REVISED M E M O R A N D U M September 10, 2015 TO: Members of the Board of Trustees FROM: Nancy L. Zimpher, Chancellor SUBJECT: Appointment of Danielle Laraque-Arena as President of the State University of New York Upstate Medical University Action Requested The proposed resolution approves the appointment of Danielle Laraque-Arena as President of the State University of New York Upstate Medical University. Resolution I recommend that the Board of Trustees adopt the following resolution: Resolved that Dr. Danielle Laraque-Arena be, and hereby is, appointed President of the State University of New York Upstate Medical University effective on or about January 14, 2016, at an annual state salary of $400,000, with an additional supplement of $200,000 from the State University of New York Research Foundation; and be it further Resolved that Dr. Laraque-Arena will reside in a campus-owned residence, if it is deemed suitable, and will have the option of either using a campus automobile or receiving an automobile allowance, in accordance with SUNY policy. Background Danielle Laraque-Arena, M.D., is an accomplished scholar with extensive experience managing and leading academic-medical organizations. She is currently the Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Maimonides Medical Center and Vice-President of the Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn. She also is currently a Professor of Pediatrics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University. Dr. Laraque-Arena leads a team of nearly 100 faculty members with either primary or secondary appointments in her division and another 230 faculty that serve in voluntary positions. Her accomplishments in the past five years include strengthening the teaching and research profile through the recruitment of new faculty, transforming the residency program and significantly increasing first attempt board pass rates, and securing funding to support four new fellowship programs. From 2000 to 2010, Dr. Laraque-Arena served as Professor of Pediatrics and the endowed Debra and Leon Black Professor of Pediatrics, as well as the Chief of the Division of General Pediatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics. During her tenure at Mount Sinai, she focused on growing innovative clinical pediatric programs, strengthening the academic teaching in support of the primary care residency training, and building the infrastructure for robust research in primary care. Over the course of her career, Dr. Laraque-Arena has been very involved in working with local communities, including founding three separate child protection, multi-disciplinary teams which evaluate and treat abused and neglected children: Harlem Hospital Pediatric Resource Center, Family Support Program (1990-2000); Mount Sinai Child and Family Support Program (2000-2010); and the Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn, Pediatric Specialty Consultation Program (2010-present). Dr. Laraque-Arena is also a leader in her academic field, having been a United States Public Health Service Primary Care Policy Fellow, a president of the Academic Pediatric Association, and a member of the National Institute of Mental Health Standing Committee on Interventions for Disorders Involving Children and Their Families. She is a nationally and internationally recognized expert in injury prevention, child abuse, adolescent health risk behaviors, and issues critical to health care delivery in underserved communities. Dr. Laraque-Arena is the recipient of numerous academic, research, community and public service awards. Dr. Laraque-Arena received her M.D. from the University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine and her B.S. in Chemistry from the University of California at Los Angeles. Her internship and residency were completed at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. A copy of Dr. Danielle Laraque-Arena’s curriculum vitae is attached. Danielle Laraque, MD, FAAP Professor of Pediatrics Albert Einstein College of Medicine Chair, Department of Pediatrics, Maimonides Medical Center Vice-President, Maimonides Infants & Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn June 21, 2015 Dear Committee: It is a pleasure to submit my letter of interest for the position of President of SUNY Upstate University and the executive leader and advocate for all the colleges and operations of the University. I am honored to be considered for this academic position and look forward to meeting the search committee. As requested, in the following pages I describe my administrative/leadership experience, my research and educational experience, and my clinical areas of expertise over my nearly 30-year career in academic medicine. I am currently Professor of Pediatrics, Investigator track, Department of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University and am Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Maimonides Medical Center, and the Vice-President of the Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn. I am an academic generalist board certified in Pediatrics and the subspecialty of Child Abuse Pediatrics. As noted in my curriculum vitae I graduated from UCLA School of Medicine, completed my pediatric residency at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a Robert Wood Johnson General Academic Pediatric Fellowship. My academic and clinical progression is noted in the sections below. Administration As Chair and Vice-President of the Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn, I lead a department of approximately 70 full-time faculty with primary appointments to the department, an additional 20 faculty with secondary appointments and over 230 voluntary faculty. A Chief Pediatric Nursing Officer reports directly to me and is essential in the administration of this service line. All pediatric subspecialties are represented in the department. I assumed these responsibilities in the latter part of 2010 with the expressed goal of strengthening the academic mission of the department of Pediatrics in this unique teaching hospital, not based at a medical school. To that end, over the past 5 years, I recruited over 20 new full-time faculty with strong academic training and achievements, committed to teaching and innovation in health care delivery, quality improvement, informatics and clinical/health services research. I recruited Mary Rojas, PhD with the goal of developing a research division in health services. I recruited George Foltin, MD a nationally recognized leader in emergency medicine and disaster preparedness, who now serves as Vice-Chair for Clinical Services with a focus on the continuum of care. With my support, 4 fellowship programs have been developed: Child Abuse Pediatrics (3 fellows, ACGME), Neonatology (6 fellows –in collaboration with New York University –ACGME), Endocrinology (4 fellows, ACGME), Hospitalist Fellowship (non-ACGME), and continued strong support for the Cardiology fellowship with expansion to 2 fellows at MMC. In addition, through ECRIP funding, the divisions of Neurology and Pulmonary have had research fellows. The Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital (MICH) generates over $100 million in revenue each year. While not a free-standing children’s hospital, under my leadership, Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital boasts a regional perinatal center providing level 3b neonatal intensive care services. In the past four years, total body cooling was initiated at this center of excellence receiving babies from Lutheran Medical Center, Coney Island, Wyckoff and other sites as needed. The division participates in the Vermont-Oxford Network and monitoring of quality measures has yielded excellence in CLABSI rates and other metrics. MICH has the largest Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in the borough/county of Brooklyn and is a major tertiary care center for children, the first and now only accredited children’s hospital in Brooklyn. The outpatient services (primary care and specialty) see over 80,000 visits per year and the Pediatric Emergency Department over 35,000 visits with a provisional status of a level-1 pediatric trauma center. MICH leads in clinical and educational research and quality improvement in the areas of child abuse pediatrics, hypertension, brain development, children’s mental health, disaster training, and endocrine disorders such as monogenic diabetes. The residency training is a moderately large program with a total of 62 residents. My aim in the past 5 years has been to right scale the program, to have innovative teaching as an integral part of training, as represented by cultural OSCEs and use of simulation, and to graduate residents who compete for the top fellowships and primary care programs with board pass rates to complement these efforts. In the first year of a fully trained class under my leadership the first attempt board pass rate has improved to over 80% and aims to have the rate exceed 90% within the next 2-3 years. Prior to leading the department of Pediatrics at Maimonides I was at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, as chief of the division. During my tenure I recruited outstanding faculty, received many programmatic and research grants, and developed a general academic pediatric fellowship program with extramural support for the first time. The Division of General Pediatrics, within two years of my arrival in 2000, received national attention for its focus on community pediatrics and advocacy. In addition, I collaborated with the departments of Preventive and Community Medicine, Internal Medicine, Dentistry, Geriatrics, Social Work, and Psychiatry, in unwavering support of excellence in primary care. Shortly after my arrival at Mount Sinai I received an endowed chair as the Debra & Leon Black Professor of Pediatrics for Primary Care Pediatrics. I had come to Mount Sinai with extensive administrative skills, having run the Harlem Pediatric Resource Center in the pediatric service line model. As division chief, I made central the development and support of faculty through frequent meetings for mentorship and support for research. I contributed to the Department and the School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in a variety of other ways including medical center committees and administration. I sat on the Institutional Review Board for six years and was an important reviewer for pediatric submissions. I was a member of the medical school admissions committee and the committee for underrepresented