Psychiatry Homepage | University of Toronto | Faculty of Medicine | Directory | Policies & Guidelines | Forms
ADMINISTRATION & ORGANIZATION
 

Weekly Psychiatry Announcements

November 7th, 2008

Problems viewing the newsletter? [Click for User Tips]

Submissions are welcome from members of the department. If you wish to submit an EVENT announcement, please provide full details, in a WORD or PDF file. SUBMISSION DEADLINE: THURSDAYS at 5 PM.


Newest Items...


    Department

  1. University of Toronto Psychiatric Outreach Program:
    Fall 2008 UTPOP Culture newsletter
     
  2. REMINDER: Coming up next week!
    Division Of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry - Hospital for Sick Children:
    19th Annual Update In Child And Adolescent Psychiatry: "Current Perspectives On Child And Adolescent Disorders"
    (Event: November 13, 2008)
     
  3. REMINDER: REGISTER NOW!
    Dept. of Psychiatry - Univ. of Toronto:
    8th Official Book Launch
    Special Guest: Norman Doidge, MD, Author of “The Brain That Changes Itself” presents “On Writing”
    (Event: November 27, 2008)
     
  4. Newest Course and Event Announcements

  5. Centre for Addiction & Mental Health:
    Grand Rounds: "Pleasure or Pain? Revisiting the Role of Dopamine in Reward and the Impact on Psychosis, Addiction and Impulsivity"
    Presented by Dr. Steven Selchen, Resident in Psychiatry, University of Toronto
    (Event: November 14, 2008)
     
  6. The Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology:
    Fall Conference: "Psychoanalytic Complexity Theory: Expecting the Unexpected"
    Presented by William J. Coburn, Ph.D., Psy.D.
    (Event: November 15, 2008)
     
  7. Hospital for Sick Children:
    Symposium: "Conquering the Hurt: Interprofessional Paediatric Pain Conference"
    (Event: November 21, 2008)
     
  8. CAMH and Faculty of Medicine, Continuing Education & Professional Development, Univ. of Toronto:
    Intermediate Cognitive Therapy Institute
    (Event: April 2-4, 2009)
     
  9. York University Psychotherapy Research Center:
    Emotion Focused Therapy Institute
    (Event: Summer & Fall 2009)
     



    Reminders

  • Education
  • Research
  • Awards
  • Funding
  • Opportunities
  • CME Courses
  • Other Courses and Events:
    Nov-08 | Dec-08 | Jan-09 | Feb-09 | Mar-09

  • Newest Items...

    Departmental

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

  •  

  • Newest Course and Event Announcements

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  
     

    Psychoanalytic Complexity Theory:
    Expecting the Unexpected

    Presented by William J. Coburn, Ph.D., Psy.D.  
    Saturday, November 15, 2008 

     George Ignatieff Theatre, Trinity College, Toronto
     
    Complexity Theory is a cutting-edge perspective used for understanding systems that are too complex to permit an accurate prediction of their future.  

    Although well-established in disciplines such as physics, molecular biology and meteorology, Complexity Theory has only recently been introduced into psychoanalysis where it is revolutionizing our views about the emergence and transformation of emotional life.

    Psychoanalysts and psychoanalytically-oriented psychotherapists are thereby offered a richer paradigm to aid their engagement in the unique experiential world of each individual.               

    Complexity Theory embodies a deep respect for the multi-dimensional nature of human experiencing in general. Complexity Theory profoundly alters our conceptualizations of human development, psychopathology, relationality, and the process of change.

    Within psychoanalysis, complexity is concerned with: the emergence and patterning of emotional experience from the self-organization and cooperation of many parts the conditions necessary to produce adaptive change the process of making meaning out of apparent randomness the process by which the "rules" of human relating change as a result of the "play".

    Bill Coburn's explication of Complexity Theory will be augmented by a dramatic slide and video presentation along with rich clinical examples. Registrants can expect to leave with a sound understanding of the fundamentals of Complexity Theory and its therapeutic application to human relating, emotional experience, meaning-making and therapeutic action and change.

