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Registration & Program 64TH ANNUAL MEETING October 23–28, 2017 Washington, DC Washington Marriott Wardman Park & Omni Shoreham Hotel Early Bird Deadline: September 15, 2017

64TH ANNUAL MEETING · 2017. 8. 2. · The AACAP App—The App not only allows you to fully navigate the meeting without paper (including electronic session evaluations), but gives

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Page 1: 64TH ANNUAL MEETING · 2017. 8. 2. · The AACAP App—The App not only allows you to fully navigate the meeting without paper (including electronic session evaluations), but gives

Registration & Program

64TH ANNUAL MEETINGOctober 23–28, 2017

Washington, DCWashington Marriott Wardman Park & Omni Shoreham Hotel

Early Bird Deadline: September 15, 2017

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AACAP Executive Committee Gregory K. Fritz, MD President

Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhDPresident-Elect

Tami D. Benton, MDSecretary

Yiu Kee Warren Ng, MD Treasurer

Mark S. Borer, MDChair, Assembly of Regional Organizations of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Heidi B. Fordi, CAE Executive Director

Annual Meeting Program Committee Boris Birmaher, MD Chair

James J. McGough, MD Deputy Chair

Micah Sickel, MDLocal Arrangements Co-Chair

Michael Houston, MDLocal Arrangements Co-Chair

Regina Bussing, MD, MSHS

Angel A. Caraballo, MD

Barbara J. Coffey, MD, MS

Judith Ann Crowell, MD

Rasim Somer Diler, MD

Anne Cecilia Duffy, MD

Laurence L. Greenhill, MD

R. Andrew Harper, MDContinuing Medical Education Committee Liaison

Ryan Herringa, MD, PhD

Manon Hillegers, MD, PhD

Jae-Won Kim, MD, PhD

Soo-Jeong Kim, MD

Alice Mao, MD

Jon McClellan, MD

Michael P. Milham, MD, PhD

Wanjiku Njoroge, MD

Roberto Ortiz-Aguayo, MD

Caroly Pataki, MD

Gregory Sayer, MD

Shawn S. Sidhu, MD

Jeffrey Robert Strawn, MD

Shelly Tran, MD

Timothy E. Wilens, MD

Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhD Ex-Officio

Join Us at AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting!

On behalf of the entire Program Committee and AACAP Staff, we’re looking forward to seeing all of you at AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting, October 23–28, at

the Washington Marriott Wardman Park and the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington, DC!

We have an impressive lineup of educational and innovative sessions to offer this year. As always, the large majority of our sessions are accredited for continuing medical education (CME) credit; therefore, attendees can receive up to 50 CME credits by attending the entire meeting.

As you’ve come to expect, we will continue to offer:

▶ The AACAP App—The App not only allows you to fully navigate the meeting without paper (including electronic session evaluations), but gives you access to other AACAP information (like AACAP’s Twitter feed and a member directory) as well.

▶ Wellness Activities—Make sure to take advantage of daily yoga and meditation classes, as well as exercise in and around DC. See page 19 for more details!

▶ Complimentary wireless internet throughout the meeting space and hotel rooms at the Marriott and Omni. Please note, if staying at the Omni, you’ll need to be a registered Omni loyalty program member to take advantage of the complimentary internet in your room.

NEW this year, we’re offering:

▶ Outings in DC, including a tour of the National Gallery of Art and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum! See page 15 for more details.

▶ The Program Committee sponsors a special symposium, Not Fake News: Gun Violence is A Serious Public Health Problem, and is bringing together researchers on this topic for an in-depth look at the current status of this public health crisis.

▶ Extended Workshops—Extended Workshops are all-day workshops providing additional time and opportunity to master evidence-based therapeutic interventions beyond what is possible in the standard 3-hour Workshop. At its conclusion, participants should have gained sufficient expertise to implement newly learned treatment approaches or interventions into their clinical practices.

With important ongoing changes in the specialty such as integrated care, wellness, excessive use of electronics, gun violence, the effects of “13 Reasons Why,” new challenges with children of illegal immigrants and LGBT communities, and updated research in complementary medicine and psychopharmacology, mental healthcare professionals can’t afford to miss this Annual Meeting!

Visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017 for more information!

Be sure to register by September 15 to take advantage of early bird rates.

See you in DC,

Boris Birmaher, MD James J. McGough, MD

Boris Birmaher, MD AACAP Program Committee Chair

James J. McGough, MD AACAP Deputy Program

Committee Chair

Official Photographer Fred Seligman, MD

Assistant Editor Erica AllenMeetings Coordinator

Editors Jill Z. Brafford, CMP, MTA Director of Meetings and Continuing Medical Education

Lucinda Flowers, CMPAssistant Director of Meetings

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 1

AACAP’s Program Committee looks forward to seeing you in Washington, DC!

Join the conversation!

Follow us on Twitter @AACAP and tweet

about the Annual Meeting using #AACAPAM17

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Program Highlights

Systems of Care Special ProgramMaking An Impact in What Matters: Risk, Resiliency, and Systemic Approaches to Social Determinants of Behavioral Health in YouthMonday, October 238:00 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chairs: Justine Larson, MD, and Lisa R. Fortuna, MDSpeakers: Gary M. Blau, PhD, Margarita Alegria, PhD, Kiara Alvarez, PhD, Patrick Tolan, PhD, Madge Mosby, Thomas Hoffman, MD, W. Peter Metz, MD, Lisa R. Fortuna, MD, Sala Webb, MD, Lisa M. Cullins, MD, Rebecca Susan Daily, MD, Cheryl S. Al-Mateen, MD, Renee Boynton-Jarrett, MD, Heidi Ellis, PhD, Saida Abdi, LICSW

Justine Larson, MD Lisa R. Fortuna, MD

This special program offers opportunities for didactic learning as well as discussion with particular attention to the needs of our most complex children and adolescent patients and their families, as well as the role that child and adolescent psychiatrists can play in impacting social determinants of behavioral health. The program allows child and adolescent psychiatrists to consider a public health approach towards treatment, prevention of mental health and substance use disorders, as well as in promoting resiliency. Child and adolescent psychiatrists often do not have an opportunity to consider how their work—whether clinical, research, or policy—may impact social determinants of health, and how child and adolescent psychiatrists can play a role in advocacy and strength-building. This program highlights some of the resources as well as gaps that exist in the current system. Child and adolescent psychiatrists can have a positive impact when there is a greater understanding of the evidence-base in treatment, factors that promote resiliency and recovery, positive ways to engage youth and families, and treatment needs of specific populations impacted by changes in our healthcare system and the social environment.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Community-Based Systems of Care Committee

2 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Member Services Forum 1: AACAP Legislative Program and Congressional VisitsMonday, October 239:00 am–5:00 pm (free ticket)

To take full advantage of meeting in our nation’s capital, and to sustain members’ enthusiasm for advocacy following the record-breaking 2017 AACAP Legislative Conference, AACAP members who are U.S. residents are invited to participate in this legislative program to advance children’s mental health through legislation. The program begins at 9:00 am on Monday, October 23, and is followed by Congressional Hill visits. This program helps equip members with the necessary know-how and offers the advocacy material needed to successfully lobby your own U.S. Representative and Senators on AACAP’s policy priorities. This event requires you to make a short trip across DC, to meet with your Congressional Representative and Senators on Capitol Hill, immediately after the legislative program. All Congressional meetings should conclude by 5:00 pm.

Prior advocacy and lobbying experience is not required, but seasoned advocates are encouraged to attend. Please note that the volunteer state leader or regional captain assigned to your area is coordinating all appointments with Congressional offices. Individual attendees will receive more details, once registered for this event.

Coordinated by AACAP’s Advocacy Committee, AACAP’s Advocacy Liaison Network, and AACAP’s Government Affairs & Clinical Practice Department.

**Please note that this MSF is limited to the first 150 AACAP members with Association membership and the free ticket must be purchased by September 15.

Go Online to Register

(www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017)

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Karl Menninger, MD, PlenaryDepression Awareness and Screening in YouthWednesday, October 258:00 am–9:45 am (open)Chair: Gregory K. Fritz, MD, AACAP President, presidingSpeaker: Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhD, AACAP President-Elect

Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhD, AACAP

President-Elect

Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhD, is Professor and Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Dr. Wagner received her medical degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook and her doctorate in clinical psychology from Temple University in Philadelphia. She completed her residency in psychiatry with Harvard Medical School at Beth Israel

Hospital and completed a fellowship in child and adolescent psychiatry with Harvard Medical School at McLean Hospital.

Dr. Wagner is an internationally recognized expert in the pharmacological treatment of childhood mood disorders. Her work has contributed to the development of evidence-based treatments for children and adolescents with major depression and bipolar disorder.