minority students, and ultimately chaired the Mount Sinai School of Medicine Student Promotions Committee. I was a member of the Department of Pediatrics’ Intern Selection Committee throughout my tenure at Mount Sinai. Nationally, I have served on numerous committees and task forces. I became APA President in 2009-2010 and am now on the Board of Directors of the American Academy of Pediatrics –one of 10 pediatricians to hold this position nationally. I am happy to discuss my involvement nationally and internationally with the committee. I am currently editing a book on Global Child Health: Research and Education. Clinical/Program Development As noted, I trained at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia for both residency and fellowship. My career focus has been to improve the delivery of health services to underserved and minority communities. This commitment has continued to the present. My choice of Columbia University-Harlem Hospital was an obvious though somewhat difficult one. During the time at Harlem Hospital, I developed an extensive array of new innovative programs including an interdisciplinary/multidisciplinary child protective team, a nationally recognized teen-tot program, an intergenerational program, and directed the Pediatric Resource Center (one of seven funded sites in New York City). Almost without exception, each of these activities was supported by extramural grants. I was extensively involved in the care of HIV-infected children and community based programs. Most notably, I was a key investigator in the Harlem Hospital Injury Prevention Program from its inception in 1988 as an RWJ Foundation Program. The cornerstone of this program has been its strong community base and solid epidemiological evaluation using population-based data. The program has won numerous awards including the prestigious Nova Award. It has been the model program for the many Injury Free sites around the country (www.injuryfree.org). I was recruited to the department at Mount Sinai in July 2000. My explicit desire was to develop an academic general pediatric division with focus on community pediatrics, advocacy, and clinical research. When I became chief of the Division of General Pediatrics, there were few extramural grants. One of these was the New York State Department of Health, School-Based Health Centers (SBHC) grant, which within six months of my arrival was up for competitive renewal. Over the next two years, I successfully competed for approximately 20 grants. I successfully competed for a five-year SBHC grant totaling over $3 million and received funding for the first time at this institution for a school-based oral health initiative. The receipt of several federal and foundation grants establishing the Child & Family Support Program (CFSP, child protective team) followed. One of these grants is a nationally recognized Maternal and Child Health Bureau Five Year Grant entitled Healthy Tomorrows Partnership for Children. The CFSP established both outpatient and consultative inpatient services in child physical and sexual abuse and neglect. The faculty were strongly supported in establishing other programs such as the Family Advocacy Program, the Mount Sinai Injury Free Mentored Site, and the first CATCH (Child Access to Child Health) program focusing on children with special health needs. As national Chair of Ambulatory Pediatric Association (APA) Health Delivery Committee, a member of the PECOS (Pediatric Education in Community and Office Settings), and APA liaison representative for the national Committee of Community Health Services, I established the Division at Mount Sinai as a leader in community pediatrics. I established the Community Pediatrics Forum composed of key Mount Sinai faculty and community-based organization leaders in support of innovative community-based programs. This structure supported the first CATCH-grant submitted by two resident groups, and renaming of the ambulatory pediatric block rotation to the ambulatory and community pediatrics rotation. I also collaborated with other divisions, such as the Pulmonary Division in obtaining a Center for Disease Control and Prevention grant establishing the Asthma counselor program. My achievements as chair at MICH are noted above. In addition, I have continued to be a consultant for child abuse pediatrics and sit on the Accountability Review Panel (child death review) of the Administration for Children Services, NYC. I founded and serve as the Program Director for the Pediatric Consultation Specialty Program alongside the child abuse pediatrics fellowship, the only ACGME child abuse pediatrics program in New York State. Teaching As Chair of the department, one of the expressed pleasures for me has been to establish an environment of inquiry and excitement about medicine. I hold weekly Chair’s Rounds where medical students, residents, fellows, and faculty may participate. These sessions are interactive, exemplifying the best of adult learning method. Morning report is chief resident run. It has invited the active participation of the attending staff with a tone set by the Department Chair and Residency Program Director. A medical education retreat held in 2013 engaged the full faculty inclusive of interdisciplinary faculty in medical education, social work, psychology and others to be part of continuous improvement of the residency training program. As noted above, all MMC faculty were supported to become faculty of the School of Medicine with a clear commitment to teaching. This also led to Maimonides becoming a major site for the third year pediatric clerkship first for NYU and now for Einstein students. The students have rated their experience as excellent commenting on teaching excellence in the midst of incredible patient demographic diversity. Innovations in teaching are essential to keeping pace with excellence. In 2005, I participated in the publication of the Bright Futures Health Promotion Curriculum in which I authored two chapters on Partnership and Advocacy. I lectured locally, regionally, nationally and internationally. In 2008 and 2009 as part of my sabbatical I spent time at the Carter Center in Atlanta where I was a member of the planning committee and a speaker at the Annual Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Symposium. In 2010 and 2012, I received NICHD R43 and R44 SBIR awards, respectively to develop a unique educational intervention in child abuse pediatrics. While at Mount Sinai School of Medicine I was involved in many educational efforts detailed in my CV. From 2005-2007 I was Chair of the Medical Students Promotions committee. I was the principal investigator and director of the new Primary Care Clinician Research Fellowship (2002-2008 supplemented by T32 and other funding sources). Funded by HRSA/Bureau of Health Professions, the fellowship was a collaboration between the Divisions of General Pediatrics and General Internal Medicine. The funding fully established a general academic pediatric and academic medicine fellowship for the first time at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. The list of fellows and their accomplishments is detailed in my CV and portfolio. At the national level, for five years I co-led the annual Ambulatory Pediatric Association (APA) Education Workshop entitled Minority Faculty Career Development presented in collaboration with the Society for Pediatric Research (Dennery). My focus on faculty development and the training needs of child health professionals is also manifested in my work utilizing a tri-state web-based survey to determine the training needs of child health professionals in the areas of mental health, environmental health, and bio-terrorism and receipt of the only NYS MCHB/HRSA grant for collaborative office rounds for primary care clinicians and child psychiatrists (2010-present). In 2010 I was honored to receive the Job Lewis Smith Award in recognition of my career achievements in community pediatrics in pediatric practice, research, advocacy and training. More recently, an analysis of the AAP Third Year Resident survey, a cross-sectional survey of a random sample of graduating residents (N=1223) with an oversample of minority residents, has led to two manuscripts. The first is published in Academic Pediatrics and the other just submitted for publication examining both the cross-cultural training of residents, and their expectation and commitment to practice in an underserved community. These results have implication for post-residency training and its linkage to medical student education. Research/Health Policy My research focus has been guided by the health issues faced by the population of children in my practice area. In Philadelphia, my initial research area was in lead toxicity. This work on lead toxicity and calcium status received both national and international attention with publication in a major journal, publication in an international digest, and presentation at an international meeting. A subsequent paper which published the first normative bone mineral content data using single photon absorptiometry for black pre-schoolers also received national attention. I’ve lectured on lead toxicity for many years. In the Central and East Harlem communities in which I practiced for over 20 years (1986-2010), my research focused on the leading causes of mortality and morbidity for that population. These have included injury, child abuse, and adolescent health risk behaviors. The work described the epidemiology of injuries to children and adolescents including firearm-related and traffic-related injuries. This collaborative injury prevention work in community-based interventions is recognized as a national model. From epidemiological work to community-based research, I’ve extended my work to health policy on injury and violence prevention noted by numerous policy papers as well as original research. (See CV). In the last decade I have undertaken survey research to better define the training needs of primary care pediatricians in the area of children’s mental health, especially focused on trauma, and in response to survey findings, developed and evaluated the impact of a regional educational intervention (the Reaching Children Initiative) in the area of children’s mental health in primary care settings. The RCI model has led to a statewide model launched by the NYS Office of Mental Health entitled CAP-PC (Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in Primary Care) funding 5 academic health centers as well as quality improvement work in collaboration