     
    This event is hosted by the Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology (IASP)  
    For online registration, go to: www.iasptoronto.com,
    If you would like further information, call
    416.690.3722 or email: info@iasptoronto.com

  •  

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

  • Education

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • Research

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • Awards

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • Funding

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  • Opportunities

  •  
     

    DEPARTMENT OF
    PSYCHIATRY & MENTAL HEALTH
    HUMBER RIVER REGIONAL HOSPITAL

    CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRISTS
    (Fulltime and Part-time)

    The Department of Psychiatry at Humber River Regional Hospital is seeking a child and adolescent psychiatrist, both fulltime and part-time.  The Child and Adolescent Program provides inpatient services (6 beds), as well as extensive transition and outpatient services, and 24-hour ER crisis intervention.

    The Department of Psychiatry is part of the University of Toronto teaching network.  This position may include medical teaching at all levels.

    The successful applicants will join a group of 23 psychiatrists and three general practitioners, the majority of them hospital-based.  The vacant positions are supported by generous sessional allocations, as well as hospital practice support.

    For further information and applications please contact:

           Dr. A.George Awad
           Chief of Psychiatry and Professor Emeritus,
           Univ. of Toronto
           Humber River Regional Hospital – Keele Site
           2175 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario M6M 3Z4
           E-mail:  gawad@hrrh.on.ca
           Tel:  416-658-2012
           Fax:  416-658-2015


     

  •  

    The Department of Psychiatry at Women’s College Hospital is offering a one year funded fellowship to MD or PhD candidates seeking advanced training in HIV and women’s mental health.

    Applicants must have successfully completed their RCPSC psychiatry specialty examinations and be a member in good standing with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario by the date of commencement of the fellowship.  PhD candidates must have completed the requirements of their PhD program prior to starting the fellowship.

    The fellowship will include a mix of clinical and academic activities. The specific time allocation is negotiable, but ordinarily, fellows spend at least 75% of their time in scholarly pursuits.  Clinical work will focus on women’s mental health and may be spent with any one of the four existing programs in the Department of Psychiatry: General Psychiatry, Mental Health in Medicine, Reproductive Life Stages, or Trauma Therapy.  Alternatively, the successful applicant may wish to work jointly between two programs.  The academic component of the fellowship will include the design and completion of a research or other scholarly project suitable for publication.  Topics for this project should be directly related to the aforementioned clinical themes of the department.  Suitable research areas may include: fertility and family planning in persons infected with HIV, HIV and trauma in women, or pregnant women with HIV and mood or anxiety symptoms. Other potential topics can be considered and should be negotiated directly with the supervisor.

    Interested candidates may apply for one year of funding beginning July 1, 2009 or another mutually agreed upon date. Internal funding will be subject to the rules of the University of Toronto Department of Psychiatry fellowship program. (Please see: http://www.utpsychiatry.ca/ Go to ‘Education’ and scroll down to ‘fellowship program’ for information regarding the program.)

    Interested applicants should send a cover letter and CV by January 1, 2009 to:
    Pam Kavanagh
    Department of Psychiatry, Women’s College Hospital
    76 Grenville Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1B2
    Email: pam.kavanagh@wchospital.ca or Tel : 416-323-6400 Ext. 4381.

    [Printable Version]


  • New Books and Publications

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • CME Courses 2008

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  
     
    The Next Two-Year Training Program in
    Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy offered by
    The Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology (IASP)
    begins September 2009, Toronto

    The next two-year training program in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy offered by the Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology (IASP) will begin in September 2009. Inquiries regarding the program are currently being received.
     
    The two year seminar program and the clinical supervision emphasize contemporary models of psychoanalytic theory and practice. The program is designed for mental health professionals with experience in the practice of individual psychotherapy, and who are interested in developing their knowledge and skill in contemporary psychoanalytic psychotherapy and/or psychoanalysis.
     
    Candidates who complete the two year program may choose to continue on to more advanced training through the third and fourth year of seminars and further clinical supervision in psychoanalytic psychotherapy or psychoanalysis.
     
    For inquiries regarding the 2009 - 2011 training program contact:
     
    Deanna Walsh
    deanna@iasptoronto.com  
    (416) 690-3722

    Visit the IASP website at www.iasptoronto.com
     


  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  • CME Courses 2009

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  

  • Other Courses and Events

    November 2008

  •  

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  • Transdisciplinary Tobacco Rounds

    Please find below information regarding a special session of Transdisciplinary Tobacco Rounds on Friday, November 14 from 9 - 10 am EASTERN. NEW LOCATION: Meeting Center (room 2029), 33 Russell Street. Coffee and tea will be served. Please also mark the sessions for upcoming regular session in your calendars - November 21, January 16, February 20, April 17 and June 19. If you can't join us in person, don't hesitate to let me know if you would like to join us via webcast.

