Psychiatry Grand Rounds 2007-2008Updated 1-2-08

Psychiatry Grand Rounds are held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month in the Camp Heart Auditorium on the 4th floor of the main hospital at 4PM.

The University of Virginia School of Medicine is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

The University of Virginia School of Medicine designates this educational activity for a maximum of 1(one) AMA PRA  Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

The University of Virginia School of Medicine awards 0.1 CEU per contact hour to each non-physician participant who successfully completes this educational activity. The CEU (Continuing Education Unit) is a nationally recognized unit of measure for continuing education and training activities that meet specific educational planning requirements. The University of Virginia School of Medicine maintains a permanent record of participants who have been awarded CEUs.

         

DATE

SPEAKER

TOPIC

8/14/07

 Eileen Ryan, D.O.

Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences

University of Virginia Health System

Munchausen by Proxy: Clinical and Forensic Issues

8/28/07

Carlos A. Zarate, Jr., M.D.

Chief Mood Disorders Research Unit, Associate Clinical Director,

Laboratory of Molecular Pathophysiology

National Institute of Mental Health

Glutamatergic Modulators for the Treatment of Mood

9/11/2007

Mayada Akil, M.D.

Senior Advisor to the Director
NIMH, NIH

Making neuroscience relevant to the clinician.

9/25/2007

Bruce Greyson, M.D.

Chester F. Carlson Professor of Psychiatry

Director, Division of Perceptual Studies

University of Virginia

Near-Death Experiencers: Out of Their Bodies or Out of Their Minds?

10/9/2007

Charles Raison, M.D.
Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Emory University

Research Interests: Physiological causes of depression in the
medically ill

10/23/2007

Jonathan Haidt, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Psychology

University of Virginia

"The Happiness Hypothesis"

11/13/2007

Rick Mays, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Public Policy
Department of Political Science
University of Richmond

The Growth and Implications of 'Pay for Performance'

Reimbursement for Hospitals and Physicians.

11/27/2007

Jair Soares, M.D.

Director, Center of Excellence for Research and Treatment of Bipolar Disorder (CERT-BD)

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Brain Imaging and Neurocognition:  Constributions to the Study of the Pathophysiology of Bipolar Disorder

12/11/2007

Steve Brasington, M.D.

Academic Chair; Department of Psychiatry; Naval Medical Center; Portsmouth, VA

Suicide in the Department of the Navy

12/25/2007

NO GRAND ROUNDS

 

1/8/2008

Dede M. Haverstick, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Pathology

University of Virginia

 

NOTE:  This is not an official Grand Rounds (no GME credit)...this is a resident lecture to which faculty are invited.

Testing for Substance Abuse - What can and can't be learned

1/22/2008

Christopher  P.  Holstege,  M.D.
Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics
Director, Blue Ridge Poision Center

Department of Emergency Medicine
Division of Medical Toxicology

 

Criminal Poisoners

2/12/2008

Lynne Fleming - Legal Counsel

Authorized Respresentation of Psychiatric Patients:  BRING CASES!!!

2/26/2008

TBA

 

3/11/2008

Joseph Callicott, M.D.

Chief, Unit on Cognition and Psychosis Program

National Institutes of Mental Health

TBA

3/25/2008

Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

University of Missouri-Columbia

Department of Psychiatry

The Neural Circuitry of Psychotherapy

4/8/2008

David R. Rubinow, M.D.
Assad Meymandi Professor & Chair of Psychiatry

Department of Psychiatry

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TBA

4/22/2008

TBA

 

5/13/2008

Kurt Miceli, M.D.

Chief Resident in Psychiatry

University of Virginia Health System

TBA

5/27/2008

Shane Rau, M.D., Ph.D.

Chief Resident in Psychiatry

University of Virginia Health System

Cognition in Schizophrenia