with NICHQ. As noted, my current work in child abuse includes funding by NICHD/NIMH through an R44 for the development of a prototype educational tool to support clinician decision in reporting of suspected child abuse and neglect. These educational and research efforts in the areas of children’s mental health and maltreatment have continued to support the development of policy statements and commentaries in both these areas. In 2011, I was nominated and was accepted as a member of the Institute of Medicine Committee on Integrating Primary Care and Public Health resulting in the publication of the book entitled Primary Care and Public Health: Exploring Integration to Improve Population Health in 2012. I am on the board of the Maimonides Research Foundation which has an endowment dedicated to the funding of starter research grants. In summary, I believe I have the formation and experience to be President of SUNY Upstate Medical University. My work over the past 30 years has reflected an interdisciplinary approach to care, education, research and systems development. The responsibility to lead a university composed of four colleges inclusive of nursing, Health Professions, Graduate Studies and the College of Medicine would be an exciting next step in my career. I believe that I have the vision, innovative spirit and determination to undertake this challenging leadership position. I truly welcome this opportunity and I would be honored by the opportunity to meet with the committee. Thank you and I look forward to discussing my interest in more detail. Sincerely, Danielle Laraque, MD, FAAP Date Prepared: December, 2013; updated 06/2015 Curriculum Vitae DANIELLE LARAQUE, MD, FAAP EDUCATION Year Degree Field Institution 1972-1974 none Chemistry Fordham University, New York 1974-1975 none Chemistry Leeds University, England (third year abroad through Fordham University) June 1976 BS Chemistry University of California at Los Angeles June 1981 MD Medicine University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine POSTDOCTORAL TRAINING 1981-1984 Pediatrics Internship and Residency in Pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1984-1986 General Robert Wood Johnson Fellowship, Children’s Hospital of Academic Philadelphia Pediatrics PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT/ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Year Academic Title Institution 1984-1986 Instructor University of Pennsylvania 1986-1988 Instructor Columbia University 1988-1996 Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Columbia University 1996-1997 Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics Columbia University 1997- 2000 Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics Columbia University 2000-2004 Associate Professor of Pediatrics Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM) 2001-2010 Debra and Leon Black Professor of Pediatrics (Endowed Chair) MSSM 2004-2010 Professor of Pediatrics (tenured) MSSM 2005-2010 Professor of Community and Preventive Medicine MSSM 2010-2014 Professor of Pediatrics New York University, School of Medicine (SOM) 2014-present Professor of Pediatrics (Investigator Track) Albert Einstein College of Medicine HOSPITAL APPOINTMENTS Year Hospital Title Hospital 1986-1996 Medical Director of the Pediatric Resource Center Harlem Hospital Center 1990-1995 Founder & Director of the Adolescent Outreach Program Harlem Hospital Center 1997-2000 Founder & Director of the Harlem Adolescent and Child Total Services Program Harlem Hospital Center 1991-2000 Founder & Director of the Family Support Program (Child Protection Director) Harlem Hospital Center 1986-1991 Assistant Attending of Pediatrics Harlem Hospital Center 1991-2000 Associate Attending of Pediatrics, Harlem Hospital Center 1996-2000 Director, Pediatric Resource Center Harlem Hospital Center, 2000-2010 Attending Physician Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH) 2000-2010 Chief, Division of General Pediatrics Mount Sinai Medical Center (MSMC) 2000-2005 Founder & Director, Child & Family Support Program Child Protection Director MSMC 2008-2010 Founder & Director, Child & Family Support Program Child Protection Director MSMC 2000-2006 Founder & Principal Investigator: Family Friends Program at Mount Sinai MSMC 2002-present Director, Primary Care Clinician-Research Fellowship (General Academic Pediatrics MSSM 2007-2010 Co-Director of the Mount Sinai Environmental Fellowship (T-32) Community Pediatrics MSSM 2008-2010 Co-Director of the Mount Sinai Primary Care Fellowship in Health Services and Health Policy Research MSSM 2010 Vice-Chair, Public Policy and Advocacy, Mount Sinai Department of Pediatrics (MSSM) 2010- Chair, Department of Pediatrics and Vice-President, Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn Maimonides Medical Center (MMC) Fellowship Director for Child abuse pediatrics MMC (July 2012) 2011- Research Advisory Committee Member MMC Principal Clinical and Hospital Service Responsibilities (where appropriate) Year Type of Activity 2000-2010 Chief, Division of General Pediatrics Mount Sinai Medical Center (MSMC) 2000-2005 Founder & Director, Child & Family Support Program Child Protection Director MSMC 2008-2010 Founder & Director, Child & Family Support Program Child Protection Director MSMC Major Administrative Responsibilities Year Title, Place of Responsibility Same as under major clinical and service responsibilities and hospital appointments; new responsibilities commenced October 25, 2010 when I assumed the Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Maimonides and Vice-President of the Infant & Children’s Hospital of Maimonides. OTHER PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS AND VISITING APPOINTMENTS Year Position Title Institution 2001-2004 Admissions Committee New York Academy of Medicine 2001-2005 New York Forum for Child Health New York Academy of Medicine 2010 Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics MSSM (starting 10/16/2010) 2010 Adjunct Professor of Preventive MSSM (starting 10/16/2010) Medicine 2010 Visiting, Professor of Pediatrics State University of New York, Downstate 2015 Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics New York University SOM BOARD CERTIFICATION: Pediatrics, November 16, 1986 (Lifetime) Child Abuse Pediatrics, Certified November 16, 2009; Enrolled in MOC LICENSURE: New York, 166209-1; Current. Pennsylvania, expired. PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY MEMBERSHIPS Memberships, Offices, and Committee Assignments in Professional Societies (Year, Society) Academic Pediatric Association (formerly Ambulatory Pediatric Association ) 1989-present Fellow-Ambulatory Pediatric Association 1994-1995 Ambulatory Pediatric Association abstract reviewer 1993-1996 Ambulatory Pediatric Association Region II -Co-Chair (elected) 5/1995-5/1997 Ambulatory Pediatric Association -National Nominating Committee member (elected) 1999-2002 Ambulatory Pediatric Association – Board of Directors (elected 3/99) 1999-2002 Ambulatory Pediatric Association–Chair–Health Care Delivery Committee 5/99 2000 –2002 Ambulatory Pediatric Association - Liaison to the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee Community Health Services 2004-2006 Ambulatory Pediatrics Association, National Nominating Committee (elected) 2005 APA New Century Scholars Program – Advisory Group and Senior Mentor 2007 APA Advisory Committee on Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry- nominee to HRSA –APA national representative 2008-9 Academic Pediatric Association, President-Elect – 2008-2009 (elected) 2009-2012 Pediatric Academic Societies Executive Committee Member 2010-2011 Pediatric Academic Societies Executive Committee Chair 2009-10 Academic Pediatric Association President – Elected 2010-2011 Academic Pediatric Association, Immediate-Past-President 2009-2010 Federation of Pediatric Organizations (FOPO) Officer 2013- APA, Task Force on Childhood Poverty American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 1988-present Fellow-American Academy of Pediatrics 1991 AAP - Legislative Meeting Attendee - Washington, 1996 Project Advisory Committee- Firearms Injury Prevention Training Project 1996-2002 National Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention -COIPP, AAP 2002-present Section Member – Community Pediatrics 1997-present Section Member- Adolescent Medicine 1997-present Section Member - Injury Prevention 1997- present Section Member - Child Abuse 1997-1999 Executive Committee, American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3 1990-1998 Chairperson -American Academy of Pediatrics Chapter 3; Injury Prevention Committee 1990-present Executive Council-American Academy of Pediatrics-Chapter 3 1997-1998 Member at Large, American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3, (elected) 1998-1999 District Executive Committee – American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3 1998-1999 Vice President - American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3, New York 1999-2001 Vice President/President Elect (elected)– American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3, District II October 2000- Reaching Children: Building a Systems of Care Project. Funded by the federal Maternal and Child Health Bureau. Competitively selected, SCHIP Project Advisory Committee member July2001-2003 President – American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3 2001 Doctors Against Handgun Injury – American Academy of Pediatrics Representative 2004 Bright Futures Project Advisory Committee July 1, 2003 -June 30, 2005 Immediate-Past-President – American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3 May 2003 Liaison for Mental Health, American Academy of Pediatrics, District II, Regional Task Force on Terrorism. 