Dr. Wagner is the recipient of numerous honors, including an Honorary Doctorate from State University of New York; Distinguished Alumnus, State University of New York School of Medicine at Stony Brook; Psychiatric Excellence Award from Texas Society of Psychiatric Physicians; the Klerman Senior Investigator Award from Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance; the Blanche F. Ittleson Award for Research in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry from the American Psychiatric Association; the Colvin Award for Outstanding Achievement in Mood Disorders from the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation; the Mood Disorders Research Award from the American College of Psychiatrists; and the Edward A. Strecker Award from the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Wagner has served in leadership positions in professional organizations and has been a member of the National Advisory Mental Health Council of the National Institutes of Health. She is editor of the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry’s Child and Adolescent Section. Dr. Wagner is Past-President of the American Association of Directors of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and President-Elect of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

In her inaugural address, Dr. Wagner presents her Presidential Initiative, which focuses on increasing awareness of and screening for depression in children and adolescents. Early identification of depression is critical to reduce the likelihood of social, family, and academic impairments as well as suicidality associated with this disorder.

The Karl Menninger, MD, Plenary is supported by Ronald K. Filippi, MD, in honor of his mentor, Karl Menninger, MD.

Research SymposiumSocial Neuroscience and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Research Priorities at the National Institute of Mental HealthTuesday, October 247:00 pm–9:00 pm (open)Chair: Manpreet K. Singh, MDSpeakers: David Leopold, PhD, and Shelli Avenevoli, PhD

David Leopold, PhD Shelli Avenevoli, PhD

This year’s Research Symposium features two experts from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), who are presenting groundbreaking basic/translational research in the field of social neuroscience and highlighting funding priorities relevant to the field of child and adolescent psychiatry.

Dr. David Leopold, an accomplished basic neuroscientist, studies the social behavior of macaque monkeys. He is presenting current cutting edge translational research on the fundamental underpinnings of human behavior as it relates to social neuroscience. Throughout his career, Dr. Leopold has been interested in the large-scale organization of brain activity that underlies aspects of visual perception. As the Senior Investigator and Chief of the Section on Cognitive Neurophysiology and Imaging in the Laboratory of Neuropsychology, and Director of the Neurophysiology Imaging Facility, Dr. Leopold’s ongoing research theme focuses on the role of the visual cortex and thalamus in the establishment and maintenance of stimulus visibility. The title of Dr. Leopold’s presentation is “Electrophysiology and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Study Social Visual Cognition.”

Dr. Shelli Avenevoli is the Deputy Director for the National Institute of Mental Health, the lead federal agency for research on mental illness, with a budget of $1.4 billion and a staff of over 1,000. In her 16 years at NIMH, Dr. Avenevoli has been heavily involved with many key NIMH efforts, including an important revision of NIMH’s Strategic Plan, which has re-defined the Institute’s approach to supporting research in neurodevelopment and in bipolar disorder. Dr. Avenevoli is also serving as a liaison to other agencies for special initiatives. Dr. Avenevoli is presenting on the current funding priorities of the NIMH. The title of her presentation is “Advancing Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Research: A View from the National Institute for Mental Health.”

Sponsored by AACAP’s Research Committee

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 3

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Noshpitz Cline History LectureHow Have Longitudinal Study Findings Changed Our Thinking About Families and Children Over the Last 50 Years?Wednesday, October 251:15 pm–2:45 pm (open)Chair: David W. Cline, MDSpeaker: Michael Rutter, MD

Michael Rutter, MD

Sir Michael Rutter, MD, has been a consultant psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital in London, England, since 1966. In his lecture, he will describe “How longitudinal study findings have changed our thinking over the last 50

years” beginning from that date, a time that is fresh in his mind. This was also the year his first book, Children of Sick Parents: An Environmental and Psychiatric Study, was published.

Sir Michael became the first UK Professor of Child Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry from 1973–1998. He set up the Medical Research Council’s Child Psychiatry Research Unit and the Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre. He is currently Professor of Developmental Psychopathology at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London. Sir Michael’s research has included studies of school and family influences on children’s behavior; autism; the European and Romanian Adoptee (ERA) studies on the effects of severe deprivation; and the interplay between genetic and psychosocial risk factors and resilience. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and the Royal Society, as well as the Institute of Medicine in the US. Professor Rutter has published around 500 scientific papers, and over 50 books. He was knighted in 1992, for contributions to child mental health and education.

Sponsored by AACAP’s History and Archives Committee and supported by David W. Cline, MD.

AACAP Catchers in the Rye Humanitarian AwardMarsha Levick, Esq.

Marsha Levick, Esq.

Marsha Levick, Esq. is AACAP’s 2017 Catchers in the Rye Humanitarian Award recipient for her outstanding contributions to the protection of youth in the juvenile justice system. Ms. Levick, Chief Counsel of the Juvenile Law Center (JLC), which she co-founded in Philadelphia in 1975, has waged decades’ long battles to end the harshest sentences for juvenile offenders. She has served

as co-counsel for the United States Supreme Court ruling that prohibited mandatory minimum life without parole sentences for juveniles that must be applied retroactively including the Roper vs. Simmons case ending the juvenile death penalty.

Her advocacy focuses upon the immediate harm to young people who have made mistakes, as well as long term implications upon their emotional and occupational success. She has been a national leader in aligning the law with recent scientific evidence, that has proven that children are different psychologically and developmentally from adults, and changing beliefs about the culpability for juvenile offenders. Ms. Levick continues to be a force. She is writing an amicus brief, supported by AACAP, preventing routine strip searches of minors, and another protesting the ability of a 10-year old to waive their Miranda rights. Ms. Levick is more than an advocate for children. Her work is a model for advocacy of our most vulnerable youth, working to protect their futures.

Program Highlights (continued)

4 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Go Online to View Full Program www.aacap.org/

AnnualMeeting/2017

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James C. Harris, MD, Developmental Neuropsychiatry ForumNeurodevelopmental Consequences of Early Childhood Adversity: Insights From Children Raised in InstitutionsThursday, October 268:30 am–11:00 am (open)Chair: Bryan H. King, MD, MBASpeakers: Michael Rutter, MD, Charles Nelson, III, PhD

Michael Rutter, MD Charles Nelson, III, PhD

This Forum details the course of neurodevelopmental outcomes arising from profoundly depriving environments. The speakers focus on

how early childhood deprivation impacts trajectories in childhood and adolescence, as well as promising avenues for future impact, including beneficial effects of more enriched environments, such as foster care.

The first speaker, Sir Michael Rutter, MD, was the first professor of child psychiatry in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth. He is a pre-eminent leader in developmental neuropsychiatry research, and is currently a Professor at the Institute of Psychiatry in King’s College London. Dr. Rutter is widely credited in many areas of child psychiatry, including epidemiology and genetics of autism, resilience in the face of adversity, and the sequelae of profound childhood deprivation. In this Forum, he focuses on his seminal work from the English and Romania Adoptees (ERA) study, a “natural experiment” in which there was a rapid transition from a profoundly depriving environment in Romanian institutions of the 1980s and early 1990s to adoptive families in England.

The second speaker, Charles A. Nelson, PhD, is a renowned developmental psychologist and neuroscientist who is a Professor of Pediatrics and Neuroscience at Harvard Medical School and Research Director of Developmental Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital. His research examines the intersection of brain and cognitive development. His specific interests are concerned with the effects of early experience on brain and behavioral development, particularly the effects of early biological insults and early psychosocial adversity. In this Forum, Dr. Nelson presents his seminal work in the Bucharest Early Intervention Project, a randomized clinical trial of foster care for institutionally reared children.

During the discussion, both speakers describe how an understanding of early psychosocial deprivation influences development of children and adolescents, especially as it pertains to neurodevelopmental sequelae and risk of neurodevelopmental disorders.

Town MeetingBreaking Down AACAP’s Communications Efforts: Protocols, Responses, and Getting the Job Done!Thursday, October 2611:45 am–1:15 pm (members only)

Get a firsthand look behind the curtain as AACAP’s Communications Team along with member-experts from various AACAP Committees

including: Media, Disaster, and Consumer Issues, walk you through our strategies including crafting and developing communications plans, choosing when and how to respond, identifying key stakeholders, interacting with the media, adhering to message discipline, and more.

The James C. Harris, MD, Developmental Neuropsychiatry Forum is an annual event thanks to a generous donation from AACAP Distinguished Fellow James C. Harris, MD, and his wife Catherine DeAngelis, MD, MPH. The Forum provides the opportunity for Annual Meeting attendees to learn about cutting-edge science in this evolving subspecialty area of child and adolescent psychiatry.

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 5

▼ Michael Rutter, MD, and James C. Harris, MD

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Presidential InterviewGregory K. Fritz, MD, Interviews Charles H. Zeanah, Jr., MDSaturday, October 2811:45 am–1:15 pm (open)

Gregory K. Fritz, MD Charles H. Zeanah, Jr., MD

Charles H. Zeanah, Jr., MD, is the Mary Peters Sellars-Polchow Chair in Psychiatry, Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, and Vice-Chair for Child and Adolescent

Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans. He also directs the Institute of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health at Tulane University. Throughout his career, he has studied the effects of adverse early experiences on development, including trauma, abuse, and neglect. He also has studied interventions designed to enhance recovery following exposure to adverse experience. He is the editor of three editions of the Handbook of Infant Mental Health, and with Charles Nelson and Nathan Fox, the co-author of Romania’s Abandoned Children: Deprivation, Brain Development and the Struggle for Recovery. He chaired a Zero to Three Task Force that recently published the DC:0–5, a diagnostic nosology for Early Childhood Disorders. A Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and the American Psychiatric Association, he also serves as a Board Member of Zero to Three and is Visiting Professor at the University of Bucharest and the University of Glasgow.

