradley E, Caldwell P, Underwood L, “Chapter 16: Autism Spectrum Disorder” In: Tsakanikos E, McCarthy J, Handbook of Psychopathology in Intellectual Disability; Research, Practice and Policy, New York, Springer, 2014, 237-263. Bradley E, Loh A, Grier E, Korossy M, Cameron D, “Health Watch Table - Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)” In: Bradley E, Loh A, Grier E, Korossy M, Cameron D, Tools for the primary care of people with developmental disabilities, Toronto, Surrey Place Centre, 2014, 1-27. Cantor JM, “Gold star pedophiles in general sex therapy practice” In: Binik YM, Hall K, Principles and practice of sex therapy, New York, Guildford, 2014, 219-234. Cantor JM, “Milestones in sex research: What causes pedophilia?” In: Hyde JS, DeLamater JD, Byers ES, Understanding human sexuality, Toronto, McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 2015, 452-453. Cantor JM, “Pedophilia” In: Cautin R, Lilienfeld S, Encyclopedia of clinical psychology, Malden, MA, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015. Cantor JM, Sutton KS, “Paraphilia, gender dysphoria, and hypersexuality” In: Blaney PH, Millon T, Oxford textbook of psychopathology, New York, Oxford University Press, 214, 589-614. Cassin SE, David L, “Binge eating disorder” In: Cautin R, Lilienfeld S, Encyclopedia of clinical psychology, WileyBlackwell, 2015. Cassin SE, Geller J, “Motivational interviewing in the treatment of disordered eating” In: Arkowitz H, Miller WR, Rollnick S, Motivational interviewing in the treatment of psychological problems, New York, Guilford Press, 2015, 344-364. Chaim G, “Caffeine use collaborative action plan for children and youth” In: Theall L, Sommers J, Stewart S, Henderson J, Owen-Anderson A, Chaim G, interRAI Child and Youth Mental Health Collaborative Action Plans (CAPs) for use with the interRAI Child and Youth Mental Health (ChYMH) Assessment Instrument, Research Version 1 Standard Edition, Washington, interRAI, 2014. Cleland J, Durning S, “Book Prefaces/Forewords” In: Cleland J, Durning S, Cleland J, Durning S, Researching Medical Education, London, City of, Cambridge Press, 2015.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Courtney D, Daoust JP, Juery C, Flament MF, “Traitment du Trouble de la Personalite Borderline chez les Jeunes” In: Holzer L, Psychiatrie de l’enfant and de l’adolescent: Une approche basee sur les preuves, Paris, De Boeck-Solal, 2014, 323-366. Cox SM, Boydell KM, “Ethical issues in arts-based health research” In: Creative Arts in Public Health: International Perspectives., Camic P, Wilson L (eds), London, City of, Oxford University Press, 2015. Dalfen A, “Women’s Mental Health: Postpartum Depression” In: Psychiatric Care of the Medical Patient, Fogel B, Greenberg D (eds), Oxford Press, 2015. Dent J, Harden R, Eds, “Book Prefaces/Forewords” In: Dent J, Harden R, Eds, Dent J, Harden R, Eds, A Practical Guide for Medical Teachers, London, City of, Elsevier, 2014. Devins GM, Otto KM, Irish JC, Rodin GM, “Head and neck cancer (Chapter 14)” In: Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Butow PN, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Psycho-Oncology, Third Edition, New York, Oxford University Press, 2015, 92-97. Drmic IE, Szatmari P, “Emotional Dysregulation and Comorbidity in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)” In: XX, Cutting Edge Psychiatry in Practice, CEPIP, United Kingdom, 2014, 119-131. Duda JL, Marks S, “Psychology of the female athlete” In: Mountjoy ML, International Olympic Committee (IOC) Handbook of Sports Medicine and Science, The Female Athlete, Lausanne, Switzerland, Published Nov 2014 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. The Female Athlete, First