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NARSAD to Present Annual Career Achievement Prizes for Psychiatric Research at New York Gala, October 27th

  Prize Recipients Have Contributed to the Understanding and Treatment of
   Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Depression in Women, Teen Suicide and
                           Cognitive Dysfunction

    GREAT NECK, N.Y., Oct. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- This Friday, the five most
prestigious awards in brain and behavioral disorders science will be
presented to some of the world's most prominent researchers in psychiatry
by NARSAD: The Mental Health Research Association at the organization's
19th annual New York City gala.
    Because of NARSAD's distinctive history of contributing to the support
and public understanding of neuropsychiatric research, the organization is
able each year to recognize those scientists whose career achievements are
especially noteworthy in the fields of schizophrenia, mood disorders,
childhood and adolescent psychiatry, and cognitive neuroscience research.
This year's recipients have made exceptional contributions to the
understanding and treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder,
depression in women, teen suicide and the cognitive dysfunctions that
underlie many mental illnesses.
    The 2006 NARSAD prizes and their recipients are:

    * Lieber Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Schizophrenia Research
      ($50,000): Jeffrey A. Lieberman, M.D., chair of psychiatry at Columbia
      University College of Physicians & Surgeons, director of the New York
      State Psychiatric Institute, and psychiatrist-in-chief at NewYork-
      Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, has been
      chosen to receive this prize for bringing new understanding to the
      development and progression of schizophrenia, and the mechanisms and
      effectiveness of antipsychotic drugs for treating the disease.

      According to NARSAD's Lieber Prize Selection Committee: Dr. Lieberman
      has made a major scientific impact on our understanding and treatment of
      schizophrenia. Through a series of systematic studies, he focused on
      elucidating the psychobiology of patients experiencing their first
      episode of psychosis and showed these people have progressive changes in
      the structure of their brains. Recently, Dr. Lieberman has served as
      principal investigator of the largest randomized clinical trial of
      treatments for schizophrenia, the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of
      Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE), sponsored by the National Institute
      of Mental Health.

    * Falcone Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Affective Disorders
      Research ($50,000): Lori L. Altshuler, M.D., is chair in mood disorders
      and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of
      California, Los Angeles, Semel Institute for Neuroscience & Human
      Behavior, where she directs the Mood Disorders Research Program and
      Women's Research Program.

      About her work, the Falcone Prize Selection Committee wrote: Dr.
      Altshuler is being honored for her outstanding achievements in enhancing
      the understanding and treatment of patients with severe mood disorders,
      particularly bipolar disorder and recurring depression. Using brain
      imaging, she uncovered mechanisms involved in these disorders that are
      localized to the temporal lobe, especially the amygdala. Her work in
      therapeutics for these conditions has been equally stellar. She found
      that even mild depression has striking effects on quality of life, and
      she has studied and found medications that assist in achieving full
      remission by treating the associated symptoms of anxiety, obesity,
      fatigue and poor concentration. She has conducted vital studies of the
      effects of mood disorders and medications on endocrine and reproductive
      function.

    * Ruane Prize for Childhood and Adolescent Psychiatric Research ($50,000):
      The Ruane Prize is shared this year by David A. Brent, M.D., University
      of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and David Shaffer, M.D., Columbia
      University College of Physicians & Surgeons, for their individual
      studies of teen suicide.

      The Ruane Prize Selection Committee chose Drs. Brent and Shaffer to
      share the prize because of their innovative leadership in the study of
      the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of childhood depression and
      suicide: Both have explored the issues using many angles, including
      epidemiological, drug and non-drug based approaches, advocacy groups and
      public education. Their respective ground-breaking research about
      detecting mental illness and suicide risk in teens and preventing teen
      suicide has had a vitally important influence on today's educators and
      practitioners.

      Dr. Brent holds an endowed chair in suicide studies at the Western
      Psychiatric Institute and Clinic of the University of Pittsburgh School
      of Medicine, where he is also academic chief of the division of child
      and adolescent psychiatry, director of services for teens-at-risk and
      professor of child psychiatry. The focus of Dr. Brent's research efforts
      has been to understand adolescent depression and suicidal behavior, and
      to translate research findings into prevention and treatment.

      Dr. Shaffer is a professor of child psychiatry at Columbia University
      College of Physicians & Surgeons and director of the division of child
      psychiatry at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. Since the 1960s,
      when he conducted the first epidemiological study of child and early
      adolescent suicide using the psychological autopsy method, his research
      has been devoted to developing new prevention and treatment protocols
      against teen suicide.