Lawrence A. Stone, MD, PlenaryChild Psychiatry: This is Where We Build Healthy BrainsFriday, October 2711:45 am–1:15 pm (open)Chair: Gregory K. Fritz, MD, AACAP President, presidingSpeaker: James J. Hudziak, MD

James J. Hudziak, MD

James J. Hudziak, MD, is Professor of Child Psychiatry, Medicine, Pediatrics, and Communication Sciences at the University of Vermont’s Larner College of Medicine and Medical Center. He holds adjunct professorships in child psychiatry at Washington University in St. Louis, MO, Sophia Children’s Hospital

at ErasmusMC Rotterdam, Netherlands, and the Giesel School of Medicine in Hanover, NH. He is the Chief of Child Psychiatry and Director of the Vermont Center of Children, Youth, and Families, and the Wellness Environment at the University of Vermont. Jim has served as the chair of AACAP’s Health Promotion and Prevention Committee for the past 6 years.

Dr. Hudziak is internationally known for his work in genomics, developmental neuroimaging, epigenetics, and assessment of child emotional behavioral problems and wellness. He has applied the neuroscience lessons from his published work of over 180 peer reviewed papers to the practice of child psychiatry. He currently holds grants from NIH and the Conrad Hilton Foundation for his work in health promotion. His publications focus on the importance of using health promotion strategies to improve brain health in children and families with the goal of impacting overall child and family emotional behavioral and general medical health.

In his lecture, Dr. Hudziak explores how the neuroscience of family based health promotion has developed to the point that child psychiatry can take its place as a driver of health care reform. He argues that all health results from emotional behavioral health’ and that in the same way cardiology has worked as a field to develop strategies to develop healthy hearts, it is time for child psychiatry to develop programs aimed at promoting healthy brain development in children and families regardless of their psychiatric status. He presents data from multiple studies using his clinical model, the Vermont Family Based Approach (VFBA). The VFBA is built on careful assessment of family emotional strengths and weaknesses. Once done, the VFBA prescribes tailored health promotion, illness prevention, and family based intervention. Dr. Hudziak presents examples from general pediatric, OBGYN, and teenage population projects that all arrive at the same conclusion; child and adolescent psychiatrists can and should prescribe health promotion strategies with the goal of helping children and their parents `build healthy brains’.

The Lawrence A. Stone, MD, Plenary is named in honor of AACAP Past President and Life Fellow, Lawrence A. Stone, MD. It recognizes his leadership,

vision, and passion to the mission of AACAP. Mrs. Marnette Stone endowed this plenary in loving tribute to her husband.

Lawrence A. Stone, MD

Program Highlights (continued)

6 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

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AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 7

New to You: Extended Workshops

Extended Workshops are a brand-new program this year and are designed to provide additional time and opportunity to master evidence-based therapeutic interventions during a full-day program. At the conclusion of the workshop, participants should have gained sufficient expertise to implement newly learned treatment approaches or interventions into their clinical practices.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017Extended Workshop 1: Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Interpersonal Violence: Practical Strategies for Child Psychiatrists10:00 am–6:00 pm (ticket)Chair: Judith A. Cohen, MDPresenters: Judith A. Cohen, MD, Anthony Mannarino, PhD, Nathaniel G. Sharon, MD

Learn about the theory, evidence-base, and clinical skills relevant to providing Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) for youth who experience interpersonal violence. Interpersonal violence is associated with high rates of posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and substance abuse. Participants learn specific TF-CBT techniques to implement gradual exposure for overcoming trauma avoidance; provide psychoeducation about interpersonal violence for caregivers; encourage adaptive affect expression related to interpersonal violence experience; effectively manage traumatic behavior problems; and encourage cognitive processing of interpersonal trauma experiences. Clinicians are able to implement all or part of the TF-CBT model when conducting assessments, medication management, and multi-systems coordination.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Issues Committee and Child Maltreatment and Violence Committee

Thursday, October 26, 2017Extended Workshop 2: Meditation/Mindfulness: Use in Clinical Practice8:30 am–5:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: Deborah R. Simkin, MD, James J. Hudziak, MDPresenters: James J. Hudziak, MD, Deborah R. Simkin, MD, Basant Pradhan, MD

This Extended Workshop provides a hands-on approach to meditation techniques that can be used in the clinical setting with youth and families. Current data in meditation and mindfulness techniques show promise for treatment of symptomatic anxiety, depression, and executive function in youth. The different types of meditation are reviewed; and evidence-based research on Mindfulness-Based Stress

Therapy (MBST) and Trauma Interventions using Mindfulness Based Extinction and Reconsolidation (TIMBER©) are presented. Participants not only observe, but engage in training on MBST in the morning and a combination of Mindfulness Based Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (MBCT) and TIMBER© in the afternoon.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Health Promotion and Prevention Committee and Complementary and Integrative Medicine Committee

Friday, October 27, 2017Extended Workshop 3: Introduction to Motivational Interviewing: Skill-Building Fundamentals8:30 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chair: Joseph S. Lee, MDPresenter: Christian Thurstone, MD

Psychiatry residents, child and adolescent psychiatry fellows, faculty, and child and adolescent psychiatrists with a basic knowledge of psychotherapy receive in-depth, experiential, and practical training in motivational interviewing. Motivational interviewing is an evidence-based behavioral intervention designed to help people make desired changes in behavior. Motivational interviewing is time-limited and practical to be implemented in emergency, inpatient, outpatient, medical, and psychiatric settings. Participants hear, see, and practice the principal interventions of motivational interviewing, including the spirit of motivational interviewing, how to tailor interventions to the specific process of motivational interviewing, how to evoke change talk, and how to soften sustain talk and engender participation in the planning process.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Committee on Medical Students and Residents and Substance Abuse and Addiction Committee

Extended Workshop 4: Dialectical Behavior Therapy Toolkit for Child Psychiatrists: Targeting Self-Injury and Suicidal Behavior8:30 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chair: Mary S. Ahn, MDPresenter: Blaise Aguirre, MD

Child and adolescent psychiatrists benefit from learning to effectively use the tools of Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), specifically the techniques that target the management of both nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) and suicidal behavior in adolescents. As an evidence-based treatment for adolescents with emotional dysregulation and suicidal or self-harming behavior, DBT significantly reduces self-injurious behaviors, suicidal ideation, depression, hopelessness, and borderline personality symptoms; however, few clinicians incorporate DBT techniques into their practice due to lack of training. Participants learn to apply DBT Suicide Risk Assessment to treatment planning; learn common therapeutic strategies for addressing motivation for treatment; and can identify “interfering behaviors” that complicate treatment.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Psychotherapy Committee

Saturday, October 28, 2017Extended Workshop 5: Fundamentals in Mentalization-Based Treatment for Suicidal and Self-Injurious Youth8:30 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chairs: Laurel L. Williams, DO, Owen S. Muir, MDPresenters: Carl Fleisher, MD, Efrain Bleiberg, MD, Chris Grimes LCSW, Carlene MacMillan, MD, Liz Cracknell, RMN

Data from neuroscience and attachment research are presented in the context of mentalization-based treatment (MBT). MBT is a treatment approach to borderline personality disorder, family treatment of children and adolescents, eating disorders, and self-harming adolescents. Participants learn how to identify mentalizing and non-mentalizing behaviors; understand neurodevelopmental changes in the mentalizing capacities of adolescents and the impact those changes have in terms of vulnerabilities in one’s sense of self, affect regulation, and impulse control; and review the role of these vulnerabilities in maladaptive behavior and psychopathology, particularly for disorders that often lead to self-injurious or high-risk behaviors.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Complementary and Integrative Medicine Committee and Psychotherapy Committee

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Family Friendly ActivitiesAre you looking for fun things to do with your family around Washington, DC, during AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting? Tour the Capitol, walk around the monuments on the National Mall, or visit the famous Smithsonian museums! There are endless activities and sights in Washington, DC, that will entertain your family for hours. For more information, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017, and see our Family-Friendly Events page!

Your children may also participate in the Children’s Welcome Event, Welcome Reception, evening Media Theater programs, and the Exhibit Hall with adult supervision.

Integrated Care Programs

Gregory K. Fritz, MD

AACAP President Gregory K. Fritz, MD, made integrated care the focus of his two-year presidential initiative. Part of that initiative involves educating

child and adolescent psychiatrists about models for integrated care and how best to collaborate with others in primary or specialty medical care. Here is a sampling of the programs on the Annual Meeting schedule dedicated to this topic.