Edition. Edited by Margo L. Mountjoy. © 2015 International Olympic Committee, 2014, 2028. Emerson S, Leszcz M, “Am I Enough?” In: Complex Dilemmas in Group Therapy: Pathways to Resolution, Motherwell L, Shay JJ (eds), Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 2014, 154-161. Esplen MJ, Bleiker EM, “Chapter 11: Psychosocial Issues in Genetic Testing for Breast/Ovarian Cancer” In: Holland J, Breitbart WC, Jacobsen PB, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Psycho-Oncology Textbook, London, UK, Oxford University Press, 2015, 71-76. Ferguson MK, Kovacs AH, “End of life care and treatment preferences among adults with congenital heart disease” In: Clinical Psychology and Congenital Heart Disease, Callus E, Quadri E (eds), New York, Springer, 2015. Fitzgerald P, Li M, Miller K, Rodin G, “Depression” In: Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Lederburg MS, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Psycho-Oncology, New York, Oxford University Press, 2015, 281-288. Fitzgerald P, Li M, Miller K, Rodin G, “Depression, Chapter 40” In: Psycho-Oncology, Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Lederburg MS, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R (eds), New York, Oxford University Press, 2014. Fitzgerald P, Li M, Rodin G, “Pharmacotherapy of Depression in Cancer Patients” In: Grassi L, Riba M, Psychopharmacology in Oncology and Palliative Care - a Practical Manual, Springer, 2014, 145-162. Fitzgerald P, Miller K, Li M, Rodin G, “Depressive disorders, Chapter 37” In: Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Butow PN, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Editors, Psycho-Oncology, New York, Oxford University Press, 2015, 281-288. Gallagher D, Coen R, Lawlor BA, “Alzheimer’s Disease” In: Neurodegenerative Disorders: A Clinical Guide, Hardiman O, Doherty CP (eds), Springer, 2015. George TP, “Nicotine and Tobacco” In: Goldman L, Schafer A, Cecil Medicine, New York, Elsevier, 2015, 145-148.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Goossens E, Kovacs AH, Mackie AS, Moons P, “Transfer and transition in congenital heart disease” In: Pediatric and Congenital Cardiology, Cardiac Surgery and Intensive Care, New York, Springer, 2014, 2633-2649. Hales S, Lo C, Rodin G, “Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully (CALM) Therapy” In: Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Lederberg MS, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Psycho-Oncology, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015, 487491. Halman M, “Psychopharmacology in Psychiatric Co-morbidity” In: Halman M, HIV and Psychiatry, Joska J, Stein D, Grant I (eds), Wiley and Sons, 2014, 199-204. Hamer D, Kancir J, Fuller J, Kuper A, Bryden P, Peterkin A, “A Narrative Companion for the Medical Curriculum” In: Keeping Reflection Fresh: Top Educators Share Their Innovations in Health Professional Education, Peterkin A, BrettMacLean P (eds), Kent State Press, 2014. Hodges BD, “Chapter 4: Faculty Development for Research Capacity Building.” In: Faculty Development in the Health Professions: A Focus on Research and Practice, Steinert Y (eds), New York, Springer, 2014, 79-96. Hodges BD, Kuper A, “Education reform and the hidden curriculum: the Canadian journey” In: O’Donnell J, Hafferty F, The Hidden Curriculum in Health Professional Education, Hanover, Dartmouth College Press, 2015, 41-50. Hood HK, Antony MM, “Phobia, specific” In: Milosevic I, McCabe RE, The psychology of irrational fear, Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood, 2015, 280-284. Hood HK, Antony MM, “Phobias, prevalence of” In: Milosevic I, McCabe RE, The psychology of irrational fear, Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood, 