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2024 Welcome Night
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 Please join us in congratulating Jose A. Amat, M.D., Ph.D. as the 2025 Wilfred C. Hulse M.D. Award recipient. Congratulations, Dr. Amat! |
Upcoming Events
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2025 Welcome Night | 2025 Welcome Night Wednesday, August 13, 2025
7:00 - 9:00 pm ET Bar Royale Outside Terrace 157 Avenue C (btwn 9th and 10th Sts), New York, NY 10009
(Deadline: August 10) The NYCCAP Training & Education Committee and MIT Subcommittee invite you to Welcome Night 2025! Join fellow trainees from across the New York area and connect with members of the NYCCAP Board. Enjoy complimentary food and drinks while you mingle, network, and learn about opportunities to get involved with NYCCAP!
NOTE: If you cannot attend Welcome Night 2025 but are interested in getting involved, please contact Adriana Bruges Boude, MD (abrugesboude@gmail.com) or Robin Du, MD (robindu552@gmail.com), Co-Chairs, MIT Subcommittee of the Training Committee. Co-Sponsored by the Training and Education Committee: Co-Chaired by Cathryn Galanter, MD, Eva Levy, MD, and Jaryd Frankel, DO and the MIT Subcommittee: Co-Chaired by Adriana Bruges Boude, MD and Robin Du, MD
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Antiracism, Anti-Asian
Sponsored by NYCCAP's Antiracism Taskforce
Dear NYCCAP Family,
NYC has over 1 million Asian Americans in the city proper, making it the city with the largest total Asian population in the US. The impact of anti-Asian sentiments is felt in our patients, our friends, and our colleagues. This is a critical time to commit ourselves to combat racism of all kinds. Let's mobilize and use the power and privilege we hold as child and adolescent psychiatrists individually, and as members of any organizations we are part of to further equity and justice for all. Please join us in any way you can as we stand with AACAP nationally in this fight and contribute locally.
In solidarity,
NYCCAP's Anti-Racism Taskforce
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Legal-Psychosocial Resource for Immigrant Families in NYC |
includes Manhattan, Bronx, Long Island, Queens, Brooklyn, and more
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AACAP New Policy Statement: Separating Immigrant Children From Their Families |
AACAP New Policy Statement: Separating Immigrant Children From Their Families
The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP), a medical association representing physicians dedicated to the health of children and families around the globe, advocates putting an end to the practice of separating immigrant children from their families. (more . . .)
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C2C integrates mental health services into programs already serving low-income communities where people may not know they need help, or are reluctant to access it. ". . . our city is taking a huge leap forward in our quest to embed mental health resources in the places where people live, work, play, and go for help." -- Chirlane McCray, First Lady and Chair, Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City (see Letter from the First Lady)
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