Tuesday, October 24Clinical Perspectives 7: What Primary Care Providers Really Want: Four Models of Collaboration in Early Childhood Mental Health Care 9:00 am–12:00 pm (open)Chair: Mary-Margaret Gleason, MDDiscussant: David W. Willis, MDSpeakers: Elise M. Fallucco, MD, Tessa L. Chesher, DO, Melissa Middleton, PhD, Matthew G. Biel, MD, MSc

Clinical Perspectives 11: Integrating Care Across the Specialty Pediatric Continuum: Outcomes-Driven Engagement of Families and Teams1:30 pm–4:30 pm (open)Chairs: Khyati Brahmbhatt, MD, K. Ron-Li Liaw, MDDiscussant: Gary Maslow, MD, MPHSpeakers: Eva C. Ihle, MD, PhD, K. Ron-Li Liaw, MD, Khyati Brahmbhatt, MD, Rebecca Lois, PhD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee

Clinical Perspectives 12: International Clinical Perspectives: International Models of Pediatric Integrated Care: Obstacles and Innovations 1:30 pm–4:30 pm (open)Chair: Carol M. Larroque, MDSpeakers: Shirley D. Alleyne, MBBS, Horacio B. Hojman, MD, Sigita Lesinskiene, MD, Julie Chilton, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee and International Relations Committee

Clinical Perspectives 15: Psychiatric, Cognitive, Legal, and Public Health Challenges Facing Refugee Children: An Integrated Approach 1:30 pm–4:30 pm (open)Chair: Dorothy E. Stubbe, MDSpeakers: Caleb N. Thomas, John Thomas, JD, Chris George, NA

Wednesday, October 25Clinical Perspectives 20: Innovative Interdisciplinary Approaches to Community Violence in Youth10:00 am–1:00 pm (open)Chair: Seeba Anam, MDDiscussant: Elizabeth Thompson, PhDSpeakers: Bradley Stolbach, PhD, Sonya M. Dinizulu, PhD, Liza Suarez, PhD, Colleen Cicchetti, PhD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Disaster and Trauma Issues Committee

Clinical Perspectives 22: Is Integrated Care the Answer for Childhood Trauma? Approaches, Challenges, and Future Directions10:00 am–1:00 pm (open)Chair: Brooks R. Keeshin, MDDiscussant: D. Richard Martini, MDSpeakers: Harriet MacMillan, MD, Heather C. Forkey, MD, Neal Davis, MD, Brooks R. Keeshin, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Committee on Collaboration with Medical Professions and Child Maltreatment and Violence Committee

Clinical Perspectives 23: Pediatric Autoimmune Encephalopathies: What Should a Child Psychiatrist Know?10:00 am–1:00 pm (open)Chair: Lisa P. Namerow, MDDiscussant: GenaLynne C. Mooneyham, MD, MSSpeakers: Lisa B. Namerow, MD, Kevin P. Young, PhD, William Gallentine, DO, Heather A. Van Mater, MD, MSc, Saachi K. Tarr, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee and Triple Board and Post Pediatric Portal Programs Committee

Workshop 8: The Collaborative Care Model for Integrated Mental Health Practice in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting: Key Skills and Approaches for Child and Adolescent Psychiatrists3:00 pm–6:00 pm (ticket)Chair: Barry Sarvet, MDCo-Presenter: Anna Ratzliff, MD, PhD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Healthcare Access and Economics Committee

8 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

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Clinical Perspectives 30: Pediatric Medicine Update for the Child Psychiatrist: Medical Therapies for Transgender Youth, Postural Tachycardia Syndrome, and Updates on Contraceptives3:00 pm–6:00 pm (open)Chairs: Kristi Kleinschmit, MD, Mary Gabriel, MDSpeakers: Nadia Dowshen, MD, Jeffrey Moak, MD, Beth Gargaro, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Training and Education Committee and Triple Board and Post Pediatric Portal Programs Committee

Thursday, October 26Institute 4: Family-Based Psychiatric Interventions for Physically Ill Children8:00 am–5:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: Thomas A. Roesler, MD, Gary Maslow, MD, MPHSpeakers: Michelle L. Rickerby, MD, Kristina Schwerin, MD, Cynthia Harbeck-Weber, PhD, Gary Maslow, MD, MPH, Anne Kazak, PhD, Pamela J. Mosher, MD, MDiv, Thomas A. Roesler, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee and Family Committee

Clinical Perspectives 39: Implementing Clinical Pathways for Acute Behavioral Health Issues in Pediatric Medical Settings8:30 am–11:30 am (open)Chair: Vera Feuer, MDDiscussant: Laura M. Prager, MDSpeakers: Stephen Tourjee, MD, Nadine Schwartz, MD, Negar Beheshti, MD, Clare Gray, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee and Emergency Child Psychiatry Committee

Clinical Perspectives 41: Skill Building in Family-Centered Pediatric Integrated Care8:30 am–11:30 am (open)Chair: Katherine E. Grimes, MD, MPHDiscussants: Gregory Hagan, MD, Cecil R. Webster, MD, Karen Martinez, Gregory K. Fritz, MD

Clinical Perspectives 50: Life Members Wisdom Clinical Perspectives: Care Integration for Childhood Sexual Abuse—Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Heroin, and Other Adverse Outcomes2:00 pm–5:00 pm (open)Chair: Douglas A. Kramer, MD, MSDiscussant: Allan Mark Josephson, MDSpeakers: Douglas A. Kramer, MD, MS, Eraka Bath, MD, Lisa Amaya-Jackson, MD, MPH, Brooks R. Keeshin, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Child Maltreatment and Violence Committee, Family Committee, and Life Members Committee

Friday, October 27Symposium 20: Simon Wile Symposium: Super-Powered Child Psychiatry Access Programs! Adding Value From System-Wide Integration, Early Childhood Interventions, and Quality Improvement Initiatives8:30 am–11:30 am (open)Chair: Souray Sengupta, MD, MPHSpeakers: Mary-Margaret Gleason, MD, Leandra Godoy, PhD, Richard Dopp, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Committee on Collaboration with Medical Professions

Clinical Perspectives 63: Pathways and Protocols in Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders: Putting the Functional in Functional Disorders8:30 am–11:30 am (open)Chairs: Khyati Brahmbhatt, MD, Tyler Pirlot, MDDiscussant: Patricia I. Ibeziako, MDSpeakers: Nasuh Malas, MD, MPH, Claire M. De Souza, MD, FRCPC, Lisa B. Namerow, MD, Lisa Lloyd Giles, MD, Khyati Brahmbhatt, MD, Tyler Pirlot, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee

Clinical Perspectives 71: From the Bedside to State-Wide: A Tour of Integrated Care Models Across the Country1:30 pm–4:30 pm (open)Chairs: Lisa Lloyd Giles, MD, Gary Maslow, MD, MPHDiscussant: D. Richard Martini, MDSpeakers: Mary-Margaret Gleason, MD, Sandra J. Rackley, MD, Lisa Lloyd Giles, MD, Nasuh Malas, MD, MPH, Sansea L. Jacobson, MD

Sponsored by AACAP’s Training and Education Committee, Committee on Collaboration with Medical Professionals, Triple Board and Post Pediatric Portal Programs Committee, and the Physically Ill Child Committee

Special Interest Study Group 2: Behavioral Health Integration in Primary Care: A Hybrid Model5:00 pm–6:30 pm (ticket)Chair: Terry Stancin, PhDCo-Presenter: Raman Marwaha, MD

Saturday, October 28Clinical Case Conference 18: “Inside Out” Clinic: A Model for Integrated Care in Medical Education1:30 pm–4:30 pm (open)Chair: Suzie C. Nelson, MDCo-Presenters: Matthew Baker, DO, Paul H. Butler, DO

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Look for the scientific proceedings in a special supplement issue of JAACAP!

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10 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Institutes

Institutes are among the most popular Annual Meeting programs because they give a comprehensive and authoritative overview of a topic area in a full-day program.

They are a great way to learn the latest in research and clinical practice in a specific area of child and adolescent psychiatry. Be sure to purchase your Institute tickets when you register, as they often sell out!

Institute 1: Psychopharmacology Update: Balancing Benefits and RisksTuesday, October 248:00 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chairs: Jeffrey R. Strawn, MD, Barbara J. Coffey, MD, MSPresenters: Karen Dineen Wagner, MD, PhD, John T. Walkup, MD, Jeffrey R. Strawn, MD, Jeremy Veenstra-Vanderweele, MD, Gabrielle A. Carlson, MD, Melissa P. DelBello, MD, MS, Timothy Wilens, MD, Barbara J. Coffey, MD, MS

Accumulating data support the efficacy of psychopharmacologic interventions for a number of psychiatric disorders in youth; however, in parallel, studies increasingly reveal a clearer picture of the adverse effects or side effects profiles of these treatments. This advanced Institute seeks to review and apply current data related to efficacy of psychotropic medications in youth, as well as the prevalence and management of medication-related adverse effects. The Institute presents recent clinical trial data and data related to efficacy and side effect management of selected medications in pediatric patients with anxiety, depressive, bipolar, autism spectrum, tic, and obsessive-compulsive disorders, as well as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Case presentations are utilized to illustrate pragmatic aspects of adverse effects and tolerability issues with second generation antipsychotics, stimulants, and antidepressants, as well as evidence-based management strategies for these adverse effects.

