News
If you are looking for a New Year’s resolution, focusing on better quality sleep is a great one! Michael Grandner, PhD, the director of the Banner University Medicine Behavioral Sleep Medicine Clinic says that being well-rested boosts mood and improves energy, giving you a jump start to achieve your dreams and goals.
Philip Lam, DO, Banner – University Medicine psychiatrist and assistant clinical professor, of COM-T psychiatry, provides insights on the antidepressant MAOI for the mental health publication WonderMind.
Jordan Karp, MD, professor and chair for the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Arizona, was interviewed by The Daily Wildcat and shares his thoughts on seasonal affective disorder.
College of Medicine – Tucson researchers will create a portable virtual reality device to quickly assess traumatic brain injuries when and where they occur.
College of Medicine – Tucson researchers will create a portable virtual reality device to quickly assess traumatic brain injuries when and where they occur.
Pritchard uses skills honed on the opera stage to help her psychiatry students find the style that works for them.
Correspondent Dina Demetrius speaks with Dr. Saira Kalia, director of the Perinatal Psychiatry Access Line, about the various barriers to mental health treatment for mothers and their partners and how they can be fixed.
Richard D. Lane, MD, PhD, a tenured professor of psychiatry at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, and Karen Weihs, MD, a tenured professor of psychiatry at the College of Medicine – Tucson, were named fellows in the American Psychosomatic Society.
Michael Grandner, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and Director of the Sleep and Heath Research Program, is interviewed on BBC News on how to buy things that protect sleep. He also shares that sleep problems can be created by biological and social issues.
Dr. Jordan F. Karp, professor and chair of the University of Arizona's Department of Psychiatry, is interview by the Green Valley News about the increase in senior suicides in Pima County. ""While not as high as in younger adults, this is too many suicides in older adults, and speaks to the need for focused suicide prevention efforts specifically for those 60 and older."