10/04-09/07 District II Vice-Chair, American Academy of Pediatrics (elected) 10/07-09/10 District II Vice-Chair, American Academy of Pediatrics (re-elected) 10/11-10/18 District II Chair (New York State), American Academy of Pediatrics (elected, re-elected 2014) 2004-present American Academy of Pediatrics Standard Board Committees: Advisory Committee to the Board on Committees and Sections 2004-2005 Advisory Committee to the Board on Education 2004-2005 Advisory Committee to the Board on Marketing and Publications 2004-2005 Committee Forum Management Committee 2005-2006 Advisory Committee to the Board on Strategic Planning 2005-2006 Advisory Committee to the Board on Information Technology 2006-2007 Advisory Committee to the Board on Finance 2006-2007 Advisory Committee to the Board on Membership 2006-2007 Advisory Committee to the Board on Strategic Planning 2008-2009 Board of Directors 2008-2009 Advisory Committee to the Board on Research 2009-2010 Advisory Committee to the Board Advisory Committee to the Board on Community/Chapter/State Affairs 2009-2014 Advisory Committee to the Board on Federal Affairs 2009-2014 Advisory Committee to the Board on Practice 2009-2014 Chair, Advisory Committee to the Board on Research 2011-2014 Chair, Advisory Committee to the Board on Global Child Health 2014-2015 Chair, Advisory Committee to the Board on Practice 2014-2015 Chair, Advisory Committee to the Board on Quality 2015-2018 Chair, Advisory Committee to the Board on Specialty Pediatrics 2015-2018 2006-2010 American Academy of Pediatrics, Mental Health Task Force 2006-2010 Chair, AAP Mental Health Task Force, Decision Support Committee Sept. 2005 Listening to Mothers II: National Advisory Council Member- AAP Representative 2009 Pediatric Research in Office Settings –investigator 2006-2007 Chair – Nominating Committee for Section on Injury and Poison Prevention 2008-2010 Vision 20/20 Task Force of the American Academy of Pediatrics 2014- American Academy of Pediatrics, Chair: Research, Openness and Advocacy for Diversity and Inclusion Subcommittee American Academy of Pediatrics, Authored Resolutions: Year, resolution #: Resolution Title 1999-5: Building an Intergenerational Alliance for Universal Healthcare 2000-11: Youth and the Juvenile Justice System 2003-32SB: Universal Health Insurance 2004-7SA: Opposition to the Death Penalty. 2009-10: Protecting Children in Times of Wars 2009-11: Abolishing Life Imprisonment of Juveniles with no Opportunity for Parole 2009-38: Climate Change Prevention and Preparedness 2009-41: Promotion of Mental Health for Residents and Fellowship Trainees Other Professional Societies/Organizations 1977-1981 Student National Medical Association (President, 1978-79) 1995-present National Medical Association 1990-1991 American Public Health Association 1989-2002 Susan Smith McKinney Steward Society 1992-94 Chairperson/Issues Committee -International Coalition of Women Physicians 1995-present AMHE- Haitian Physicians Association Abroad 1997-2003 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Violence Prevention Coordination and Consultation Team; (see listed publications) 1997-2000 White Papers -Emergency Medical Services for Children Working Group 1998- 2005 Bright Futures, National Health Promotion Work Group 1999-2000 PRAMS (Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System) Steering Committee –New York City Department of Health 2000 Advisory Committee for the Teen Silent March 2000-present New York Academy of Medicine Member 2001-present Society of Primary Care Policy Fellows 2002-2004 New York Academy of Medicine Admissions Committee Member 2002-present Newborn Screening Work Group - MCHB, HHS, and American College of Medical Genetics Oct. 3, 2002 NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Maternal & Child Health Advisory Meeting, 2002-present NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Division of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Bureau of Family Health, Infant Mortality Case Review Committee member 2004-2006 Advisory Board of the September 11th Fund at the National Philanthropic Trust 2007-present Society for Equity in Child Health –Executive Council 2007-2009 United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) – Step 3 Test Material Development Committee (TMDC) for Computer-based Case Simulation, Scoring Committee – Effective 2011-2013 American Pediatric Society (APS) Task Force on Diversity and Inclusion 2013-present APS Committee on Diversity and Inclusion Child Abuse Related Functions 1991- present American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children 1998-present American Academy of Pediatrics – Section on Child Abuse & Neglect Editorial Positions: Review Activities (occasional, ad hoc reviews not listed) Year Name of Board Editorships: Guest Editor The Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine Volume 73, Number 8 December 2006 Editorial Board Jan. 2003-Dec. 2005 Ambulatory Pediatrics Journal – Editorial Board 2000-2006 Pediatrics in Review -Editorial Board Reviewer: (multiple ad hoc reviews over the years not listed) 1994 Primary and Secondary Reviewer for the National Center for Child Abuse, and Neglect 1996-1998 Reviewer and Commentary Contributor -Ambulatory Child Health: The Journal of General and Community Pediatrics 1999-2000 HRSA Residency Training/Faculty Development Reviewer, Co-Chair 2000-present National Medical Association - 1997-present; Reviewer Dec. 2004 NIH/NIMH – Study Section: Special Emphasis Panel of Small Grant Applications. AWARDS AND HONORS Year Name of Award 1972-1974 Fordham University Honor Society 1977-1981 Roy Markus Achievement Scholarship 1978-79 Student National Medical Association, President UCLA 1981 Student National Medical Association Award 1981 Mosby Achievement Award for Academic Excellence 1985 Medical Associates Research & Education Foundation Award Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1985 Clinical Research Center Award -Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1987 Honorary Membership to the Haitian Pediatric Society 1986-1988 Regents Physician Loan Forgiveness Award 1991* Special Merit Award for the Injury Prevention Project, Public Health Association of New York City 1992 American Academy of Pediatrics Bicycle Safety Merit Award 1993 Teens for the Future Award 1991-1994 Community Health Care Award, Project: Adolescent Outreach Program: An approach to Injury Prevention; Johnson & Johnson.* 1995* Nova Award American Hospital Association 1995* Health Education Award, New York State 1996* Lifesavers Public Service Award 1996* Safe Communities Partnership Award, US Dept of Transportation 1996* Surgeon's Award for Distinguished Service to Safety National Safety Council 1998* American Trauma Society Distinguished Achievement Award 1998* Allstate Safety Leadership Award, Allstate Foundation 1998 Schlegel Lecturer, UCLA-Drew Medical School January 1999 Healthy Tomorrows Partnership for Children- Third prize best abstract Sept. 9, 2000 Outstanding Community Service Award Central Harlem Senior Citizen’s Coalition; 2001 New York Magazine’s top ten pediatricians in New York City Sept.10, 2001 Fourth Annual White Coat Ceremony, Coater 2001 US Public Health Service Primary Care Health Policy Fellowship Sept. 20, 2001 The Debra and Leon Black Professor of Pediatrics –Endowed Chair 2003 American Academy of Pediatrics New York Chapter 3, Chapter Special Achievement award 2002 and 2003 and Chapter excellence 2003 National Institutes of Health, Agency for Health Care Research and Quality Task Force on violence and related health-risking social behaviors in adolescents – Selected peer reviewer 2004-present Castle Connolly Medical Ltd. Inclusion 2004-2005 America’s Top Pediatrician -featured in New York Magazine Best Doctors 2005 Best Black Doctors in Metro New York – Network Journal January 2005-present American Pediatric Society (APS) January 2005-present Eastern Society for Pediatric Research 2005 - present New York Magazine Best Doctors (mental health, child abuse, injury prevention) 2005 GOLD AWARD Interactive Categories L.A. Bruell, Inc., American Academy of Pediatrics & September 11th Children’s Fund (PI Danielle Laraque) Nov. 2007 The Family Friends Advisory Committee, Harlem Hospital Center Award (Honoree) 2009-2010 Leonard P. Rome CATCH Visiting Professorship (sponsored by Baylor Pediatric Residency) 2009 The Ray E. Helfer Society Member (Honor Society) 2010 Job Lewis Smith Award (Outstanding Service in Community Pediatrics, American Academy of Pediatrics national award) 2011 Harvard School of Public Health: Program for Chiefs of Clinical Services, Department of Health Policy and Management and the Center for Continuing Professional Education 2011-13 Institute of Medicine Committee on Integrating Primary Care and Public Health 2011-present New York Times, Super Docs Listing 2013 Institute of Medicine: Next Steps for Implementing the IOM Epilepsy Report Meeting Member 2013- The Foundation for the History of Women in Medicine – Board of Trustees 2013 Visionary Award – Casa dei Bambini Foundation and Maimonides Medical Center 2014 First Caribbean American Healthcare Awardee, Brooklyn, NY 2014 Leadership Award – Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence 2015 Association des Medecins Haitien a L’Etranger (AMHE) –Outstanding Achievement Award * Harlem Hospital Injury Prevention Program Awards OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: Major Committee Assignments (other than professional societies) National 2006-2010 NIH/NIMH Standing Committee: NIMH, Interventions Committee for Disorders Involving Children and Their Families. 2008 NIH Consensus Development Conference Committee and Panel: Hydroxyurea Treatment of Sickle Cell Disease. 