Institute 2: Research Institute: This Is Your Brain on Child Psychiatry. Any Questions? A Practical Update on the Impact of Neuroimaging Findings in Child PsychiatryTuesday, October 248:00 am–5:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: Daniel P. Dickstein, MD, David Cochran, MD, PhDDiscussant: Bradley Peterson, MDPresenters: Michael P. Milham, MD, PhD, Nitin Gogtay, MD, Melissa P. DelBello, MD, MS, Paul E. Croarkin, DO, Ellen Leibenluft, MD, Jean A. Frazier, MD, Russell A. Poldrack, PhD, Alexander Kolevzon, MD

All too often, clinicians and some researchers feel shut out of the ways neuroimaging is advancing child psychiatry due to excessively technical terminology, methods, etc. This Institute seeks to break down those barriers, to ensure attendees, whether clinician, researcher, or both, understand the latest in applications of neuroimaging to child and adolescent psychiatry. Areas addressed include how neuroimaging informs our understanding of psychiatric disorders compared to typical development; how psychiatric diagnosis and practice are being revolutionized through the development of biomarkers; how resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulations (rTMS) are being utilized in diagnosis and therapy; and the challenges associated with broader use of neuroimaging data. Participants receive a comprehensive examination of how neuroimaging research is relevant to child and adolescent psychiatry practice, how the challenges associated with neuroimaging datasets can be addressed, and how to make neuroimaging more reproducible and transparent in the future.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Research Committee

Institute 3: Autism Spectrum Disorder: From Clinical Practice to Cutting-Edge ResearchWednesday, October 2510:00 am–6:00 pm (ticket)Chair: Alexander Kolevzon, MDPresenters: David Grodberg, MD, Pilar

Trelles, MD, Roberto Canitano, MD, Catalina Betancur, MD, PhD, Jeremy Veenstra-Vanderweele, MD, Jennifer Foss-Feig, PhD

This Institute presents an interdisciplinary, collaborative approach to the complex presentation of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), placing emphasis on advances in neuroscience and translational research. Presentations are carefully designed to complement and build on each other, using vignettes and video of an ASD case to illustrate relevance to clinical care. Topics include gold standard assessments, behavioral and pharmacological interventions, novel pharmacological treatments, gene discovery, neurobiology, biomarkers, and experimental therapeutics. Participants gain critical knowledge in assessment and management of ASD, become familiar with evidence-based behavioral interventions and pharmacological treatments, and appreciate the impact that molecular genetics has had on future directions in treatment.

Institute 4: Family-Based Psychiatric Interventions for Physically Ill ChildrenThursday, October 268:00 am–4:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: Thomas A. Roesler, MD, Gary Maslow, MD, PhDPresenters: Michelle L. Rickerby, MD, Kristina Schwerin, MD, Cynthia Harbeck-Weber, PhD, Anne Kazak, PhD, Pamela J. Mosher, MD, MDiv, Gary Maslow, MD, MPH, Thomas A. Roesler, MD

This Institute explores family-based programs that are effective, innovative models for expanding psychiatric care to children with medical illness, such as cancer, diabetes, chronic pain, and eating disorders. Child and adolescent psychiatrists who work with physically ill children, and those who anticipate doing so, benefit from a review of the principles of family-based interventions and obtain detailed guidance on how to apply these principles in integrated care settings. Model programs are discussed, ranging from outpatient psychotherapy for medically ill children to embedding

Barbara J. Coffey, MD, MS Institutes

Subcommittee Chair

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AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 11

psychological expertise in pediatricians’ offices to specialized day treatment and inpatient environments. AACAP’s Family and Physically Ill Child Committees come together to enhance the concept of integrated care, and explore the interface between medical and mental health treatments using family-based strategies to improve both medical and mental health outcomes.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Physically Ill Child Committee and AACAP’s Family Committee

Institute 5: Lifelong Learning Institute: Module 14: Relevant Clinical Updates for Child and Adolescent PsychiatristsThursday, October 268:00 am–5:30 pm (ticket)Chairs: Andrew T. Russell, MD, Sandra B. Sexson, MDPresenters: Ellen Leibenluft, MD, Bonnie T. Zima, MD, MPH, Gail Ann Edelsohn, MD, MSPH, Timothy Wilens, MD, Richard R. Pleak, MD, Christopher R. Thomas, MD, John T. Walkup, MD

This year’s Lifelong Learning Institute highlights Module 14, which provides a review of the latest relevant

literature available on a broad range of issues and disorders affecting children and their families. Topics include ADHD, conduct disorder, gender-nonconforming youth, mood disorders, substance use disorders, and ethical dilemmas, among other timely topics. This Institute is designed for all child and adolescent psychiatrists who are working on Maintenance of Certification (MOC), as well as anyone who wants to keep current with important issues in the field.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Lifelong Learning Committee

Institute 6: Insomnia: The Sleeping Giant of Pediatric Public HealthFriday, October 278:00 am–4:30 pm (ticket)Chairs: Anna Ivanenko, MD, PhD, Jess P. Shatkin, MD, MPHPresenters: Daniel S. Lewin, PhD, Kyle

P. Johnson, MD, Argelinda Baroni, MD, Judith Owens, MD, MPH, Jess P. Shatkin, MD, MPH, Anna Ivanenko, MD, PhD

Sleep disorders are a pediatric health problem, which are often unidentified. This Institute provides practicing mental health professionals comprehensive training in pediatric sleep disorders, and advanced knowledge of pharmacological and behavioral treatments of insomnia in children, adolescents, and young adults. Topics discussed include clinical challenges, prevalence, impact on neurobehavioral development, sleep stages, and circadian rhythmicity. Sleep education and hygiene, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia, and sleep aids and prescription therapies are discussed. Special emphasis is placed upon treating insomnia in the context of comorbid psychiatric conditions, such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder, and mood and anxiety disorders. Participants learn practical skills to recognize and manage pediatric sleep problems in clinical practice.

Institute 7: Intellectual Disability and Co-Occurring Psychiatric Disorders: Diagnosis, Treatment, and Forensic IssuesFriday, October 278:00 am–5:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: James C. Harris, MDPresenters: Kerim M. Munir, MD, DSc, Robert L. Findling, MD, MBA, Robert L. Hendren, DO, Louis Hagopian, PhD, Elisabeth Dykens, PhD, Ludwik S. Szymanski, MD

Children and adolescents with intellectual deficits and co-occurring psychiatric disorders are underserved because training in this area can be limited, and because there is no current practice parameter to guide residents, early career psychiatrists, or the practicing child and adolescent psychiatrist in diagnosis and treatment. What constitutes an intellectual disability? How are psychiatric disorders identified in children and adolescents with intellectual disability? What are the ethical and forensic issues

involved in treating this population? Participants acquire knowledge of DSM-5 criteria for intellectual disability; learn targeted neurobiological strategies and the modifications in assessment necessary to recognize, diagnose, and treat co-occurring psychiatric disorders; gain understanding of the effectiveness of evidence-based psychopharmacology, behavioral, and family interventions in a variety of situations; and discuss ethical and forensic issues that may be encountered during treatment.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Autism and Intellectual Disability Committee

Institute 8: Practical Pediatric Psychopharmacology for Pediatricians and Non-Child PsychiatristsSaturday, October 288:30 am–4:00 pm (ticket)Chairs: Adelaide S. Robb, MDPresenters: Boris Birmaher, MD, John T. Walkup, MD, Martine M. Solages, MD, Timothy Wilens, MD, Adelaide S. Robb, MD

Pediatricians and non-child psychiatrists receive practical information on the use of psychotropic medications in children and adolescents. There have been substantial increases in the evidence base that supports use of pharmacologic treatments in children and adolescents; however, significant concerns remain that many youth with mental health difficulties do not receive appropriate services or that medication treatments are utilized in inappropriate ways. Presentations provide evidence-based information on medication selection, dosage, initiation, titration, and duration of treatment for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, and anxiety disorders, as well as the management of medications used in the treatment of bipolar disorder, pervasive developmental disorders, and aggression. Brief vignettes allow participants to apply this information to increase their comfort level in treating common childhood psychiatric disorders with pharmacotherapy.

