Check out our news archive below to learn more about what’s happening in Duke Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences!
Behind the Data: Mental Health and the Justice System in Durham County
A team led by Duke Psychiatry adjunct faculty member Nicole Schramm-Sapyta, PhD, has built a database of more than 23,000 individuals with mental health diagnoses who were locally incarcerated between 2014 and 2023. The goal is to have better interventions and stronger partnerships between health and criminal justice systems in Durham and beyond. This Duets podcast episode explores the project.
Healing after Disaster
There are the physical efforts to prepare communities for a natural disaster, to communicate during response, and to mitigate damage—and to learn from the things that went catastrophically wrong. Here’s how Duke experts—including Duke Psychiatry's Robin Gurwitch, PhD, and Rajendra Morey, MD—are thinking about the less visible impacts on communities: our health, both mind and body, weeks, months and years out.
Perkins Library Offers Sensory Kits to Reduce Stress, Assist Neurodiverse Students
Thanks to the vision of several Duke Center for Autism and Brain Development faculty members, Duke's Perkins Library now offers sensory kits designed to offer calming input or stimulation to help people manage their emotions and stay focused—from squeeze balls to clicking fidget toys and more.
Rewiring the Cannabis-Addicted Brain
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences researchers Gregory Sahlem, MD, and Tonisha Kearney-Ramos, PhD, share their promising research on a new therapy for cannabis use disorder. The treatment uses targeted magnetic pulses to retrain the brain and reduce cravings. Could this be the breakthrough needed by millions to break their cannabis habit?
Department of Defense Grant Aims to Help Veterans Manage Anger via Mobile App
Duke University School of Medicine has received a $1,493,450, four-year grant from the Department of Defense to develop and test a mobile app-based cognitive rehabilitation program to improve anger management among Veterans with traumatic brain injury and posttraumatic stress disorder.
Gary Maslow Receives NC Pediatric Society Award
Gary Maslow, MD, MPH, the Gorrell Family Distinguished Professor in Children’s Psychiatry, received the 2025 Outstanding Academic Service Award from the North Carolina Pediatric Society.
Can Electronic Health Records Reveal Early Signs of Autism?
By leveraging routinely collected health data, Duke researchers—including Duke Psychiatry's Geraldine Dawson, PhD, Lauren Franz, MBChB, MPH, and Gary Maslow, MD, MPH—aim to address a critical need for efficient, consistent, and objective methods for early autism screening.
Study Shows More Colleges Are Embracing Peer Support — Just Not in the Same Way
A recent Duke-led study published in the Journal of American College Health offers the most comprehensive look to date at the availability, structure, and quality of peer mental health support programs at colleges and universities across the U.S. Researchers found that program characteristics vary widely and that greater collaboration may improve the impact of these programs. Duke Psychiatry's Nancy Zucker, PhD, is the study's senior author.
Apex Selected as Home for New NC Children’s Health Campus
With the goal of creating a brighter future for our children, North Carolina Children’s Health (NC Children’s) has chosen a location in Apex for its campus, which will include the only freestanding, independent children’s hospital in the Carolinas. NC Children’s, a partnership between UNC Health and Duke Health, will be built on approximately 230 acres of land at the intersection of US-1 and NC-540.
Duke Psychiatry Faculty Members Selected for Duke-NUS Travel Grants
Maragatha (Maggie) Kuchibhatla, PhD, and Katherine Ramos, PhD, received Duke-NUS travel grants in support of academic visits to Singapore, deepening the long-standing partnership between the two institutions. The initiative aims to foster cross-campus collaboration in research, education and innovation in academic medicine.