2008 Sabbatical and Post-sabbatical– with the following activities and affiliations: . Carter Center –24th Annual Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Symposium Conference Planning Committee –Unclaimed Children Revisited 2008 . Carter Center-25th Annual Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental Health Policy -Planning Committee Health Care Reform: Challenges and Opportunities for Behavioral Health Care 2009 . National Center for Children in Poverty 2008 . Children’s Health Fund 2008 . REACH Institute Activities 2008 . UNICEF Innocenti Research Center 2008 2012 DSM-5 Pediatric Advisory Committee (American Academy of Pediatrics Representative) 2014- American Board of Pediatrics –General Pediatrics Examination Committee Member (two, 3 year terms) Regional Feb 13, 20, 27, 1990 HHC/Cornell Training Program on Child Sexual Abuse, Faculty 1990-2000 NYC Citywide Peer Review Committee on Child Sexual Abuse- NY Hospital Cornell 1992--present Faculty- State Licensing Program for Health Professionals in Child Abuse (Harlem Hospital and Renewed for Mount Sinai –servicing the regional residency training programs) 1996 Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect: Protocol for Identification, Reporting, and Treatment - Reviewer and revision for the Health & Hospital Corporation 1996-present Manhattan District Attorney Child Advocacy Resource Center Member 1998 Child Protection Center Advisory Committee Member (Ad hoc Chair of the Standards Committee, NYC Emergency Medical Services for Children) 1997-present Manhattan Inter-hospital Child Protection Network 1997-present Mayor’s Task Force on Child Abuse 2007-present NYC Administration for Children Services, Accountability Review Panel -appointed 2008 Achieving the Promise. Children’s Mental Health Workforce Workgroup, NYS OMH 2008 The Children’s Plan: Improving the Social and Emotional Well Being of New York’s Children and their Families. Engage. NYS OMH 2011-present Medicaid Redesign Team Behavioral Health Reform Workgroup: Children’s Team 2012 Medicaid Redesign Team Health Disparities Workgroup – New York State 2013-2017 New York State Emergency Medical Services for Children Advisory Committee 2015- New York State Department of Health Integrated Care Workgroup in support of NYS DOH Health Innovation Plan (SHIP) Medical School Year Name of Committee, Role Institution 1978-1979 Admissions Committee UCLA School of Medicine 1980-1981 2000-2005 Institutional Review Board Member Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM) 2002 Arts & Science of Medicine Advisory Board MSSM 2004-2006 IRB Executive Committee MSSM 2000-2005 Admissions Committee MSSM 2001-2008 Department of Pediatrics, Intern Selecting Committee MSSM 2001 HRSA Center of Excellence: Center for Multicultural Affairs – Advisory Council MSSM 2002-2008 Pediatric Research Day Steering Committee Member MSSM January 2003 Liaison Committee on Medical Education (Committee II – Education Programs for the MD degree) MSSM 8/2003- Student Promotion Committee MSSM 2004-2005 Dean’s Ambulatory Task Force – Fall MSSM Dec. 2004 Early Childhood Search Committee – Department of Psychiatry MSSM Dec. 2004 Liaison Committee of the Department of Psychiatry of North General MSSM 2005-2007 Chair, Medical Student Promotion Committee MSSM 2005-2010 Executive Committee –Dept of Pediatrics MSSM 2006-2010 Internal Pediatrics Promotion Committee MSSM 2008 Search Committee (Health Policy) MSSM 2008 Search Committee Pediatric Department (Pulmonary Division) MSSM 2009-2011 Medical School Oversight Committee (Undergraduate Curriculum) MSSM 2013- Committee of Professors at Montefiore Montefiore Dept of Pediatrics for Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn Hospital Year Name of Committee, Role Institution 1983-84 Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects – Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1983-1984 Undergraduate Medical Education Committee – Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1987-1993 Quality Assurance Committee Harlem Hospital 1987-1988 Ambulatory Care Committee Harlem Hospital 1988-2000 Child Abuse Committee Harlem Hospital 7/1/93-2000 Chair, Committee on Child Abuse Harlem Hospital 1994-2000 Steering Committee Harlem Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 1994-2000 Patient and Family Education, C.Q.I. Committee (Chair) Harlem Hospital 1995-2000 Department of Pediatrics, Residency Program Committee Harlem Hospital 1995-2000 Department of Pediatrics, Education Committee Harlem Hospital 2003-2010 Clinical Access Committee Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH) 2005-2010 EPIC, Informatics, Clinical Advisory Group MSMC 2010-present Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital Board MMC 2011-present Maimonides Research and Development Foundation, Member Maimonides Medical Center (MMC) 2011-2013 Space Committee MMC 2011-2012 MMC ECRIP Review Panel MMC 2011-present MMC Research Advisory Board MMC 2012-present MMC Marketing Committee MMC 2013-2014 Chair of Chairs Sub-Committee on Senior Faculty and Staff Orientation MMC 2013 Chair, Chairs Subcommittee on Physician MMC And Chairs’ Orientation 2013 Chair, Competency Subcommittee of the MMC Graduate Medical Education Committee Major Research Interests Injury Prevention and Epidemiology In the mid-1980s and 1990s the use of injury epidemiology as a means of planning community-based interventions was a major focus of my community-based research. This is represented in funded programmatic research and numerous articles published on the Harlem Hospital Injury Prevention Program which resulted in a national model on community-based interventions. This work also led to policy directions and statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics and other organizations. Mental Health Integration in Primary Care Settings – My research in this field has extended to a regional survey assessment of training needs (survey study); an educational intervention with before and after control design; a quality improvement project on the integration of mental screening and follow-up in the NY tri-state area; and a feasibility assessment of a web-based portal for parent pre-visit questionnaire. (See grants portfolio) This work led to a statewide effort by OMH (Project Teach) to train primary care physicians in the assessment and treatment of mental health disorders in children (see publication, 2014). This work has recently also continued with the receipt of the AmeriCares and Friends of Children grants following Hurricane Sandy. Publications in this area include policy briefs, peer-reviewed work of the AAP mental health task force and original research on mental health screening in high risk populations such as children at risk for child maltreatment. Other studies in children’s mental health in primary care include a study which tests the impact of the Multiple Family Group on child mental health and on various parent and family-level outcomes. Specifically, this project’s overall goal was to train a general academic pediatric clinician-researcher with special emphasis on children’s mental health (MH) services research. The sub research study question involves validation of the Strengths and Difficulties functional assessment scale in the group of children enrolled in MFG. Adolescent Behavior – my research in the 1990s focused of predictors of adolescent sexual behaviors. This involved the use of the Health Belief Model in predicting consistent condom use to protect against pregnancy and HIV/AIDS/STI. The research also involved a quasi-experimental design testing a pregnancy prevention computer-assisted intervention in Harlem adolescents. Child Abuse Research – I have been involved in child abuse program development and evaluation for over two decades and have published in this area. Most recently, I am funded by NICHD/NIMH in a project entitled Stop, Look and Listen: Separating Fact from Fiction in Evaluation Cases of Child Abuse: An Interactive Learning tool for Pediatricians. Phase I of this research involved the development of a prototype educational tool to support clinician decision in reporting of suspected child abuse and neglect. Phase II application has refined the prototype and expanded to six case and has included a preliminary evaluation. A separate project which originated from this initial one examines the role of implicit bias in the identification and reporting of child abuse by mandated reporters. An MOC part 2 as well CME accreditation is being sought. Policy – Policy implications and statements compose a large part of my scholarly portfolio. The policy realms covered include health care delivery models, child abuse, injury prevention, and adolescent health risk behaviors. The focus of most of the policy papers related to underserved populations. In March 2011 I was nominated and accepted to be a member of the Institute of Medicine Committee on Integrating Primary Care and Public. This committee was charged with examining ways to better integrate public health and primary care to assure healthy communities. The areas of focus included cardiovascular disease inclusive of obesity, tobacco use, other risk factors as well as additional topics relevant to health disparities or specific populations. Cross-cutting issues such as behavioral health are included. I also participated in the IOM meeting Next Steps for Implementing the IOM Epilepsy Report: A Decision-Making Tool for People with Epilepsy and Their Families. Training - The major goal of the multiple training grants that I have obtained from 2002-2010 has been to train generalist specialists in pediatrics and internal medicine with a focus on underserved communities and thematic emphasis on Healthy People 2010 objectives (mental health, child abuse, respiratory diseases such as asthma, nutrition and overweight, environmental health). All fellows have obtained a Masters in Public Health and have been mentored to carry out and publish a research project addressing key morbidity and mortality areas and areas of health promotion and disease prevention. The curriculum has also emphasized the development of strong teaching skills using adult learning theory. In 2011, I established the Pediatric Specialty Consultation Service sponsored by Maimonides Medical Center at the Maimonides Infants & Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn and the corresponding child abuse pediatrics fellowship in collaboration with New York University. Maimonides Graduate Medical Education Committee has approved both a new child abuse fellowship and a NICU fellowship in collaboration with NYU. The Child Abuse Fellowship was accredited 7/1/2011 and the first fellow began training. The NICU fellowship has rotated the six NYU fellows (one supported by MMC) through the MMC Regional Perinatal Center. In 2012, the Endocrine Division of MMC established the first MMC sponsored Pediatric Endocrine Fellowship. The Division of Cardiology continues with a Cardiology Fellowship in collaboration with NYU. In 2013, in response to Hurricane Sandy my education/research group sought to integrate mental health training within the immediate response to a disaster. In support of this, two grants were received that will lead to the adaptation of the Reaching Children Initiative and the Child Adolescent Psychiatry-Primary Care curricula alongside principles of psychological first aid. Global Health – My APA Presidential Address was on global child health and the framework for response to the Millennium Developmental Goals in the context of the mission, vision and values of the Academic Pediatric Association. The core principles of this address are detailed in the publication Global Child Health: Reaching the Tipping Point for All Children (Academic Pediatrics). Part of my presidential project was founding and chairing the APA Global Health Task Force. The Task Force resulted in the publication (in press, Pediatrics) of the Global Health Competencies. Concurrently, I became the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) oversight Chair of the Advisory Committee to the Board on Global Child Health. During my tenure as the oversight Chair I represented the AAP at a number of global health events in Haiti, NCD-UNICEF, GAVI initiative to expand immunizations to low-resource countries. Currently, I am editing the book entitled Global Child Health: Education and Research, First Edition to be published by the American Academy of Pediatrics. My co-editor is Bonita Stanton, MD. The book will be anchored by the discussion of the core principles, describe in more detail the identified core competencies (administrative, clinical, research and education), and have focused chapters on specific areas of research and education, case examples of best practices inviting an international group of global health researchers and educators. GRANTS RECEIVED Past Grants Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: United Hospital Fund Title: Reaching Children Initiative-Learning Collaborative (RCI-LC): A Tri-State Children’s Mental Health Collaborative Funding Period: July 1, 2006-June 30, 2007 ($75,000) Description: RCI-LC proposes in-depth training over 18-months by developing a Learning Collaborative that will recruit practices to participate in on-going quality improvement strategies to improve the delivery of primary care based mental health services. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Red Cross Title: Reaching Children Initiative-Learning Collaborative (RCI-LC): A Tri-State Children’s Mental Health Collaborative Funding Period: July 1, 2006-June 30, 2007 ($225,000) Description: RCI-LC proposes in-depth training over 18-months by developing a Learning Collaborative that will recruit practices to participate in on-going quality improvement strategies to improve the delivery of primary care based mental health services. 1 D55HP05155-01-00 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: HRSA/Bureau of Health Professions Title: Faculty Development in Primary Care Program Funding Period: 2005-2008; $1,256,646/3 years Description: The major goal of this training grant is to train generalist specialists in pediatrics and internal medicine with a focus in underserved communities and thematic emphasis on Healthy People 2010 objectives (mental health, child abuse, respiratory diseases such as asthma, nutrition and overweight, environmental health). Focus on training on quality improvement and safety is emphasized, as well as, cultural competence. C023677 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: New York State Office of Children & Family Services (Supplement) Title: Multidisciplinary Teams Investigation Funding Period: April 1, 2006-9/30/2007 ($145,200) Description: The major goal is programmatic support to achieve the standards of a full CAC (Child Advocacy Center) Co-Investigator (Sania Perez, MD –PI -mentored) Source: National Children’s Alliance Title: The Child & Family Support Program Funding Period: November 2005-October 2006 ($50,000) Description: The major goal is programmatic support to achieve the standards of a full CAC (Child Advocacy Center) C023677 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: New York State Office of Children & Family Services (Supplement) Title: Multidisciplinary Teams Investigation Funding Period: August 2005-March 2006 ($20,000) Description: The major goal is programmatic support to achieve the standards of a full CAC (Child Advocacy Center) Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD and Frederick Suchy, MD Recipient Organization: Mount Sinai School of Medicine Source: NYS Department of Health Title: MSSM Partnership for Children with Special Health Care Needs: Care Coordination Project Funding Period: July 1, 2005-June 30, 2007 Amount: $200,000.00 Description: The major goal is implementing and assessing the impact of a care coordination project for children with asthma and hematologic/oncologic disorders. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Recipient Organization: American Academy of Pediatrics Source: September 11 Children’s Fund Title: Feelings Need Check Ups Too Funding Period: September 2005-July 2006 Amount: $220,000.00/2 yrs Description: The major goal is dissemination of the educational CD-ROM with a new toolkit to physicians in the Washington DC and Pennsylvania areas as well as family physicians, school nurses, and the military. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Red Cross Title: Reaching Children Initiative: Post 9/11 through Primary Care Clinician Training in Mental Health. Funding Period: July 1, 2005-June 30, 2006 Amount: $250,000 Description: The major goal is the implementation and quantitative evaluation of a tri-state training program aimed at improving physician knowledge and skills in the detection and management of trauma-related mental conditions (PTSD, depression, anxiety and bereavement-related) Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Academy of Pediatrics Title: Healthy People 2010: Mental Health NY3-CPAP (Child Psychiatry Access Project) Funding Period: 07/01/05-05/31/07 Amount: $20,000 Description: The major goal is feasibility testing of a web-based child psychiatry project in support of the identification and management of children’s mental health issues in primary care settings. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Recipient Organization: American Academy of Pediatrics Source: September 11th Children’s Fund at the National Philanthropic Trust Title: Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Children in response to September 11th and other catastrophic events: An educational resource for pediatricians -Dissemination Funding Period: December 2004 $51,785 Description: The major goal is dissemination of the educational CD-ROM to physicians in the Washington DC and Pennsylvania areas as well as family physicians and school nurses. Principal Investigators: Gary Butts, MD and Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Golden Family Title: Golden Family Community Pediatrics Award Program Funding: indefinite $100,000 to award two, $2500 per year to medical students to plan and implement a community pediatrics project Description: The major goal is to support medical students through mentorship to plan and implement a community pediatrics research or program project C023677 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: New York State Office of Children & Family Services (Supplement) Title: Multidisciplinary Teams Investigation Funding Period: April 2004 through July 2005 ($23,160) Description: The major goal is programmatic support to achieve the standards of a full CAC (Child Advocacy Center) C023677 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: New York State Office of Children & Family Services Title: Multidisciplinary Teams Investigation Funding Period: November 1, 2003 through March 31, 2005 ($96,584) Description: The major goal is programmatic support to achieve the standards of a full CAC (Child Advocacy Center) Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Recipient Organization: American Academy of Pediatrics Source: September 11th Children’s Fund at the National Philanthropic Trust Title: Addressing the Mental Health Needs of Children in response to September 11th and other catastrophic events: An educational resource for pediatricians Funding Period: August 2003-June 2004 ($298,940) Description: The major goal is the creation of a case-based, interactive educational tool to aid primary care physician assessment of children’s trauma-related symptoms. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: HRSA/Bureau of Health Professions Title: Faculty Development in Primary Care Program Funding Period: 2002-2003 Year 1 ($271,032); Year 2 2003-2004 $391,088); Year 3 2004-2005 ($531,330); Total 3 year budget $ 1,193,450 Description: The major goal of this training grant is to train generalist specialists in pediatrics and internal medicine with a focus in underserved communities and thematic emphasis on Healthy People 2010 objectives (mental health, respiratory diseases such as asthma, nutrition and overweight, environmental health) Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: HRSA (Health Resources & Services Administration) Title: Healthy Tomorrows Partnership for Children. Mount Sinai Child & Family Support Program: A Focus on Mental Health Funding Period: 3/1/2002-2/28/2007 Total $249,890/5yr Description: The major goal is the integration of a mental health specialist in the evaluation of children with suspected abuse. Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: NYS DOH Title: Pediatric School Based Health Center Funding Period: July 2001-June 2006; Total yearly operating budget varied each year exceeded $1M per year all NYS funding sources. Description: The major goal is the support of comprehensive school-based primary care services in the East Harlem community. Co-Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: NYS DOH Title: Pediatric School Based Health Center: Youth Tobacco Use Prevention and Cessation Funding Period: July 2001-June 2006 $50,000/yr Description: The major goal is to implement a best practice tobacco prevention/cessation program for adolescents in Mount Sinai SBHC. Principal Investigators: Danielle Laraque, MD and Claude Chemtob, PhD Source: The Klingenstein Third Generation Foundation Title: It takes a village to heal a child: The Mount Sinai Child & Family Support Program Funding Period: June 2001-May 2005 $50,000.00 Description: The major goal is the integration of mental health assessment in the evaluation of children with suspected abuse. Co-Investigator and Site Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD (Multi-site PI Hank Bernstein, DO, Boston Children’s Hospital) 1 T02 MC 00035 01 Source: HRSA Maternal and Child Health Bureau Title: Virtual Institute for Leadership in Health Promotion Funding Period: 2001-2004 Description: Development of a website for distance learning in health promotion based on the Bright Futures Health Promotion Workgroup. Co-Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD (PI Meyer Kattan, MD) Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Title: Asthma Intervention for Inner-City Children Project Period: January 2001-December 2004 $ 213,204/yr Description: The major goal is the implementation of the asthma counselor program derived from the National Cooperative Inner City Asthma Study in real life setting. 