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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240417
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240419
DTSTAMP:20260522T155442
CREATED:20230510T211554Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230510T211554Z
UID:8648-1713312000-1713484799@www.psychiatry.wisc.edu
SUMMARY:Wisconsin Symposium on Emotion
DESCRIPTION:Save the Date! \nApril 17 – 18\, 2024 at the UW Discovery Building \n\nTravel Award Applications will be accepted starting January 1st.\nDetails: https://healthemotions.org/travel-awards/ \nVisit the Symposium website for more information:\nhttps://healthemotions.org/
URL:https://www.psychiatry.wisc.edu/event/wisconsin-symposium-on-emotion-3/
LOCATION:Discovery Building – H.F. DeLuca Forum\, 330 N ORCHARD ST\, Madison\, WI\, 53715
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240417T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240417T130000
DTSTAMP:20260522T155442
CREATED:20231019T185322Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240311T193015Z
UID:8955-1713355200-1713358800@www.psychiatry.wisc.edu
SUMMARY:Educational Conference | Claudia Reardon\, MD | "Sports Medicine and Mental Health"
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Claudia Reardon\, MD\n\n\n\nSports Medicine and Mental Health \nLocation: WebEx \n\nLearning Objectives: \n•       Incorporate an understanding of the biopsychosocial stressors that contribute to mental health symptoms and disorders in athletes into formulations and treatment plans and use this understanding to optimize interprofessional communication with members of athletes’ clinical teams. \n•       Identify nuanced presentations of common mental health symptoms and disorders in athletes. \n•       Consider sport-related and physiological factors when considering mental health treatment options for athletes. \n\nAbout the Speaker: \n\n\n \nClaudia L. Reardon\, MD completed her undergraduate and medical school degrees as well as her psychiatry residency training\, serving as Chief Resident\, at the University of Wisconsin.  She is a Board Certified Psychiatrist specializing in sports psychiatry.  Dr. Reardon is a Professor in the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (UWSMPH) Department of Psychiatry\, through which she does significant amounts of teaching of medical students\, residents\, and fellows.  She clinically works as the consulting sports psychiatrist to the University of Wisconsin Athletic Department at UW-Madison’s University Health Services. \nDr. Reardon has served on the International Society for Sports Psychiatry (ISSP) Board of Directors since 2010\, currently as its Education Committee Chair.  Through the ISSP\, she developed a program that awards a “Certificate of Additional Training in Sports Psychiatry” to clinicians who complete a curriculum that she developed.   She also serves as the sole psychiatrist on the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association Sports Medicine Advisory Committee. Dr. Reardon Co-Chairs the workgroup “Mental Health in Elite Athletes” for the International Olympic Committee.  She also co-leads the International Olympic Committee Diploma Program (designed for sports medicine physicians) on mental health in elite athletes.  She has published and presented widely on a number of sports psychiatry related topics\, and is Co-Editor of the book “Clinical Sports Psychiatry:  An International Perspective”. \nDr. Reardon’s teaching activities include:  directing the quality improvement curriculum for UW psychiatry residents; serving as a leader of the advocacy curriculum for medical students at the UWSMPH; serving as Faculty Advisor of the UWSMPH Psychiatry Student Interest Group; directing a medical student rotation in mental health advocacy and public health\, a medical student rotation in sports psychiatry\, and a psychiatry resident rotation in sports psychiatry; and teaching and administration in a variety of other courses for medical students\, residents\, and fellows across all specialties. \nDr. Reardon currently serves as President of the Wisconsin Medical Society Foundation and as Chair of its Scholarship Committee\, on the Board of Directors of the Wisconsin Medical Society\, and as a United States Track and Field Certified Official.  She is Past President of the Dane County Medical Society and Past Chair of the American Medical Association Women Physicians Section. \n\nReading List: \nAnxiety Disorders in Athletes\n \nMental health in elite athletes: International Olympic Committee consensus statement (2019) \nThe Mental Health Crisis in Sports: The Perfect Storm of Contemporary Factors \n\n\n\nAbout the Series: \nThe Educational Conference series is a series of lectures designed to provide clinically useful information to the practicing psychiatrist (faculty or trainee).  Every 1 to 2 months an intra- or extra-departmental speaker is invited to speak on a topic of interest selected by current faculty.  This educational series is open to the public and anyone is welcome to attend.  Continue Medical Education units (CME’s) are available to eligible attendees. \n\nAccreditation Statement \nIn support of improving patient care\, the University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME)\, the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE)\, and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) to provide continuing education for the healthcare team. \n  \nCredit Designation Statements \nAmerican Medical Association (AMA) \nThe University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP designates this live activity for a maximum of 1 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™.  Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. \nAmerican Psychological Association (APA) \nContinuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsibility for the content of the programs. \nContinuing Education Units \nThe University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP\, as a member of the University Professional & Continuing Education Association (UPCEA)\, authorizes this program for 0.1 continuing education units (CEUs) or 1 hour.
