Information for the 2026 course is not yet available.
Harvard Brain Medicine: Integrating the Clinical Neurosciences 2025 The concept of brain medicine aims to integrate clinical and neuroscientific perspectives across the various non-surgical specialties (e.g., neurology, psychiatry, neurorehabilitation) that care for and conduct research in people with brain disorders. This one-day CE activity accredited by Harvard Medical School will include pre-recorded lectures with a virtual live Q&A format. Speakers will include experts in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, consultation liaison psychiatry, geriatric neurology and geriatric psychiatry, brain medicine, brain health, and neurorehabilitation, speaking on a broad array of assessment and management principles for individuals with complex brain disorders that negatively impact cognition, behavior, emotion, perception, social cognition, and sensorimotor functions. Content will include topics such as: brain medicine and brain heath, the importance of the biopsychosocial formulation, and how to build integrative and collaborative care models within clinical neuroscience programs.
Friday, February 7, 2025
Brain Medicine: Addressing Biopsychosocial Complexity
David L. Perez, MD, MMSc
Brain Health and Alzheimer’s Disease: State of the Science
Rudolph E. Tanzi, PhD
Q&A
David L. Perez, MD, MMSc; Rudolph E. Tanzi, PhD
BREAK
How to Build Integrative and Collaborative Care Programs
Jeffrey Huffman, MD
Disorders of Gut-Brain Interactions: Integrating Care
Elizabeth Madva, MD
Embedding Psychiatric Care within Neurology
Caitlin Adams, MD
Q&A
Jeffrey Huffman, MD; Elizabeth Madva, MD; Caitlin Adams, MD
LUNCH
The Neural Circuitry of Chronic Pain
Tor Wager, PhD
Psychosocial Interventions for Chronic Pain – What’s the Evidence
Ana-Maria Vranceanu, PhD
Functional Restoration: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Enhance Function and Manage Pain
Eve Kennedy, OTR/L
Q&A
Tor Wager, PhD; Ana-Maria Vranceanu, PhD; Eve Kennedy, OTR/L
Moderated by David L. Perez, MD, MMSc
Break
Frontotemporal Dementia: Translating Neuroscience to the Clinic
Bradford Dickerson, MD, MMSc
Cerebellar Cognitive-Affective Syndrome: Translating Neuroscience to the Clinic
Jeremy Schmahmann, MD
Q&A
Bradford Dickerson, MD, MMSc; Jeremy Schmahmann, MD
Moderated by Caitlin Adams, MD