Sponsored by AACAP’s Psychopharmacology Committee

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12 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Meeting at a Glance

8:00 am–4:30 pm Systems of Care Special Program: Making An Impact in What Matters: Risk, Resiliency, and Systemic Approaches to Social Determinants of Behavioral Health in Youth

9:00 am–5:00 pm Member Services Forum 1: AACAP Legislative Program and Congressional Visits4:00 pm–8:00 pm Registration Open

7:00 am–5:30 pm Registration Open8:00 am–4:00 pm Assembly of Regional Organizations8:00 am–4:30 pm Institute 1—Advanced Psychopharmacology Update: Balancing Benefits and Risks8:00 am–5:00 pm Institute 2—Research Institute: This Is Your Brain on Child Psychiatry. Any Questions? A Practical Update on the

Impact of Neuroimaging Findings in Child Psychiatry9:00 am–12:00 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, and Symposia 1:30 pm–4:30 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, and Symposia4:30 pm–6:00 pm Medical Students, Residents, and Fellows: Meet Life Member Mentors5:30 pm–7:00 pm Networking for International Attendees and Presentation of International Awards6:00 pm–7:00 pm Medical Student and Resident Networking Hour6:30 pm–9:30 pm Media Theatre—Autism in Love: A Feature-Length Documentary About How Individuals with Autism Find and

Manage Romantic RelationshipsMedia Theatre—Teaching Through a New Lens III: The Profound and Transformative Power of Peer Relationships in The Perks of Being a Wallflower

7:00 pm–9:00 pm Research Symposium: Social Neuroscience and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Research Priorities at the National Institute of Mental Health

7:00 am–5:30 pm Registration Open8:00 am–9:45 am Karl Menninger, MD, Plenary: Depression Awareness and Screening in Youth10:00 am–1:00 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Previews From the Pipeline,

Symposia, and Workshops10:00 am–5:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open10:00 am–6:00 pm Extended Workshop 1—Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Interpersonal Violence: Practical Strategies

for Child Psychiatrists10:00 am–6:00 pm Institute 3—Autism Spectrum Disorder: From Clinical Practice to Cutting Edge Research10:15 am–11:45 am AACAP Council Meeting 1 and Business Meeting11:00 am–1:30 pm New Research Poster Session 111:45 am–1:15 pm Distinguished Member Awards Lunch1:15 pm–2:45 pm Noshpitz Cline History Lecture: How Have Longitudinal Study Findings Changed Our Thinking About Families and

Children Over the Last 50 Years?1:30 pm–5:30 pm AACAP Council Meeting 22:00 pm–4:30 pm New Research Poster Session 23:00 pm–6:00 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Tips From the AACAP Youth

Connection, Symposia, and Workshops6:00 pm–7:30 pm Welcome Reception6:30 pm–9:30 pm Media Theatre—Room: Trauma and Recovery After Captivity7:30 pm–9:30 pm Open Mic Night

7:00 am–8:30 am Clinical Consultation Breakfasts7:00 am–5:30 pm Registration Open7:30 am–9:30 am Medical Student and Resident Breakfast: The Possibilities on This Journey8:00 am–4:00 pm Institute 4—Family-Based Psychiatric Interventions for Physically Ill Children 8:00 am–5:30 pm Institute 5—Lifelong Learning Institute: Module 14: Relevant Clinical Updates for Child and Adolescent Psychiatrists8:30 am–11:00 am James C. Harris, MD, Developmental Neuropsychiatry Forum: Neurodevelopmental Consequences of Early

Childhood Adversity: Insights From Children Raised in Institutions8:30 am–11:30 am Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Symposia, and Workshops8:30 am–5:00 pm Extended Workshop 2— Meditation/Mindfulness: Use in Clinical Practice

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AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 13

9:30 am–3:30 pm Cross-Cultural Immersion With Gallaudet University: A Clinical Practicum in Mental Health Needs of Deaf and Hard of Hearing Youth

10:00 am–12:30 pm New Research Poster Session 310:00 am–4:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open11:00 am–1:00 pm Medical Student and Resident: Career Development Forum11:45 am–1:15 pm Town Meeting: Breaking Down AACAP’s Communications Efforts: Protocols, Responses, and Getting the Job Done!

12:30 pm–4:30 pm National Gallery of Art Tour: Children and Parents as Depicted in the Visual Arts1:00 pm–3:30 pm New Research Poster Session 41:15 pm–2:45 pm Junior Research Scholar Lunch2:00 pm–5:00 pm Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Symposia, and Workshops5:00 pm–6:30 pm Mentorship Program for Medical Students and Residents 15:15 pm–7:15 pm Caucuses: Hispanic/Latino Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, International Medical Graduate Child and Adolescent

Psychiatry, and Black Child and Adolescent Psychiatry5:30 pm–7:00 pm Early Career Psychiatrist Meet and Greet 6:00 pm–10:30 pm Receptions and Reunions6:30 pm–9:00 pm Life Members Reception and Dinner6:30 pm–9:30 pm Media Theatre—Moonlight: A Coming-of-Age Story of an African American Homosexual Male Youth’s Search for Identity

7:00 am–8:30 am Clinical Consultation Breakfasts7:00 am–5:30 pm Registration Open8:00 am–9:30 am Young Leaders Awards Breakfast8:00 am–4:30 pm Institute 6—Insomnia: The Sleeping Giant of Pediatric Public Health8:00 am–5:00 pm Institute 7—Intellectual Disability and Co-Occurring Psychiatric Disorders: Diagnosis, Treatment, and Forensic Issues8:30 am–11:30 am Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Symposia, and Workshops8:30 am–4:30 pm Extended Workshop 3—Introduction to Motivational Interviewing: Skill-Building Fundamentals8:30 am–5:00 pm Clinical Research Practicum: A Day at the National Institute of Mental Health8:30 am–5:00 pm Extended Workshop 4—Dialectical Behavior Therapy Toolkit for Child Psychiatrists: Targeting Self-Injury and Suicidal Behavior

9:00 am–12:30 pm Exhibit Hall Open9:30 am–12:00 pm New Research Poster Session 511:30 am–2:00 pm Training and Education Lunch11:45 am–1:15 pm Lawrence A. Stone, MD, Plenary: Child Psychiatry: This is Where We Build Healthy Brains12:00 pm–4:00 pm United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Tour1:30 pm–3:30 pm TED Talks Meets Perspectives1:30 pm–4:30 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, International Medical Graduate Mentorship Forum, Media Theatre,

Member Services Fora, Symposia, and Workshops4:30 pm–6:00 pm Mentorship Program for Medical Students and Residents 25:00 pm–6:00 pm Maintenance of Certification 101: Meeting the Requirements5:00 pm–6:30 pm Special Interest Study Groups6:30 pm–9:30 pm Media Theatre: Cyberbully: Caught in the Net

7:00 am–8:30 am Clinical Consultation Breakfasts7:00 am–4:00 pm Registration Open8:30 am–11:30 am AACAP Council Meeting 38:30 am–11:30 am Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora, Symposia, and Workshops8:30 am–4:00 pm Institute 8—Practical Pediatric Psychopharmacology for Pediatricians and Non-Child Psychiatrists8:30 am–4:30 pm Extended Workshop 5—Fundamentals in Mentalization-Based Treatment for Suicidal and Self-Injurious Youth10:00 am–12:30 pm New Research Poster Session 611:45 am–1:15 pm Presidential Interview: Gregory K. Fritz, MD, Interviews Charles H. Zeanah, Jr., MD1:30 pm–4:30 pm Clinical Case Conferences, Clinical Perspectives, Life After Combined Training, Media Theatre, Member Services Fora,

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14 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Washington, DC—Our Nation’s Capital

Hotel Policies

▶ When making your reservation, ask for AACAP’s 2017 Annual Meeting rate to qualify for the discount.

▶ For both the Washington Marriott Wardman Park and Omni Shoreham Hotel, a deposit equal to one night’s stay is required to hold each individual’s reservation. This deposit is refundable if notice is received by September 15, 2017, and a cancellation number is obtained.

▶ The discounted hotel rates are available until Friday, September 29, or until the group block sells out, whichever comes first. We highly recommend making your reservation early to secure your room!

Washington Marriott Wardman Park2660 Woodley Rd. NW

Washington, DC 20008

Main Line: 202.328.2000 Check-in is at 4:00 pm

Check-out is at 12:00 pm

Reservations: 877.212.5752

All room rates are quoted exclusive of applicable state and local taxes, currently 14.5%.

Omni Shoreham Hotel2500 Calvert St. NW

Washington, DC 20008 Main Line: 202.234.0700 Check-in is at 3:00 pm

Check-out is at 12:00 pm

Reservations: 800.843.6664

All room rates are quoted exclusive of applicable state and local taxes, currently 14.5%.

Group Hotel ReservationsIf you need to reserve 10 or more sleeping rooms, please contact Jill Brafford at 202.966.7719 or [email protected] to make separate arrangements.

Ooohhh and aaahhh over the Giant Pandas...visit the National Zoo!

Embrace the First Amendment...visit the Newseum!

Experience powerful moments in African American history and culture...visit the new National Museum of African American History and Culture!

Check out some of Washington, DC’s most famous sites

Hotel InformationRooms are selling quickly at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park and the Omni Shoreham Hotel, so don’t wait to book! The Washington Marriott Wardman Park and the Omni Shoreham Hotel are located one block away from each other and educational events take place at both hotels. Conveniently located in the heart of Washington DC, the hotels are just steps from the excitement of the Smithsonian National Zoo, the beauty of Rock Creek Park, and the worldwide cuisine of restaurants in Adams Morgan.

Rates at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park are $272 single/double per night plus tax.

Rates at the Omni Shoreham Hotel are $274 single/double per night plus tax.

It is highly likely that hotel rooms will be sold out before October, so please don’t wait—book your room today!

Two different ways to make reservations:

1 Phone: Call the hotel directly and ask for the AACAP 2017 Annual Meeting rate. Marriott Reservations: 877.212.5752 Omni Reservations: 800.843.6664

2 Online: Visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017/hotel and click on the reservations link next to either hotel.