90AM2405 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Administration on Aging Title: Mount Sinai Family Friends/Volunteer Senior Aides Project Period: 09/30/2000 –09/29/2003, no cost extension to 09/29/04 $79,001/yr, total $237,003 Description: The major goal is the development of an intergenerational program matching senior volunteers with children with disabilities, including emotional disorders and child maltreatment. M1062-01 Co-Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Title: Non-invasive Diagnosis of Viral and Bacterial Sexually Transmitted Diseases on Sexually Assaulted Female Adolescents and Children. September 1999 - November 2005 $100,404/yr. (multi-site study, transferred to Mt. Sinai) Description: The major goal is testing the sensitivity and specificity of non-invasive (urine) PCR for gonorrhea and Chlamydia versus culture methods in a population of abused pre-pubertal children. Principal Investigators: Danielle Laraque, MD and Sophie Balk, MD (Recipient Organization: American Academy of Pediatrics) Source: NY State Department of Health (administered via MHRA –Medical and Health and Health Research Association of New York City, Inc. Title: Interventions for Tobacco Control in the Community: The Training of Pediatricians in Smoking Cessation Counseling Funding Period: January 2001- May 2001 $15,000 Project Director: Danielle Laraque, MD (PI Bruce Link) Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Title: Columbia University Youth Violence Center: (Pilot project: Zero Tolerance for Violence: Focus Group Discussion with Community and Physician Groups. Funding Period: January 2001- September 30, 2001.- no cost extension to 2003 $3,666 Consultant: External Monitoring Advisory Board Source: MCHB/HRSA (Cooperative Agreement) Title: The Network Development Demonstration Project, North East Regional Node; Pediatric Emergency Department North East Team. Funding Period: October 2001-September 2002 $569,500 (year 1) Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD (competitive selection) Source: New York Academy of Medicine Title: Millie & Richard Brock Visiting Professorship; Nominee Otis Webb Brawley, MD Funding Period: Academic year 2002-2003 Principal Investigators: Danielle Laraque, MD and Deborah Steinbaum Source: Task Force for Tobacco-Free Women and Girls Title: Street Art as an Anti-Smoking Intervention Project Period: December 2000- April 30, 2001 $2,000 9210 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: National Children’s Alliance Titte: Non-Member Training Grant (Child Abuse) Project Period: January 1, 2001-December 31, 2001 $5,000/yr 9210 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: National Children’s Alliance Title: Non-Member Program Development Grant (Child Abuse) Project Period: January 1, 2001-December 31, 2001 $34,803/yr Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Pfizer Medical & Academic Partnerships Title: Pfizer Visiting Professorship Program in Pediatrics Project Period: October 23, 2000 – October 22, 2001 $7,500.00 Sub-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD (PI Margaret Burroughs, MD) Source: Viropharma Title: A double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled safety and efficacy trial of a suspension of formulation of Pleconaril in the treatment of viral upper respiratory infection in children age 2-12 years. Project period: October –Nov 2000 U48/209663, Danielle Laraque, MD Co-Principal Investigator Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Title: Preventing Teenage Pregnancy: The Behavioral Aspect Project Period: 10/97-9/01 $189,000.000/yr Co-Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Supplement to MCHB T 77 MC 00011-06 Source: HRSA Maternal and Child Health Bureau Title: Bright Futures Health Promotion Funding Period: 1998-2001 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Health Care Reform Act , New York State Title: Mount Sinai Pediatric School-based Health Center Program Project Period: 9/22/00 – 9/21/01 $307,802.00 C-013156 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD (as of 9/00) Source: New York State Department of Health Title: Pediatric School-Based Health Program Project Period: July 2000- June 2001 $276,000 (Awarded) Co-Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: HRSA – Human Resources and Services Administration Title: Faculty Development in General Pediatrics (Babies Hospital and Harlem Hospital) Project period: July 2000- June 2003 $231,035 (Not transferred to Mount Sinai) 7320 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: National Children’s Alliance, Child Abuse training. Title: Non-member Training Grant (Federal) Project Period: November 1999- October 2000. $5,000.00 7557 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: National Children’s Alliance. Title:Non-member Program Development Grant (Federal); Child abuse program development. Project Period: November 1999 –October 2000. $31,400.00 MCJ-368742 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Health Resources & Services Administration; Maternal and Child Health Services Federal Set-Aside Program Title: Healthy Tomorrows Partnership for Children Program: Harlem Adolescent and Child Total Services 10/97-9/02. $250,000.00/5 yrs. (not transferred to Mt. Sinai) Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: New York State Department of Health - MHRA Title: Pediatric Resource Center 1986-2000. $250,000.00/yr; (not transferred to Mt. Sinai) 90 AM2121 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Department of Health & Human Services; Administration on Aging Title: Family Friends/Volunteer Senior Aides program.. 10/97-9/00. $210,000.00/3yrs 5 % effort Principal Investigator Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Academy of Pediatrics Title: CATCH -Community Access to Child Health: The Renaissance Adolescent and Child Center Healthy Tomorrows Program: Prevention First. 12/27/95. $10,000.00 U48/209663 Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention Title: Epidemiology and Prevention of Violence in Youth; Harlem Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. 1995-1998 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Johnson & Johnson Title: Adolescent Outreach Program: An approach to injury prevention; 1991-1995 $10,000.00/yr 5U01HS07399 Co-investigator Source: US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Health Care Policy Research Title: Urban Health Institute at Harlem- MEDTEP 9/92-9/97 $ 5,000,000.00/5 years Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Bureau of Maternal and Child Development BRG P02027-01-0, HRSA Title: Pediatric AIDS Health Care Demonstration Projects; 1988-present. Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Juvenile Justice Grant Title: Urban Bike Youth Core Project; 1993-95. $150,000.00 U348/209663 Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Title: The Harlem Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention; Project Director for Computer-Assisted Instruction in Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention; 1990-1993. $20,000.00/yr. Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Title: Prevention of Playground Injury to Children in Central Harlem; 1988-1992. $250,000.00/yr Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Academy of Pediatrics Bicycle Safety Merit Award- 1992. $2,000.00 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: NY State Dept of Social Services Div. of Family and Children Services, Office of Program and Community Development; Children's Justice and Assistance Act Funds Title: Family Support Program (program for the follow-up of sexually abused children); 7/91-12/92 $50,000.00 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: American Academy of Pediatrics-Bicycle Helmet Mini-grant Awardee. Jan 1991 $4,000.00 Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: Under Sponsorship-Burroughs-Wellcome Co. Title: Treatment of Individual Patients with Severe Human Papilloma Virus Disease (Interferon treatment), 1987 Current Grants (in past 5 years) Early Intervention Contract (WRI) Principal Investigator: Laraque D. Title: Early Intervention and MMC Project Budget and Period: $108,090/6months Jan1, 2014-June 30, 2014; July1, 2014-June 30, 2015 ($216,180); Total contract, $324,270 for the 18 month period. Description: Maimonides Medical Center (MMC) entered into an agreement to provide services to the Division of Mental Hygiene with the following deliverables in two time periods. Phase I of the EI-MMC Project which engaged the Maimonides Medical Center research team to develop a set of research areas and questions to be considered for long-term clinical projects, possible grant funding, and/or more rigorous research applications. Additionally, the effort was to identify possible evaluation and research measures to be applied to current and future programmatic activities. The development of an EI algorithm, physician guide was an additional component to the contract. AmeriCares Foundation, Inc. Project: USA: NY - Pediatric Disaster Mental Health Intervention (PDMHI) Grant #: 900-13HT-511 Principal Investigators: D. Laraque and G. Foltin Budget: $174,570. Budget Period: 2013-2014 Description: To improve the delivery system of post-disaster mental health services to targeted child and adolescent victims of Hurricane Sandy using an evidenced informed educational intervention. Friends of Children Grant: American Academy of Pediatrics Principal Investigator: District II Chair - Laraque Responding to the Needs of Pediatricians following Hurricane Sandy. Budget: $44, 650 Budget Period: 2013-2014 Description: To develop the network of resources to support pediatricians responding to needs of children and adolescents in the wake of Hurricane Sandy in concert with an educational intervention. Early Intervention Contract (WRI) Principal Investigator: Laraque D. Title: Early Intervention and MMC Project Budget: $60,000 Budget Period: Jan-June 2013 Description: Maimonides Medical Center (MMC) entered into an agreement to provide services to the Division of Mental Hygiene with the following deliverables in two time periods. Phase I of the EI-MMC Project which engaged the Maimonides Medical Center research team to develop a set of research areas and questions to be considered for long-term clinical projects, possible grant funding, and/or more rigorous research applications. Additionally, the effort was to identify possible evaluation and research measures to be applied to current and future programmatic activities. The development of an EI algorithm, physician guide was an additional component to the contract. R-44 NICHD in response to PA-11-096- PHS 2011-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, FDA and ACF