UCSF Psychiatry News

Man wearing a surgical mask looking out a window

Your mental health may impact your chances of breakthrough COVID

April 14, 2022
A new study led by UCSF researchers has shown that people who are vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, and have a history of certain psychiatric conditions, have a heightened risk of COVID-19.
Carhart-Harris

Psilocybin rewires the brain for people with depression

April 11, 2022
Psilocybin fosters greater connections between different regions of the brain in depressed people, freeing them up from long-held patterns of rumination and excessive self-focus, according to a new study by scientists at UCSF and Imperial College London.
Digital image of the hypothalamus

Loss of neurons, not lack of sleep, makes Alzheimer’s patients drowsy

April 04, 2022
The lethargy that many Alzheimer’s patients experience is caused not by a lack of sleep, but rather by the degeneration of a type of neuron that keeps us awake.
Pritzker Building interior

UCSF continues streak as the top public university for graduate and professional psychiatry programs

March 29, 2022
UCSF's psychiatry program has been ranked fourth in the nation in U.S. News & World Report's annual survey of the best graduate and professional schools. For the fourth consecutive year, UCSF is also the top public university for graduate and professional psychiatry programs in the United States.
Class of 2026

UCSF Adult Psychiatry Residency Training Program matches 16 for its Class of 2026

March 18, 2022
After receiving more than 970 applications, the UCSF Adult Psychiatry Residency Training Program announced that it will welcome a diverse and highly accomplished class of 16 new resident physicians to UCSF this summer.
Older person sleeping on couch

Extended napping in seniors may signal dementia

March 17, 2022
A new study shows that increased daytime napping in older people may foreshadow Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
Mother and baby

Prenatal mindfulness program improves stress response in infants

March 10, 2022
Infants whose mothers participated in a mindfulness-based program during pregnancy had healthier stress responses at 6 months old, a new UC San Francisco study found.
Award recipients

Four selected as 2022 Grand Rounds Trainee Research Award honorees

March 03, 2022
Four early career researchers have been selected to present their scholarship and research at Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Grand Rounds events later this spring as part of a series designed to highlight the work of senior trainees
Lab assistant working on samples

UCSF among top 10 nationally in NIH research funding for psychiatry

February 15, 2022
The UCSF Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences was ranked third among departments at public institutions and 10th among all recipients in psychiatric research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in fiscal year 2021
Program proctor and a child seated at a table

UCSF dyslexia researchers develop tool to flag early reading challenges

February 01, 2022
A UCSF-developed tool to detect early signs of literacy weaknesses that could lead to dyslexia got a boost in the California governor’s recent budget proposal, and could be in widespread use in the state’s public schools by 2023.

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