2015, 311-313. Iaboni A, Fitzgerald P, Rodin G, “Special issues in psychopharmacology: The Elderly” In: Psychopharmacology in Oncology and Palliative Care—A Practical Manual, Grassi L, Riba M (eds), Springer, 2014, 349-368. Ismail Z, Granger R, Pollock BG, “General Principles of Pharmacological Treatment” In: Psychiatry, Tasman A, Kay J, Lieberman J, First MB, Riba M (eds), Chichester, John Wiley & Sons, 2015, 2027-2040. Jokel R, Anderson ND, “Restoring semantic memory, word by word: Insights from semantic dementia” In: Porter OH, Semantic memory: Neurobiology, disorders and therapeutic strategies for improvement, Porter RH (eds), New York, Nova publishers, 2014, 1-20. Kaplan AS, “Overview of Feeding and Eating Disorders” In: Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders, Gabbard G (eds), American Psychiatric Press, 2014. Kennedy S, Parikh S, Grigoriadis S, “Depression” In: Compendium of Therapeutic Choices, Jovaisas B (eds), Ottawa, Canadian Pharmacists Association, 2014, 71-88. Kennedy S, Parikh S, Grigoriadis S, “Electronic Chapter: Depression” In: Neurodegenerative Disorders: A Clinical Guide, Jovaisas B (eds), Ottawa, Canadian Pharmacists Association, 2014. Kentner AC, Kovacs AH, Grace SL, “Cardiovascular Disease” In: Hadjistavropoulos T, Fundamentals of Health Psychology, Oxford University Press, 2015, 139-154. Kentner AC, Kovacs AH, Grace SL, “Fundamentals of Cardiac Psychology” In: Fundamentals of Health Psychology, Hadjistavropoulous T, Hadjistavropoulous HD (eds), Don Mills, Oxford, 2015.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Killeen T, Cassin SE, Geller J, “Motivational interviewing in the treatment of addictions and eating disorders” In: Brewerton TD, Baker-Dennis A, Eating disorders, addictions, and substance use disorders: Research, clinical, and treatment perspectives, New York, Springer, 2014, 491-507. Korczak DJ, Monga S, “Depression and Anxiety” In: Neinstein’s Adolescent and Young Adult Health: A Practical Guide, Neinstein L, Katzman DK, Callahan T, Gordon C, Joffe A, Rickert V. Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins (eds), 2014. Kovacs AH, Dipchand AI, Greutmann M, Tobler D, “End-of-life care in pediatric and congenital heart disease” In: ,, End-ofLife Care in Cardiovascular Disease, Goodlin SJ, Rich MW (eds), New York, Springer, 2015. Lachmann M, “Data Points Do Not a Person Make, or Why “Big Data” is Irrelevant to Your Health Care” In: Herzberg AM, Statistics, Science, and Public Policy: Communication, Knowledge, and Understanding, Kingston, Queen’s University Press, 2015, 17-20. Lake JK, Palucka A, Desarkar P, Hassiotis A, Lunsky Y, “Inpatient mental health services for adults with intellectual disabilities” In: Handbook of Psychopathology in Intellectual Disability, Tsakanikos E, McCarthy J (eds), New York, Springer Science, 2014, 373-386. Le Foll B, Enoch NG, Trigo JM, Di Ciano P, “The Self-medication Hypothesis in Schizophrenia: What Have We Learned from Animal Models?” In: Lipina T, Roder J, Drug Discovery for Schizophrenia, 2015, 70-88. LeCourteur AL, Szatmari P, “Autism Spectrum Disorder, Chapter 51” In: Thapar A, Pine DS, Leckman JF, Scott S, Snowling MJ, Taylor EA, Rutter’s Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015, 665-682. Leszcz M, “Existential Group Psychotherapy” In: The SAGE Encyclopedia of Theory in Counseling and Psychotherapy, Neukrug ES (eds), SAGE Publications, Inc., 2015. Li M, Hales S, Rodin G, “Adjustment Disorders” In: Holland JC, Breitbart W, Jacobsen PB, Lederburg MS, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R, Psycho-Oncology, New York, Oxford University Press, 2015, 274-280. Li M, Hales S, Rodin G, “Adjustment Disorders, Chapter 39” In: Psycho-Oncology, Holland JC, Breitbart WS, Jacobsen PB, Lederburg MS, Loscalzo MJ, McCorkle R (eds), New York, Oxford University Press, 2014. Lin E, Or Z, Codefy M, Urbanoski K, Seitz D, Carlisle C, Szatmari P, Kurdyak P, “Medical Practice Variations in Mental Health and Addictions Care” In: Medical Practice Variations. Health Services Research, Sobolev B, Johnson A, Stukel T (eds), Springer, 2015. Lyons-Ruth K, Zeanah CH, Benoit D, Madigan S, Mills-Koonce R, “Disorder and risk for disorder during infancy and toddlerhood” In: Mash EJ, Barkley RA, Child Psychopathology, New York, Guilford Press, 2014, 673-736. Mackowick KM, George TP, “Nicotine and Tobacco Addiction” In: El-Guebaly N, Galanter M, Carra G, Textbook of Addiction Treatment: International Perspectives, Heidelberg, Germany, Springer, 2015, 415-436. Malat J, Leszcz M, “Group Psychotherapy” In: Editors-Tasman A, Kay J, Lieberman JA, Michael B, Riba M, Psychiatry, New Jersey, Wiley Blackwell, 2015, 1923-1942. Maunder RG, Hunter JJ, “An attachment perspective on understanding and managing medically unexplained symptoms” In: Maunder RG, Hunter JJ, An attachment perspective on understanding and managing medically unexplained symptoms., Danquah AN, Berry K (eds), Routledge, 2014.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Maunder RG, Newton G, Nolan RP, “Attachment Insecurity, Autonomic Regulation and Cardiovascular Health: A Study of Adult Attachment in Cardiac Disease with and without Heart Failure” In: Attachment and Psychosomatics, Brisch KH (eds), Klett-Cotta Verlag, 2014. McCabe RE, Hood HK, Antony MM, “Anxiety disorders: Social anxiety disorder and specific phobia” In: Tasman A, Kay J, Lieberman JA, First MB, Riba MB, Psychiatry, Chichester, UK, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015, 1019-1056. McCabe-Bennett HE, Antony MM, “Phobias, diagnosis of” In: Milosevic I, McCabe RE, The psychology of irrational fear, Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood, 2015, 293-296. McInerney SJ, Gorwood P, Kennedy SH, “Cognition and Biomarkers in MDD” In: McIntyre RS, Cognitive Dysfunction in Major Depressive Disorder, 2014, 39-59. McNaughton NL, Hodges BD, “Simulated patient methodology and the discourses of health professional education” In: Nestel D, Bearman M, Simulated Patient Methodology: Theory, Evidence and Practice, Chinchester, John Wiley and Sons, 2015, 53-60. Meschino D, Robinson G, “Chapters 1: Gynecological surgery, pelvic pain and other relevant issues; 2) Psychiatric and psychological Issues of Pregnancy” In: Psychiatric Care of the Medical Patient, Fogel BS, Greenberg DB (eds), 2015. Mountjoy ML, Marks SI, “Aquatic Athlete Injuries and Emergencies” In: McDonagh D, Zideman D, The “International Olympic Committee’s” IOC Manual of Emergency Sports Medicine, Chester, West Sussex, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK, 2014, 196-204. Mulsant BH, Pollock BG, “Psychopharmacology” In: Mulsant BH, Pollock BG, Psychopharmacology, Steffens DC, Blazer DG, Thakur ME (eds), Arlington, American Psychiatric Publishing, 2015, 527-587. Nissim R, Lo C, Rodin G, “The Desire for Hastened Death in Patients in Palliative Care” In: Gudat H, Ohnsorge K, Rehmann-Sutter C, Patients Wish to Die: Research Ethics and Palliative Care, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015, 7180. Nowakowski ME, Antony MM, “Anxiety and related disorders” In: Milosevic I, McCabe RE, The psychology of irrational fear, Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood, 2015, 19-23. Nowakowski ME, Antony MM, “Phobias, assessment of” In: Milosevic I, McCabe RE, The psychology of irrational fear, Santa Barbara, CA, Greenwood, 2015, 287-289. Nowakowski ME, Atkey SK, Antony MM, “Self-help/bibliotherapy” In: Cautin R, Lilienfeld SO, Encyclopedia of clinical psychology, Hoboken, NJ, John Wiley and Sons, 2015. Nowakowski ME, Rogojanski J, Antony MM, “Specific phobia” In: Hofmann SG, Wiley handbook of cognitive behavioral therapy. Part 2: Specific disorders, Hoboken, NJ, Wiley-Blackwell, 2014, 979-999. Nunes KL, Cantor JM, “Sex offenders” In: Whelehan P, Bolin A, International encyclopedia of human sexuality, Malden, MA, Wiiley-Blackwell, 2015. Pain C, Alem A, “Medical education and global mental health: Research and monitoring the progress of countries” In: Essentials of Global Health, Okpaku S (eds), Cambridge University Press, 2014.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Pain C, Kanagaratnam P, Payne D, “The debate about trauma and psychosocial treatment” In: Simich L, Andermann L, Refuge and resilience Promoting resilience and mental health among resettled refugees and forced migrants, New York London, Springer, 2014, 51-60. Palucka AM, Desarkar P, Lunsky Y, “Mood disorders in individuals with intellectual disability” In: Psychiatric and Behavioural Disorders in Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, Hemmings C, Bouras N (eds), Cambridge University Press, 2014. Portnoy A, Rama P, Zimmermann C, Rodin G, “The use of palliative sedation to treat existential suffering: A reconsideration (Chapter 4)” In: Taboada P, Editor, Sedation at the End-of-Life: An Interdisciplinary Approach, New York, Springer, 2015, 41-54. Rabin RA, Blumberger DM, Daskalakis ZJ, George TP, Barr MS, “The Promise of rTMS to Treat Addiction: Where do we go From Here?” In: Neuroimaging and Psychosocial Addiction Treatment, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. Radhu N, Blumberger DM, Zanjani A, Daskalakis ZJ, “Combined transcranial magnetic stimulation with electromyography and electroencephalography: applications in psychiatric disorders” In: Holtzheimer PE, McDonald W, Clinical Guide to the Administration of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, New York, Oxford University Press, 2014. Ravindran AV, da Silva T, “Complementary and alternative therapies for mood and anxiety disorders in late life” In: D’Addona D, Lavretsky H, Sajatovic M, Reynolds III CF, Eds, Complementary, Alternative, and Integrative Interventions in Mental Health and Aging, New York, Oxford University Press, 2014. Rector NA, Wilde JL, Richter MA, “Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Comorbidity: Rates, Models and Treatment Approaches” In: Handbook of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Across the Lifespan, Abramowitz J, McKay D, Storch E (eds), New York, Wiley, 2014. Rennie D, Nissim R, “The Grounded Theory Method and Humanistic Psychology” In: Schneider K, Pierson J, Bugental J, The Handbook of Humanistic Psychology: Leading Edges in Theory, Practice, and Research, Thousand Oaks, Sage, 2015, 297-308. Rhodes AE, Bethell JM, “Mental Health Service Use by Suicidal Boys and Girls” In: Neurobiology of Men’s Mental Health, Rice T, Sher L (eds), New York, Nova Science Publisher, 2014. Robinson G, Grigoriadis S, “Hormones and Mood” In: Psychiatric Care of the Medical Patient, Fogel BS, Greenberg DB (eds), New York, Oxford University Press, 2015. Sadavoy J, “Personality Disorders in the Elderly” In: Neurobiology of Men’s Mental Health, Pachana N, Laidlaw K (eds), Oxford University Press, 2014. Sattler J, Pillai Riddell R, “Observational assessment methods for children, Part I” In: Sattler J, Hoge R, Assessment of Children: Behaviour, Social, and Clinical Foundations, San Diego, Sattler Publishing, 2014, 257-294. Sattler J, Pillai Riddell R, “Observational assessment methods for children, Part II” In: Sattler J, Hoge R, Assessment of Children: Behaviour, Social, and Clinical Foundations, San Diego, Sattler Publishing, 2014, 295-336. Seeman MV, “The ethics of HIV screening targeted to the seriously mentally ill” In: Pope J, Patient Rights: Ethical Perspectives, Emerging Developments and Global Challenges, Hauppauge, N.Y. U.S.A., Nova, 2015, 83-95.