Video

VIDEO: What will be the NIMH’s focus under Dr. Joshua Gordon?


 

– “Most clinicians probably don’t have problems identifying patients who are depressed and giving them a trial of an antidepressant or a second antidepressant, but where do they run into stumbling blocks?” That’s a question Joshua A. Gordon, MD, PhD, the new director of the National Institute of Mental Health, said he is pondering as he steps into his new role.

Both a practicing clinical psychiatrist and a neuroscientist with a lab chiefly dedicated to optogenetics, Dr. Gordon shared his thoughts about what the priorities of the world’s largest mental health research institute should be, and how to balance immediate patient needs with the development of future interventions.

Conducted in New York City, where Dr. Gordon saw patients, maintained a lab, and was an associate professor of psychiatry at Columbia University for nearly 2 decades, this is the last installment in a series of interviews.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

Recommended Reading

Anxiety, depression may precede Parkinson’s by 25 years
MDedge Family Medicine
Early epilepsy increases risk of later comorbid ADHD in autism
MDedge Family Medicine
Cannabis use after first-episode psychosis may raise relapse risk
MDedge Family Medicine
NIH workshop yields youth suicide prevention road map
MDedge Family Medicine
Perinatal problems raise adult OCD risk
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Is your patient clinically depressed, or is there something else?
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: The ‘artificial’ divide between biology and psychology
MDedge Family Medicine
Ostracism is a growing concern as mechanism of poor health outcomes in military
MDedge Family Medicine
Hypertension in children linked to lower neurocognitive performance
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: New NIMH director talks ethics, optogenetics, novel treatments for depression
MDedge Family Medicine