    I'd like to invite you and your colleagues to join a new network for those who are interested in helping smokers quit - CAN-ADAPTT http://www.can-adaptt.net/registration/Default.aspx. Anyone visiting our site can view the on-line discussion groups, etc., but only registered users can post entries. The Pregnets smoking and pregnancy special interest group will be housed in the on-line discussion groups of the CAN-ADAPTT website (under Resources/On-line Discussion Group/Specific Populations and Other Recommendations) and I invite other tobacco control special interest groups to start an on-line discussion group too.

    Best regards,
    Virginia M.C. Chow
    Program Manager
    Tobacco Use in Special Populations (TUSP) Program

    Please note my change of address and telephone number as of May 23rd:
    Room 113, 175 College Street
    Toronto, ON M5T 1P7

    Tel: 416-535-8501 x 7408
    Fax: 416-599-8265
    email: virginia_chow@camh.net
    website:
    www.tusp.net and www.pregnets.net


  •  

     
    Transdisciplinary Tobacco Rounds:
     
    Don't Believe Everything You Read in the Papers:
    Publication and other biases

     

    Presenter:

    Marcus R. Munafò, PhD
    Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol
     

    Learning objectives:

    1. To understand the nature, extent and impact of bias in the published literature;
    2. To understand the threats to the validity of published research; and
    3. To understand measures that can be taken to increase the validity of published research.

    Date:

    Friday, November 14, 2008
     

    Time:

    9 - 10 am
    Coffee and tea will be served.
     

    Location:

    *** (PLEASE NOTE THE NEW LOCATION) ***
    Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
    33 Russell Street, Meeting Centre, Room 2029
    RSVP for in person attendance is not required
     

    Contact:

    Virginia Chow
    virginia_chow@camh.net
    416-535-8501 ext. 7408
     

    Directions:

    Russell St. site is located one street north of College St. on the east side of Spadina

    BY TTC: You can get off at Spadina Station and walk south along Spadina to Russell Street. (Approx 10 min)

    OR

    Get off at Queens Park Station and walk west along College St. and north on Huron (Approx 10 min)
     

    Parking:

    There is limited parking around CAMH. There is underground parking (entrance off Spadina Street just north of College). This lot fills up rapidly before 9:00am. The parking fee is $12.00 for all day. If you use underground parking, do not try to enter the building via the stairwells. We have a security system and a key is required. Exit the parking lot via the parking attendant's kiosk and go around the building to the Spadina entrance of 250 College St.
     

    Webcast:

    For more information about webcasting of this event to Brentcliffe, QS and other sites, contact virginia_chow@camh.net or 416-535-8501 x7408. Web casting of this event is funded by a partnership under the coordination of the Canadian Tobacco Control Research Initiative (CTCRI). <website: www.tusp.net and www.pregnets.net>.
     

    Next TTR:

    Please mark the sessions for this academic year in your calendars
    November 14 & 21, January 16, February 20, April 17 and June 19.
     


  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  •  
     

    Psychoanalytic Complexity Theory:
    Expecting the Unexpected

    Presented by William J. Coburn, Ph.D., Psy.D.  
    Saturday, November 15, 2008 

     George Ignatieff Theatre, Trinity College, Toronto
     
    Complexity Theory is a cutting-edge perspective used for understanding systems that are too complex to permit an accurate prediction of their future.  

    Although well-established in disciplines such as physics, molecular biology and meteorology, Complexity Theory has only recently been introduced into psychoanalysis where it is revolutionizing our views about the emergence and transformation of emotional life.

    Psychoanalysts and psychoanalytically-oriented psychotherapists are thereby offered a richer paradigm to aid their engagement in the unique experiential world of each individual.               

    Complexity Theory embodies a deep respect for the multi-dimensional nature of human experiencing in general. Complexity Theory profoundly alters our conceptualizations of human development, psychopathology, relationality, and the process of change.

    Within psychoanalysis, complexity is concerned with: the emergence and patterning of emotional experience from the self-organization and cooperation of many parts the conditions necessary to produce adaptive change the process of making meaning out of apparent randomness the process by which the "rules" of human relating change as a result of the "play".

