Psychiatry Research

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Accelerating Discovery

Our experts focus on producing impactful research that promotes positive mental health.

Leaders in Mental Health

The U-M Medical School Department of Psychiatry consistently ranks in the top 10 in NIH research funding, and we are home to a diverse faculty across a variety of disciplines and interests dedicated to improving mental health across the life-span.

Our research spans a wide array of focus areas and methodologies. We have a number of well-established, motivated programs seeking to learn more about their respective interests and explore how their findings play a part in better understanding psychiatric health as a whole. These programs are comprised of experienced faculty, and they also benefit from strong partnerships with researchers across the university. The Department of Psychiatry is uniquely situated to take advantage of the multidisciplinary focus offered by Michigan Medicine including affiliated Centers and Institutes that link researchers to schools and departments across Michigan Medicine and the University of Michigan community.

Every day, our researchers work toward novel discoveries within the domains of basic, clinical and policy research with the goal of improving mental health care for all. We offer research and training opportunities for highly-motivated individuals across many disciplines and levels.

Get Involved in Research

We need you to partner with our researchers. Research is critical to increasing our knowledge of mental illness and addiction.

Participate in mental health research studies

Our Research Areas

Michigan Mental Health Integration Partnership (Medicaid Match)

The Michigan Mental Health Integration Partnership (MIP), a collaboration between the U-M Medical School and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS), works to improve mental health across Michigan by implementing and evaluating innovative, integrated care programs. Recognizing the high prevalence and complexity of mental illness, MIP connects U-M clinical experts with community partners to expand best practices, particularly for lower-income and Medicaid-eligible populations.

Since 2005, MIP has supported multidisciplinary projects through matched funding from mostly non-federal sources, supporting initiatives such as school-based CBT training, integrated mental health in primary care, trauma treatment in health centers, perinatal programs, and adolescent behavioral health capacity-building. In FY22 alone, 17 projects received over $7 million in funding.

MIP provides guidance and administrative support for new projects, including help with proposals, budgeting, and compliance, and coordinates project submissions throughout the year. Projects must focus on implementing or evaluating behavioral health service delivery (not experimental treatments), benefit mainly Medicaid recipients, and use non-federal match funding. For more information or to submit a project, contact [email protected].

Educational Opportunities

We are committed to the development of the next generation of research scientists. The U-M Medical School is ranked among the top medical schools in the country, and we recognize the strength and contributions of our trainees. The Department of Psychiatry offers many unique research training opportunities that span across multiple levels and disciplines. Opportunities are also available with individual researchers. These can include independent studies, clinical research master-level social work internships, clinical psychology research activities for PhD candidates and multidisciplinary postdoctoral opportunities.

Get Involved in Research

Research is critical to increasing our knowledge of depression, bipolar, anxiety disorders, addiction/substance abuse and other brain conditions. Medical advancement can't happen without clinical research. Without this important scientific research, the advances made to date would not have happened and future advancements would not be possible.

Our research can't move forward without the support of our volunteers. We are grateful to those who participate in research to help advance knowledge and speed the pace of innovation. Clinical research depends upon the involvement of patients and/or healthy people, and is at the heart of the Michigan approach to mental health and wellness.

There are many different types of research studies:

  • Observational studies to identify illness patterns or disease and health progression
  • Risk evaluation and prevention studies to identify risk factors and utilize various approaches to prevent occurrence and improve outcomes
  • Clinical treatment trials to test or compare methods that may involve devices, drugs or behavioral approaches
  • Quality improvement to measure and improve health services

Whether or not you actively participate in a research study, your care will be positively impacted by the questions we’re asking—and answering—behind the scenes. The Department of Psychiatry offers several research opportunities. Some studies may offer compensation and/or treatment.

Participate in research opportunities

Featured News & Stories

See all news
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Department News

Check out The Pulse, Psychiatry's e-newsletter, with news, events, and more for this summer

Pulse June 2026 edition
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Health Lab

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A Q&A with Dr. Bravender discussing what looksmaxxing is. Along with the true dangers of it, what parents should know, and when to intervene.
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Health Lab Podcast

7-OH, kratom and the emerging public health crisis for sale across the country

A patient, his doctor and other experts warn of dangers of 7-OH, which is touted as a derivative of kratom and is widely available, but packs far more opioid danger.
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Department News

Joanna Quigley, M.D., quoted in Psychiatric News story

Boosting Care and Pediatric Residency Training in Mental Health
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UMich Med Mosaic

Beyond the White Coat: Finding Your Voice at the Patient’s Bedside

In this episode of UMich Med Mosaic, host Mackenzie Kay speaks with MD students Josh Chen and Gabriel Culian about what it feels like to step onto the hospital wards for the first time. They reflect on their earliest patient encounters, the transition from standardized patients to real clinical settings, and the role medical students play in building trust, explaining care plans and supporting patients and families. They also discuss witnessing serious illness, grief and life-changing conversations, while exploring how early clinical experiences shape confidence, empathy and the kind of physicians they hope to become.
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Department News

Dr. Steve Taylor penned the op-ed for the U-M VP of Research's Michigan Research newsletter's May edition

AI and mental health: Promises and peril