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What does everyone think of when they come to Washington, DC? Museums, of course! AACAP has organized trips to the museums, but with a twist...

National Gallery of Art TourThursday, October 2612:30 pm–4:30 pm

Please come join us for a 90-minute tour and discussion at the National Gallery of Art. While touring the gallery with a docent, you’ll learn more about how the arts have a unique way of taking complicated and often abstract subject matter and distilling it to its basic components and meaning. By forcing the viewer to look at a number of different depictions of children and their parents, the viewer should be able to better understand these relationships, and may take away abstract concepts related to dyadic relationships and child development that otherwise cannot be conveyed through other means, such as written material. The National Gallery of Art (NGA) is one of this country’s pre-eminent art galleries and has within its possession world-class paintings and sculptures, many of which depict children and their parents. Tour details and logistics will be sent out to all registrants.

The tour will include transportation to and from the museum. Maximum tour capacity is 30 and is being offered on a first-come-first-serve basis.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum TourFriday, October 2712:00 pm–4:00 pm

A two-hour tour of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Permanent Exhibition offers visitors a chronological history of the Holocaust, tailored to the specific interests of AACAP members.

The tour touches on a number of issues of potential interest to psychiatrists, including: the pseudoscientific Nazi racial thinking taught by German teachers and practiced by German doctors, the murder of the physically and mentally disabled, medical experimentation on children in the concentration camps, the role of educated people (including doctors) in the Final Solution, and the traumatic effect of the Holocaust on survivors and the next generations.

The tour will include transportation to and from the museum. Maximum tour capacity is 30 and is being offered on a first-come-first-serve basis.

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 15

AACAP members put together offsite events, showcasing the unique programs in Washington, DC!

Cross-Cultural Immersion With Gallaudet University: A Clinical Practicum in Mental Health Needs of Deaf and Hard of Hearing YouthThursday, October 269:30 am–3:30 pm (ticket, members only)

Sponsored by AACAP’s Deaf and Hard of Hearing CommitteeLocation: Gallaudet University

The objective of this Clinical Practicum is to give clinicians hands on, real time information in working with deaf and hard of hearing children and transitional age youth. Through collaboration with Gallaudet University, the practicum aims to foster understanding of deaf culture, and improve access to mental health for this vastly underserved population, by educating clinicians on culturally appropriate clinical practice. Gallaudet University is the world’s only university entirely accessible for deaf students. Deaf and hearing experts in the field present didactic material on working with the deaf, and attendees have the opportunity to participate in small group practice. Working with the Deaf and Hard of Hearing population poses special challenges in the areas of communication and culture, and it is crucial that mental health providers possess the foundational knowledge and skills that are necessary to serve this population.

Lunch, as well as transportation to and from the Marriott Wardman Park, are provided.

Clinical Research Practicum: A Day at the National Institute of Mental HealthFriday, October 278:30 am–5:00 pm (ticket, members only)

Sponsored by AACAP’s Local Arrangements Committee and Research CommitteeLocation: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

Visit the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) on this day-long program which provides a comprehensive, first-hand exposure to NIMH researchers and facilities, including selected patient areas and labs, and an opportunity to learn about recent and ongoing research at this premier research institute. Attend presentations and discussions for our small group of AACAP participants by six noted NIMH researchers on selected pediatric psychiatric disorders, including anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and autism spectrum disorders. Learn about recent NIMH research initiatives, including the project on suicide prevention, and review findings of brain imaging studies. Gain first-hand knowledge about how research on some of the most common pediatric mental health disorders is conducted. In addition to presentations by NIMH researchers, this Clinical Research Practicum also includes a tour of selected NIMH facilities, lunch, and transportation to and from the Marriott Wardman Park.

Johann Zoffany ‘The Lavie Children’

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

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Networking

AACAP’s Annual Meeting is the perfect place to network with your colleagues. Below are some of the best ways to do so throughout the week!

Networking For International AttendeesTuesday, October 245:30 pm–7:00 pm (by invitation only)

AACAP would like to welcome all of our attendees who traveled near and far from other countries to attend the Annual Meeting! Join us to network with other attendees from your home country or those nearby! Badges are required for admission.

Welcome ReceptionWednesday, October 256:00 pm–7:30 pm (open)

Come meet your colleagues and enjoy some light refreshments and music at the Welcome Reception (located in the Marriott Ballroom on the Lobby Level of the Washington Marriott Wardman Park), as we kick off AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting!

Badges are required for admission for all adults; children are welcome and do not require badges.

Receptions/ReunionsThe Annual Meeting is an opportunity to reconnect and network with your colleagues and friends. Any university or regional council is welcome to host a reception or reunion the evening of Thursday, October 26. AACAP assigns your group a complimentary room at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park or the Omni Shoreham Hotel, and the host of the reception is responsible for all other costs. For more information or to request space, please email [email protected].

Mentorship ProgramsAACAP’s Annual Meeting has over 10 hours of mentorship opportunities for medical students, residents, and early career psychiatrists and is the best place to plan for the next stage in your career. Don’t miss your chance to connect with other child and adolescent psychiatrists who could serve as advisors for a lifetime! Visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017 for a listing of all of the activities just for these groups.

Exhibit HallWednesday, October 2510:00 am–5:00 pm

Thursday, October 2610:00 am–4:00 pm

Friday, October 279:00 am–12:30 pm

Location: Exhibit Hall A/B South on the Exhibition Level of the Washington Marriott Wardman Park.

With over 90 booths to visit, the Exhibit Hall is the place to be to learn about the latest and greatest in child and adolescent psychiatry. The exhibitors at the meeting include, but are not limited to, associations, pharmaceutical companies, publishers, recruiters, and treatment centers. While you are visiting the exhibits, don’t forget to stop by the New Research Poster Session in Exhibit Hall C. The Exhibit Hall is also a great place to meet up with colleagues and explore what new products and opportunities are available on the show floor. With over 4,000 attendees roaming through the Exhibit Hall, you will find someone you know!

Back by Popular Demand!Visit the headshot booth in the Exhibit Hall and receive a complimentary headshot by a professional photographer. You will even get to leave the meeting with your headshot on a flash drive! The headshot booth is located at booth #520.

Sponsored by Tris Pharma, Inc.

16 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

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Committee MeetingsJoining an AACAP committee is the perfect way to get involved with AACAP, and with over 60 committees, there is something for everyone! Most committees meet at the Annual Meeting, and this is a great opportunity to engage with the chairs and members to see if they are the committee for you! If you are interested in becoming a member of a committee, please visit the website at www.aacap.org/committees

for a complete listing of committees, their charges, most recent annual report, and chair contact information. To be considered for appointment to an AACAP committee, please send an email of interest along with your CV to [email protected]. If you have questions about this process, please contact Megan Levy at [email protected]. Committee meetings are open to all AACAP members unless otherwise noted.

Helen Beiser, MD, Art ShowJoin us at the annual Helen Beiser, MD, Art Show in the Exhibit Hall! We invite AACAP members and family members to showcase their amazing creativity. You may submit an application to exhibit up to three pieces of art. Works may include paintings, drawings, printmaking, potteries, sculptures, calligraphy, poetry, letterpress broadsides, artist’s books, and photographs.

Submission forms for the Art Show are available at www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017. The Art Show is coordinated by the Art Committee. For more information, contact AACAP’s Meetings & Exhibits Manager at [email protected] or 202.966.9574.

The Art Show is for exhibition purposes only; no pieces are offered for sale.

MonitorsMedical Students, Residents, and Trainees Attend the Annual Meeting for FREE!

Register as a Monitor and we will waive your general registration fee. Monitors assist AACAP staff in running the meeting by checking badges and tickets to confirm attendance, assisting speakers as needed, and distributing and collecting evaluation forms and/or other material that the speaker provides. In return for working as a monitor for either one full day or two half days, monitors receive a complimentary registration for the meeting in addition to half-priced tickets for most ticketed events.

Reasons to Become a Monitor:

▶ FREE registration for all residents, trainees, and medical students

▶ Six days of scientific content given by the top experts in the field

▶ Customized programming, including a mentorship program

▶ Networking opportunities with presenters and peers

Member Benefit!

Monitor registration opens August 1 for AACAP members only; non-member registration opens one week later on August 8. All Monitors choose their own assignments through the registration system. Increase your chances of getting the Monitor assignment that you want by becoming an AACAP member today!

For more information about the Monitor Program and to sign up to be a Monitor, visit: http://www.aacap.org/AACAP/CME_and_Meetings/Annual_Meeting/64th_Annual_Meeting/Monitors_17.aspx

To access full event descriptions and a list of suggested events, visit: www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017.

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 17

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AACAP CME

CME CreditsThe American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

Annual MeetingThe American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry designates this live activity for a maximum of 50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Self-Assessment ExamThe American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry designates this enduring material for a maximum of 8 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

The American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology has reviewed the Annual Meeting Self-Assessment and has approved this program as a part of a comprehensive self-assessment program, which is mandated by the ABMS as a necessary component of maintenance of certification.