URL:https://www.psychiatry.wisc.edu/event/educational-conference-claudia-reardon-md-topic-sports-medicine-and-mental-health/
LOCATION:Webex
CATEGORIES:CME,Educational Conference (Park Street)
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240419T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240419T131500
DTSTAMP:20260522T155442
CREATED:20230510T212540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240417T210218Z
UID:8658-1713528000-1713532500@www.psychiatry.wisc.edu
SUMMARY:UW Psychiatry Grand Rounds | Chiara Cirelli\, MD\, PhD | "The Burden of Wake and the Reasons for Sleep"
DESCRIPTION:WisPIC Commons Room\n6001 Research Park Blvd in Madison\, WI\n+ Virtual Event – via WebEx \nUW Psychiatry Grand Rounds | Chiara Cirelli\, MD\, PhD | “The Burden of Wake and the Reasons for Sleep”\n\n \n\nLearning Objectives: \nAt the end of the talk\, the audience will be able to: \n\nIdentify the reason why sleep is especially beneficial for the brain and\, vice versa\, why sleep loss impairs cognition.\nDescribe the mechanism by which the use of the brain during the day leads to the need to sleep at night.\n\n\nReading List:  \n\n“The Sleeping Brain” (Cerebrum)\n“Perchance to Prune” (Neuroscience)\n\n\nAbout the Speaker:\n \n \nChiara Cirelli received her medical degree and Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the University of Pisa\, Italy\, where she began her investigation of the molecular correlates of sleep and wakefulness and the role of the noradrenergic system in sleep regulation. She continued this work at the Neuroscience Institute in San Diego\, California as a fellow in experimental neuroscience\, and subsequently at the University of Wisconsin–Madison\, where she has been a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry since 2001. \nDr. Cirelli’s research is aimed at investigating the fundamental mechanisms of sleep regulation by using a combination of molecular and genetic approaches. By performing whole-genome expression profiling studies in different species her laboratory has characterized hundreds of genes whose expression changes in neurons and glial cells in sleep relative to wakefulness. This analysis has identified specific cellular processes that are favored by sleep and impaired by sleep deprivation. In a second\, complementary approach Dr. Cirelli’s laboratory has been performing a large-scale mutagenesis screening for sleep phenotypes in Drosophila. Several mutant fly lines that have much reduced sleep or are resistant to sleep deprivation have been found. The characterization of the genes mutated in these lines has identified key cellular pathways involved in the regulatory mechanisms of sleep and its functional consequences. Overall\, these molecular and genetic studies have shown that sleep need is strongly related to experience-dependent plasticity during wake. \nTogether with her long-term collaborator\, Dr. Giulio Tononi\, Dr. Cirelli has developed a comprehensive hypothesis about the function of sleep\, the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis\, according to which sleep serves to renormalize synaptic strength\, counterbalancing a net increase of synaptic strength due to plasticity during wakefulness. Without sleep\, such progressive increase in synaptic strength would lead to unsustainable costs in terms of energy\, space and cellular supplies\, would reduce the informativeness of neuronal signals\, and would prevent further learning by bringing stronger synapses closer to their level of saturation. In short\, according to this hypothesis sleep is the price to pay for brain plasticity during wakefulness. \nThe synaptic homeostasis hypothesis is being tested at different levels\, using electrophysiological and behavioral experiments in humans\, in vitro studies in cortical slices\, electron microscopy experiments in flies and mice\, and fMRI and DTI experiments in humans. Overall\, these experiments confirm that wake is associated with net synaptic potentiation\, whereas sleep favors global synaptic renormalization\, thereby helping to preserve an overall balance of synaptic strength. Current experiments in transgenic flies and mice use confocal and repeated in vivo two-photon microscopy and block-face scanning electron microscopy to confirm that an essential function of sleep is to promote a homeostatic reduction in synaptic strength. Other experiments are also testing whether lack of sleep\, especially during adolescence\, may have long-term consequences for the functional and anatomical connectivity of the brain. \n  \n\nWebex Info: \nJoin link: https://uwmadison.webex.com/uwmadison/j.php?MTID=ma796c3afced3008d6dd91fb14ee8b601 \nWebinar number: 2631 475 9983 \nWebinar password: CHIARA (244272 from phones and video systems) \n\n\nAmerican Medical Association (AMA) The University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. \nAmerican Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) The University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.0 ANCC contact hours. \nAmerican Psychological Association (APA) Continuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsi-bility for the content of the programs. \nContinuing Education Units Continuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsibility for the content of the programs. \nContinuing Education Units. The University of Wisconsin–Madison ICEP\, as a member of the University Professional & Continuing Educa-tion Association (UPCEA)\, authorizes this program for 0.125 continuing education units (CEUs) or 1.25 hours.
URL:https://www.psychiatry.wisc.edu/event/uw-psychiatry-grand-rounds-speaker-tba-9/
LOCATION:WisPIC\, 6001 Research Park Blvd\, Madison\, WI\, 53719
CATEGORIES:CME,Grand Rounds
ORGANIZER;CN="Jennifer Noll":MAILTO:jnoll3@wisc.edu
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