    * Goldman-Rakic Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Cognitive
      Neuroscience ($40,000): Joaquin M. Fuster, M.D., Ph.D., is professor of
      psychiatry and biobehavioral science at the University of California,
      Los Angeles, where he also serves on the medical school faculty and is a
      member of the Brain Research Institute and the Semel Institute for
      Neuroscience & Human Behavior. Building on a half-century of seminal
      research at UCLA on the functions of the brain's frontal lobe, Dr.
      Fuster is currently investigating the relationships between neural
      activity and cortical blood flow in working memory.

      NARSAD's Goldman-Rakic Prize Selection Committee wrote about Dr. Fuster:
      He is a brilliant neuroscientist who has pioneered an understanding of
      the brain's cerebral cortex, particularly its mechanisms of cognitive
      functions. Dr. Fuster has studied fundamental processes, such as
      attention and memory and the integration of information across different
      sensory modalities, which are critically altered in mental illness. His
      techniques, findings and conceptual ideas, which have been published in
      scientific papers and books, have had a profound influence on scholars
      worldwide. Dr. Fuster's work also has application to schizophrenia, and
      should lead to a more effective understanding, treatment and
      rehabilitation of the condition.

    * The Sidney R. Baer, Jr. Prize ($40,000): Lorna W. Role, Ph.D., is a
      professor of anatomy and cell biology at Columbia University College of
      Physicians & Surgeons, where for the past 21 years she has conducted
      promising research into the mechanisms of the central nervous system.
      Beginning with studies on the physiology and development of neuronal
      synapses responsive to nicotine, her research has focused on molecular
      mechanisms and neural pathways underlying motivation, memory and mood,
      particularly as they relate to schizophrenia.

      The Baer Prize recipient is selected by the Lieber Prize recipient, this
      year Dr. Lieberman, who wrote about Dr. Role: She has carried out
      spectacular work on the combined effects of candidate schizophrenia
      genes on the mechanisms that cause the disease and give rise to its
      symptoms. She also has looked at novel therapeutic agents based on her
      research.

     (Additional background on the prize recipients is available on request.)
    Through its annual program of prizes for outstanding research
achievement, NARSAD has awarded 43 scientists more than $2 million since
1987.
    Besides honoring this year's prize winners, NARSAD's gala will
celebrate the 20th anniversary of the organization's 94-member Scientific
Council, whose president since inception has been Herbert Pardes, M.D.,
president and chief executive officer of New York-Presbyterian Hospital.
The Council consists of exceptional leaders in brain and behavior research,
psychiatry and neuroscience who volunteer their services in selecting
NARSAD's prize winners and research grant recipients. Since 1987, when
NARSAD began awarding research grants, the Council has selected 2,284
scientists in 347 universities and medical centers in the United States and
25 other countries to receive 2,948 research grants worth $199.3 million.
    The fund-raising gala will take place at the Pierre Hotel, Fifth Avenue
and 61st Street in Manhattan. Cocktails begin at 6:30 p.m., followed by the
awards program, dinner and dancing. Contributions to NARSAD go entirely to
research, because its administration, overhead and fundraising costs have
been funded by two family foundations. Tickets can be reserved by calling
516-829- 0091. (For further information on the gala, go to
http://www.narsad.org/news/press/pr_2006/pr2006-10-26.html)
    In conjunction with the New York gala, NARSAD will host a free public
symposium on some of the latest developments in mental health research. The
symposium takes place on Friday and Saturday, October 27th and 28th, at
Mount Sinai Medical Center's Stern Auditorium. Presentations will be given
by a select group of 15 young investigators funded by NARSAD, who will
discuss their findings in basic science, mood disorders (including
depression, bipolar disorder and anxiety disorders) and schizophrenia
research. Scientists from NARSAD's Scientific Council will provide
commentary about the presentations. (For more details on the symposium, go
to http://www.narsad.org/news/press/pr_2006/pr2006-10-27.html)


SOURCE NARSAD




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Related links:
  • http://www.narsad.org
    CONTACT:
    Kristen Simone of NARSAD, +1-516-829-0091,
    ext. 241, Mobile: +1-917-572-5604, ksimone@narsad.org; or Seuk
    Kim of SunStar, +1-703-894-1058, skim@isunstar.com, for NARSAD