18 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

▶ Clinical Case Conference Allows clinicians to present difficult case material and includes discussions of diagnostic, clinical formulation, and/or treatment issues. These programs are three hours long and open to all attendees.

▶ Clinical Consultation Breakfast A forum for experts to share clinical wisdom and discuss difficult cases with attendees. These programs are one and a half hours long, require a ticket, and limited to 15 participants.

▶ Clinical Perspective Similar to Symposia, Clinical Perspectives present a particular topic related to treatment, research method, service delivery, or clinical care, which is evidenced-based, but also includes the “art” and clinical wisdom of the practice of child and adolescent psychiatry. These programs are three hours long and open to all attendees.

▶ Clinical/Research Practicum Provides members with guidelines on the assessment and treatment of a specific clinical topic or guidance on pursuing a career in research. The Practica take place offsite from the hotel and feature facilities that are unique to the host city. A ticket is required, and attendance is limited to 30 AACAP members.

▶ Committee Meeting Official meetings of AACAP’s Committees and are open to all AACAP members, unless otherwise noted.

▶ Extended Workshop Provides additional time and opportunity to master evidence-based therapeutic interventions during a full-day program. At its conclusion, participants should have gained sufficient expertise to implement newly learned treatment approaches or interventions into their clinical practices. Extended Workshops can have a maximum of 40 participants.

▶ Institute Focuses on “how to do it” with respect to clinical problems, academic areas, or a blending of the two. Institutes are designed for attendees who wish to be taught a comprehensive and authoritative overview of a topic area. Institutes are full day programs and require a ticket. Notebooks with all program materials are included.

▶ Media Theatre Feature motion pictures, commercially released documentaries, videotapes, music, and other forms of media relevant to any area of child and adolescent psychiatry. These programs are two to three hours in length and open to all attendees.

▶ Member Forum An open discussion for AACAP members, about a topic specific to AACAP membership.

▶ Member Services Forum Designed to provide a practical service to AACAP members, such as training on how to be an advocate or updates on CPT codes.

▶ New Research Poster Session Authors present the results of data-rich research or clinical reports with opportunity for feedback from viewers. There are six New Research Poster Sessions throughout the meeting, and they are open to all attendees. New Research Posters are not eligible for CME credit.

▶ Special Interest Study Group Allows individuals with similar interests to share their clinical or research experience, develop collaborations or networks, or discuss mutual interests. These programs are limited to 25 attendees and a ticket is required.

▶ Symposium Data-driven programs that present perspectives on different aspects of a topic or differing views of the same topic. These programs are three hours in length and open to all attendees.

▶ Workshop Provides instruction on treatment, research method, delivery, or organization of services, and are designed to encourage discussion in a small group. They are limited to 30 attendees and a ticket is required for attendance.

Types of ProgramsBelow is a description of each type of program offered at the Annual Meeting. Each type of program has a unique focus and purpose, so you can pick the programs that best fit your needs.

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Clinical Perspectives 1: Health Promotion in Pediatric Mental HealthTuesday, October 249:00 am–12:00 pm

Workshop 1: CARING at Columbia Head Start: Promoting Resilience Through Creative Art and Play: A Prevention Model for At-Risk Preschool Children and FamiliesWednesday, October 2510:00 am–1:00 pm

Clinical Consultation Breakfast Master Clinician 4: James Hudziak, MD: Practical Approaches to Prescribing Health Promotion and Illness Prevention in a Child Psychiatric, Pediatric, and OBGYN Settings: The Vermont Family-Based ApproachThursday, October 267:00 am–8:30 am

Extended Workshop 2: Meditation/Mindfulness: Use in Clinical PracticeThursday, October 268:30 am–5:00 pm

Workshop 22: Becoming Mindful: Integrating Mindfulness Into Your Psychiatric PracticeFriday, October 278:30 am–11:30 am

Lawrence A. Stone, MD, Plenary: Child Psychiatry: This is Where We Build Healthy BrainsFriday, October 2711:45 am–1:15 pm

Clinical Perspective 67: TED Talks Meets Perspectives: (Clinical) Ideas Worth SpreadingFriday, October 271:30 pm–4:30 pm

Member Services Forum 21: Resiliency in Residency and Beyond: Promoting Wellness in Yourself and Your WorkplaceSaturday, October 288:30 am–11:30 am

In an effort to encourage the personal good health and wellness of our attendees, there are several wellness-related programs at the Annual Meeting this year. Special activities include:

A fun run through the National Zoo / “serious” run to the National Mall

A bike ride through Rock Creek Park

A walk through the National Zoo

Yoga classes twice a day

Meditation classes twice a day

Scientific CME

sessions on wellness for your patients

Healthier food selections at our special events

We hope attendees take advantage of these opportunities to improve their own wellbeing. These events are open to all attendees and their spouse/significant other.

Wellness Initiative

AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting 19

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Below is a summary of registration rates and policies for AACAP’s 64th Annual Meeting. Further details can be found at www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017.

Member Registration Fees

Registration Type

Early Bird Rate By

September 15

Early Bird Rate w/

Conference Enrichment

Package

Late Rate After September 15, by October 2

Late Rate w/ Conference Enrichment

PackageOnsite Rate

Member $360 $539 $470 $649 $520

Member Presenter $360 $539 $470 $649 $520

Member Resident $130 $229 $205 $329 $230

Member Medical Student

$ 0 $99 $ 0 $99 $0

Monitor $ 0 $99 $ 0 $99 $0

Single Day Member $225 N/A $225 N/A $250

Non-Member Registration Fees

Registration Type

Early Bird Rate By

September 15

Early Bird Rate w/

Conference Enrichment

Package

Late Rate After September 15, by October 2

Late Rate w/ Conference Enrichment

PackageOnsite Rate

Non-Member $595 $774 $745 $924 $795

Non-Member Medical Student

$ 0 $99 $ 0 $99 $0

Non-Member Resident

$140 $239 $215 $314 $230

Non-Member Presenter (non-psychiatrist)

$175 $354 $200 $379 $225

Non-Member Presenter (psychiatrist)

$360 $539 $470 $649 $520

Nurse Practitioner $425 $604 $525 $704 $575

Single Day Non-Member

$390 N/A $390 N/A $415

Ticketed Events

Clinical Consultation

BreakfastsExtended

Workshops Institutes

Special Interest Study

Groups Workshops

Member $65 $120 $160 $20 $70

Non-Member $75 $180 $260 $25 $110

Member Residents/Medical Students

$32 $60 $80 $10 $35

Non-Member Residents/Medical Students

$37 $90 $130 $12 $55

Register Online!Registering online locks in ticketed events and provides instant confirmation of your registration. Online registration will be open until October 2, 2017.

Payment Information ▶ Registration fees are in U.S. dollars.

▶ AACAP accepts Visa, MasterCard, and American Express.

▶ Money orders or checks must be drawn on a U.S. bank. Make checks payable to AACAP.

▶ Credit Cards are the ONLY form of acceptable payment for onsite registration. Cash transactions for onsite registration are NOT allowed.

▶ Need to pay by wire transfer? Contact the Office of the Registrar at 202.966.7300, ext. 2005 or [email protected] for details.

Cancellation/Refund PolicyAll cancellations must be received in writing to [email protected]; telephone cancellations will not be accepted. Cancellation between the date of registration and September 15, 2017, will receive a full refund less a $150 administrative fee. No refunds will be given after September 15, 2017. Refunds will be issued after the meeting. Purchased session recordings are non-refundable, and will be made available after the meeting.

Be Sure to Take Advantage of All of the Events Included in the General Registration Fee!

Included in the general registration fee are:

▶ Clinical Case Conferences ▶ Clinical Perspectives ▶ Exhibit Hall Access ▶ Media Theatre ▶ Member Services Fora ▶ New Research Poster Sessions ▶ Plenaries ▶ Self-Assessment Exam ▶ Symposia ▶ Welcome Reception

Don’t miss out on these valuable programs!

20 For complete details and to register online, visit www.aacap.org/AnnualMeeting/2017

Registration Information PEDIATRICPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY UPDATE INSTITUTE

2018

save the dates!JANUARY 26-27, 2018

Laurence L. Greenhill, MD and Jeremy M. Veenstra-VanderWeele, MD, Co-ChairsNew York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge-Brooklyn, NY

Registration opens in September at www.aacap.org/psychopharm-2018. Questions? Email [email protected].

Cutting-Edge Psychopharmacology: Fads vs. Fact?

06317 AACAP 2018 JanInst Ad_Layout 1.indd 1 6/5/17 1:34 PM

Early Bird Deadline: September 15, 2017

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PEDIATRICPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY UPDATE INSTITUTE

2018

save the dates!JANUARY 26-27, 2018

Laurence L. Greenhill, MD and Jeremy M. Veenstra-VanderWeele, MD, Co-ChairsNew York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge-Brooklyn, NY

Registration opens in September at www.aacap.org/psychopharm-2018. Questions? Email [email protected].

Cutting-Edge Psychopharmacology: Fads vs. Fact?

06317 AACAP 2018 JanInst Ad_Layout 1.indd 1 6/5/17 1:34 PM

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