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Selby P, Samokhvalov AV, “Bupropion a liberation prolongee” In: Els C, Kunyk D, Selby P, Filimon M, Ecraser La Maladie. Reduction Et Abandon Du Tabagisme, Quebec, Les Presses De L’Universite Laval, 2014, 209-217. Selby P, Samokhvalov AV, “Sustained-Release Bupropion” In: Els C, Kunyk D, Selby P, Disease Interrupted: Tobacco Reduction and Cessation, Quebec, Les Presses De L’Universite Laval, 2014, 181-188. Seto MC, Kingston D, Stephens S, “Sexual Offending” In: Cutler B, Zapf P, APA Handbook of Forensic Psychology, Washington DC, American Psychological Association, 2014. Seto MC, Pullman L, “Risk factors for adolescent sexual offending” In: Bruinsma GJN, Weisburd DL, Encyclopedia of criminology and criminal justice, New York, Springer, 2014, 4466-4475. Shikatani B, Fracalanza K, Antony MM, “Behavior therapies” In: Cautin R, Lilienfeld SO, Encyclopedia of clinical psychology, Hoboken, NJ, John Wiley and Sons, 2015. Shikatani B, Nowakowski ME, Antony MM, “Illness anxiety disorder/hypochondriasis” In: Cautin R, Lilienfeld SO, Encyclopedia of clinical psychology, Hoboken, NJ, John Wiley and Sons, 2015. Stephens S, Seto MC, “Hebephilia” In: Whelehan P, Bolin A, The international encyclopedia of human sexuality, Chicester, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015. Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, “Metodi di valutazione dell’alessitimia” In: Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, Caretti V, Schimmenti A, La valutazione dell’alessitimia con la TSIA, Milano, Raffaello Cortina Editore, 2014, 97-112. Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, “Progressi nella teoria e nella ricerca sull’alessitimia” In: Taylor GJ, Bagby RM, Caretti V, Schimmenti A, La valutazione dell’alessitimia con la TSIA, Milano, Raffaello Cortinia Editore, 2014, 77-95. Thompson J, Astell A, Kuh D, Peace S, Moynihan P, Macdonald A, “Food Environments: From home to hospital” In: Walker, A, New Science of Ageing, Bristol, Policy Press, 2014. Ungar TU, “Therapeutic Alliance” In: Muskin PR, Personality Disorders - A Companion to The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Personality Disorders, Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Publishing - A Division of American Psychiatric Association, 2015, 138-143. Vachon MLS, “After Death: The Clinical Issues” In: McCorkle R, Sulmasy D, Lazenby M, Safe Passage: A Global Spiritual Sourcebook for Care at the End of Life, New York, Oxford University Press, 2014, 232-234. Vachon MLS, “Care of the Caregivers: Professional and Family Members” In: Stillion J, Attig T, Death Awareness: Foundations and Evolution of the Movement, New York, Springer, 2014, 379-393. Vachon MLS, Huggard PK, Huggard JA, “Reflections on Occupational Stress in Palliative Care Nursing: Is It Changing?” In: Ferrell B, Coyle N, Paice J, Oxford Textbook of Palliative Care Nursing, New York, Oxford University Press, 2015, 969986. Vigod SN, Steiner M, Buist A, “Mood and Anxiety Disorders During Pregnancy and Postpartum” In: Comprehensive Women’s Mental Health, Castle D, Abel K (eds), Cambridge University Press, 2014. Vigod SN, Stewart DE, “Psychiatric Management of Victims of Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence” In: Tasman A, Kay J, Lieberman J, First MB, Maj M, Psychiatry, Tasman A, Kay J, Lieberman J, First MB, Maj M (eds), Chichester, John Wiley and Sons, 2014.