    Bill Coburn's explication of Complexity Theory will be augmented by a dramatic slide and video presentation along with rich clinical examples. Registrants can expect to leave with a sound understanding of the fundamentals of Complexity Theory and its therapeutic application to human relating, emotional experience, meaning-making and therapeutic action and change.

     
    This event is hosted by the Institute for the Advancement of Self Psychology (IASP)  
    For online registration, go to: www.iasptoronto.com,
    If you would like further information, call
    416.690.3722 or email: info@iasptoronto.com

  •  

  •  

     
    Transdisciplinary Tobacco Rounds:
     
    The Neurobiology of Nicotine Motivation
     

    Presenter:

    Derek van der Kooy, PhD
    Professor in Molecular Genetics at University of Toronto
     

    Learning objectives:

    1. Appreciate how motivation is measured in experimental animals;
    2. Know the basic neuroanatomical connections in the midbrain that nicotine works on; and
    3. Appreciate how the aversive and rewarding effects of nicotine compete.

    Date:

    Friday, November 21, 2008
     

    Time:

    9 - 10 am
    Coffee and tea will be served.
     

    Location:

    *** (PLEASE NOTE THE NEW LOCATION) ***
    Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
    33 Russell Street, Meeting Centre, Room 2029
    RSVP for in person attendance is not required
     

    Contact:

    Virginia Chow
    virginia_chow@camh.net
    416-535-8501 ext. 7408
     

    Directions:

    Russell St. site is located one street north of College St. on the east side of Spadina

    BY TTC: You can get off at Spadina Station and walk south along Spadina to Russell Street. (Approx 10 min)

    OR

    Get off at Queens Park Station and walk west along College St. and north on Huron (Approx 10 min)
     

    Parking:

    There is limited parking around CAMH. There is underground parking (entrance off Spadina Street just north of College). This lot fills up rapidly before 9:00am. The parking fee is $12.00 for all day. If you use underground parking, do not try to enter the building via the stairwells. We have a security system and a key is required. Exit the parking lot via the parking attendant's kiosk and go around the building to the Spadina entrance of 250 College St.
     

    Webcast:

    For more information about webcasting of this event to Brentcliffe, QS and other sites, contact virginia_chow@camh.net or 416-535-8501 x7408. Web casting of this event is funded by a partnership under the coordination of the Canadian Tobacco Control Research Initiative (CTCRI). <website: www.tusp.net and www.pregnets.net>.
     

    Next TTR:

    Please mark the sessions for this academic year in your calendars
    January 16, February 20, April 17 and June 19.
     


  •  

     
    Women's College Hospital
    Department of Psychiatry
    Grand Rounds
    Noon to 1 PM
    East Wing, Room E934
     

    Date: Friday, November 21, 2008
    Topic: “Emotion-focused therapy for complex trauma”
    Speaker:     Sandra Paivio, PhD, Professor and Head, Department of Psychology, University of Windsor

     
    This is an accredited group learning activity eligible for RCPSC MOC.

    Pamela Kavanagh
    Manager, Medical Partnership
    Women's Mental Health Program
    Women's College Hospital
    76 Grenville Street, 9th Floor, Toronto, ON M5S 1B2
    Telephone: 416-323-6400, Ext. 4381
    Fax: 416-323-7718
    pam.kavanagh@wchospital.ca


  •  

  •  

     
    [Printable Flyer]
     

  • December 2008

  •  

     
    Women's College Hospital
    Department of Psychiatry
    Grand Rounds
    Noon to 1 PM
    East Wing, Room E934
     

    Date: (THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED.)
    Friday, December 5, 2008
    Topic: “Update in internal medicine”
    Speaker:     Steve Shadowitz, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, U of T, Head, Division of General Internal Medicine, Sunnybrook HSC

     
    This is an accredited group learning activity eligible for RCPSC MOC.

    Pamela Kavanagh
    Manager, Medical Partnership
    Women's Mental Health Program
    Women's College Hospital
    76 Grenville Street, 9th Floor, Toronto, ON M5S 1B2
    Telephone: 416-323-6400, Ext. 4381
    Fax: 416-323-7718
    pam.kavanagh@wchospital.ca


  • January 2009

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • February 2009

  • No listing(s) at this time.

  • March 2009

  •  

  •