麻豆学生精品版

Skip to main content

Why Mental Health Clinicians Should Measure Outcomes and Contribute to Research

Psychiatry Ground Rounds, May 18, 2022

Huntsman Mental Health Institute (HMHI) is pleased to welcome Jeremy Kendrick, MD, as our Department of Psychiatry Grand Rounds speaker on May 18, 2022. Dr. Kendrick's presentation is titled "Come On In, the Water's Fine: Making the Case for Measuring Outcomes and Participating in Clinician-Driven Research at HMHI."

Dr. Kendrick is an Assistant Professor (Clinical) in the University of Utah Department of Psychiatry at HMHI. After completing a residency in pediatrics and a combined residency/fellowship in adult, child, and adolescent psychiatry, he joined the faculty. Dr. Kendrick currently provides inpatient psychiatric care for children and adolescents at HMHI. He also works with adults in HMHI's Treatment Resistant Mood Disorders Clinic and is particularly interested in neurostimulation and ketamine infusions to treat severe refractory mental illness.

As both a pediatrician and a psychiatrist, Dr. Kendrick is interested in the process of collaboration between primary care providers and specialists. He and three of his colleagues created GATE, a unique, web-based program that facilitates consultations between primary care physicians and psychiatrists. Additionally, he is a proponent of using standardized measures to quantify clinical outcomes and analyzing the data to enhance practices. He was appointed by the University as a provider informaticist and is heavily involved in utilizing electronic health records to improve provider efficiency and positively impact patient care.

Watch his presentation virtually via Zoom () on Wednesday, May 18 at Noon, MST.

About Psychiatry Grand Rounds

The presents local and nationally-renowned clinicians, researchers, and educators. Grand Rounds typically occur the first and third Wednesday of each month. Lectures are presented in-person, virtually, or both - presentation availability is noted in the schedule online. Presentations recordings are made available at the discretion of the presenters.

Grand Rounds presentations are intended for behavioral/mental health professionals and clinical providers. Continuing education (CE) credit is available. The University of Utah School of Medicine is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.