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BOOKS CHAPTERS (continued) Vigod SN, Stewart DE, “Risks of antidepressants during pregnancy: Drugs other than selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors” In: SSRI, UpToDate, NA, NA, 2015. Wiesenfeld L, Cassidy KL, “Psychotherapy in Late Life: Evidence and Applications” In: CAGP Geriatric Psychiatry Study Guide, 2015. Young A, Beitchman JH, “Learning Disorders” In: Gabbard GO, Gabbard’s Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders, Gabbard GO (eds), Washington, American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc., 2014. Zaheer J, Links P, Law S, Shera W, Tsang KT, Cheng K, Fung A, Liu PZ, “Suicide-related behaviour in Chinese women: illustrating the role of cultural conception of gender in understanding and preventing suicide.” In: Routledge International Handbook of Clinical Suicide Research, Cutliffe J, Santos JC, Links P, Zaheer J, Hardier H, Campbell F, McCormick R, Harder K, Bergmans Y, Eynan R (eds), New York, Rutledge Publishing, 2014. Zucker KJ, “Gender dysphoria” In: Cautin RL, Lilienfeld SO, The encyclopedia of clinical psychology, Malden, WileyBlackwell, 2015. Zucker KJ, “The DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria” In: Trobetta C, Liguori G, Bertolotto M, Management of gender dysphoria: A multidisciplinary approach, New York, Springer, 2015, 33-37. Zucker KJ, Seto MC, “Gender dysphoria and paraphilic sexual disorders” In: Thipar A, Pine D, Leckman JF, Scott S, Snowling MJ, Taylor E, Rutter’s child and adolescent psychiatry, London, John Wiley, 2015, 951-966.
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Fast Facts
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Department of Psychiatry - Fast Facts
2014-2015
FACULTY Emeritus
7
Full-Time
363
Part-Time
190
Adjunct
123
Status-Only
244
Total
927
University Professors
1
Professor Emeriti
7
Full Professors
109
Associate Professors
128
Assistant Professors
368
Lecturers
314
Total
927
Administrative Staff
12
EDUCATION Medical Students Residents
196
Fellows
80
CPPD Accredited Events
88
Sites Baycrest Centre for Addiction and Mental Health 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
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FAST FACTS
295
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 Partners University Health Network Waypoint Centre For Mental Health Care Women’s College Hospital
25
Canada Research Chairs
5
Endowed Chairs
18
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:
8
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PSYCHIATRY • ANNUAL REPORT 2014-2015
PEER REVIEWED FUNDING 1. Federal Agency (2014-2015: Total Tri-Council Funding = $27,812,475) (2013-2014: Total Tri-Council Funding = $31,097,629)
$ 47,294,203
2. Provincial Agency
$ 26,453,986
3. University or Hospital
$ 12,295,061
4. US Agency (2014-2015: Total NIH Funding = $7,633,011) (2013-2014: Total NIH Funding = $14,188,606) 5. International Agency 6. Industry Agency 7. Miscellaneous Agencies Total Peer Reviewed Funding
$10,003,730 $1,413,238 n/a $ 564,315 $98,024,533
NON-PEER REVIEWED FUNDING 1. Federal Agency
$182,647
2. Provincial Agency
$1,320,143
3. University or Hospital
$2,552,800
4. US Agency 5. International Agency 6. Industry Agency 7. Miscellaneous Agencies Total Non-Peer Reviewed Funding
$255,994 $26,500 $8,262,132 $723,462 $13,323,678
FELLOWSHIP / PERSONAL AWARDS Fellowship / Personal Award
$1,594,211
Total Fellowship / Personal Award
$1,594,211
Total Funding
$112,942,422
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297
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