for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44]) Principal Investigators: Laraque D. and Lucy Bruell Title: Stop, Look and Listen: Separating Fact from Fiction in Evaluation Cases of Child Abuse: An Interactive Learning tool for Pediatricians. Phase II. Budget Period: Aug 1, 2012- July 31, 2014; ($934,666); No cost extension August 1, 2014-July 30, 2015. Description: Phase II of Stop, Look and Listen expands on the work done in Phase I by expanding on the number of cases to round out the understanding of child physical abuse and that objective, evidence-based, culturally sensitive, interdisciplinary assessments will lead to improvement in the process of reporting of abuse as well as accuracy in the suspicion of abuse. A preliminary randomized control study of senior pediatric residents and practicing pediatricians to evaluate whether SLL meets its training identified training goals will also be conducted. Maimonides Medical Center Research and Development Foundation Grant. Co-Investigator; (Mary Rojas, PhD PI) Title: Do Implicit Biases Affect Providers’ Child Abuse Reporting? Two years; $ 85,012 Budget Period: 2011-2014 Description: The study consists of two sub-studies using qualitative and quantitative methods. The first sub-study uses a randomized experimental design to examine whether providers are more likely to suspect and report child abuse based on race of the child/family. Using an online tool, providers rate their level of suspicion of abuse and likelihood of reporting after reading 8-12 vignettes describing child injuries cases. Accuracy and racial preferences will be measured. The second sub-study consists of focus groups with providers to identify the reasons for disparities in reporting after they have completed the vignettes. HRSA (MCHB) Principal Investigators: Laraque D. Title: New York (NY) Collaborative Office Rounds (COR): Reaching Children and Teens. $75,000/5 years Budget Period: June 2011-June 2016 Description: Collaborative Office Rounds processes are used to augment primary care clinicians’ comfort with management of mental issues in children presenting in their practices. R-43 NICHD (funded) in response to RFA-OD-09-009/The SBIR Small Business Catalyst Award for Accelerating Innovative Research, Trans-NIH Recovery Act Research Support. Principal Investigators: Laraque D and Lucy Bruell Title: Stop, Look and Listen: Separating Fact from Fiction in Evaluation Cases of Child Abuse: An Interactive Learning tool for Pediatricians. Budget Period: April 2010-March 2011 ($200,000) Description: Phase I of Stop, Look and Listen (SLL) involves the development of an online interactive teaching tool designed to improve physicians’ confidence and accuracy in identifying and reporting cases suspicious for child physical abuse Collaborating Investigator – (PI EW Jabs, LD Richardson, S. Sanderson) Institute for Personalized Medicine (IPM) Seed Grant Program Title: Project ENGAGE – (Evaluating Information Needs to Generate Community Engagement and Genomics Education) Charles Bronfman Institute of Personalized Medicine at MSSM (Year 1 $100,000) Budget period: September 1, 2009-Agust 31, 2010 Description: This project aims to engage the local community in genomics through a community consultation process (initially focusing on diabetes) Empire Clinical Research Investigator Award Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Title: Multiple Family Group (MFG) service delivery strategy to reduce urban youth oppositional and conduct problems. Budget Period: July 1, 2009-2011 ($150,000/2yrs) Description: The study will test the impact of the MFG on child mental health and on various parent and family-level outcomes. The overall goal of the fellowship is to train a general academic pediatric clinician-researcher with special emphasis on children’s mental health (MH) services research. The research fellow (under direct mentorship) will be immersed in all aspects of the described project, from assessment to delivery to examination of the implementation process and outcomes. Validation of a primary care functional assessment tool for youth with disruptive behaviors will be a specific sub-goal of this project. New York Community Trust Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque Title: Reaching Children Initiative: Web-based Clinical Decision Support Network for Pediatric Primary Care. Budget Period: 10/2008-9/2010 ($150,000) Description: To integrate web-based decision support system into pediatric primary care. 1R21-HD057394-01 Co-investigator: Danielle Laraque (PI Katherine Loeb) Title: Parent-Based Treatment for Pediatric Overweight (PO) Budget Period: 07/01/2008-06/30/10 Description: To develop a parent focused intervention for PO that addresses the unique needs of adolescents and modifies parenting practices Principal Investigator: Danielle Laraque, MD Source: NYS DOH Title: Pediatric School Based Health Center Funding Period: July 2007-June 2012 Total operating budget varies each year: 2008-9: $1,235,840 all sources of NYS funding Description: The major goal is the support of comprehensive school-based primary care services in the East Harlem community. Co-Director: Laraque, Danielle (PI: Lawrence Kleinman; other Co-PI Thomas McGinn) Research Training Program in Primary Care and Health Policy T32HP1062 Project Period: 7/08-6/11; $305,454/year 1 Description: The Mount Sinai Primary Care Fellowship in Health Services and Health Policy Research (MSPCF) is dedicated to recruiting a diverse cadre of talented post doctoral individuals and to developing them into leaders in primary care research for the United States. Co-Director; Co-Principal Investigator for General and Community Pediatrics (PI: Philip Landrigan; other Co-PI David Savitz) Research Training Program in Environmental Pediatrics 1T32 HD049311-01A1 Project Period: 4/1/07 - 3/31/12 (NICHHD) Direct Costs for Initial Budget Period: $168,302 Description: To establish a three-year research fellowship program in environmental pediatrics at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. The goal is to provide clinically trained pediatricians with research training in a clinical context to enable them to become clinician-scientists and future academic leaders in environmental pediatrics. Patents None Boards and Community Organizations 2006-present Westchester Children’s Association 2007-present Reach Out and Read Greater New York’s Advisory Board 2011-2014 American Academy of Pediatrics (see above under organizational involvement) 2013-present History of Women in Medicine REACH Institute Activities: 2006-2012 Steering Committee Member 2006-2012 Faculty – Mini-fellowship in Psychopharmacology 2012-present Advisor to the REACH Institute Military Service None Other None BIBLIOGRAPHY A. Original, peer-reviewed articles (in chronological order) 1. Clancy R, Malin S, Laraque D, Baumgart S, Younkin D: Focal Motor Seizures Heralding Stroke in Full-Term Neonates; American J Dis of Children , June 1985;139:601-606 2. Fennoy I and Laraque D: Benign Transient Hyperphosphatasia and HIV Infection. Clinical Pediatrics, April 1989;28(4):180-4. 3. Laraque D: Severe Anogenital Warts in a Child with HIV Infection. NEJM May 4, 1989; 320(18):1220-1221. 4. Laraque D, McCormick M, Norman M, Taylor A, Weller SC, Karp J: Blood lead, calcium status and behavior in black pre-school children. AJDC Feb 1990;144:186-89. 5. Laraque D, Kanem N, Mitchell J: The Difficult Road for the Minority Researcher, NEJM June 21, 1990;322(25);1823. (letter) 6. Laraque D, Arena L, Karp J, Gruskay D: Bone mineral content in black pre-schoolers: normative data using single photon absorptiometry. Ped Radiol, 1990 20:461-463. 7. Davis E, Fennoy I, Laraque D, Kanem N., Brown G., Mitchell J. : Autism and Developmental Abnormalities in a Cohort of children with perinatal poly-drug exposure. J Natl Med Assoc. 1992;84:315-319. 8. Laraque D, Barlow B, Davidson L, Welborn C: Central Harlem Playground Injury Project: A Model for Change. American Journal of Public Health October 1994, 84(10):1691-1692 9. Davidson LL, Barlow B, Thompkins T, Bey-Grecia A, Weeks S, Laraque D, Durkin M. Beyond the Hospital's Ivory Tower: Community Injury Prevention in Harlem. CHILD Nov 1994; 3-5. 10. Laraque D, Barlow B, Durkin M, Howell J, Cladis F, Friedman D, DiScala C, Ivatury R, and Stahl W. Children Who Are Shot: A 30 year experience. Journal of Pediatric Surgery, July 1995; 30(7):1072-1076. 11. Laraque D, Ravenell J, DiScala C, Barlow B, and Cooper A. Child abuse: What have we learned and where are we going? Current Issues in Public Health, June 1995, 1:122-130. 12. Laraque D, Barlow B, Durkin M, and Heagarty M. Injury prevention in an urban setting: challenges and successes. The Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine: A Journal of Urban Health 1995; 72(1):16-30. 13. Durkin, MS, Kuhn L, Davidson LL, Laraque D, and Barlow B. Epidemiology and prevention of severe assault and gun injuries to children in an urban community. The J of Trauma, 1996; 41(4): 667-673. 14. Najib N*, Laraque D, Leung J. Failure to thrive during Ramadan: A case report. Clinical Pediatrics, June 1996; 35(6):323-325. 15. Laraque D. Our Ailing Public Hospitals. NEJM, 1996; 334(9): 597. (letter) 16. Laraque D, Mitchell J. A Matter of Trust: HIV Mandatory Testing. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med; May 1996; 150: 556-557. 17. Brown-Peterside P* and Laraque D. A community research model: A challenge to public health. AJPH September 1997: 87(9):1563-1564. 18. Laraque D, McLean D, Brown-Peterside P, Ashton, D, Diamond B. Predictors of condom use in Central Harlem youth as conceptualized by the Health Belief Model. Journal of Adolescent Health, 1997;21:318-327. 19. Durkin M, Laraque D, Lubman I, Barlow B. Epidemiology and Prevention of Traffic Injuries to Urban Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics, June 1999; 103(6): p.e74. 20. Hammerschlag M, Ajl S, Laraque, D. Inappropriate use of Non-culture Tests for the Detection of Chlamydia trachomatis in Suspected Victims of Child Sexual Abuse: A Continuing Problem. Pediatrics 1999; 104:1137-1139. 21. Laraque D, Barlow B, Durkin M. Prevention of youth injuries. Journal of National Medical Association. October 1999, 91(10):557-571. 22. Laraque D, Spivak H, Bull M. Serious Firearm Injury Prevention Does Make Sense. Pediatrics, February 2001; 107(2):408-411. 23. Benjamin JT, Cimino SA, Hafler JP and the Bright Futures Health Promotion Workgroup*, Bernstein HH. (*Benjamin JT, Blaschke G, D”Alessandro D, Hafler JP, Laraque D, Lopreiato J, Palfrey JS, Pan R, Pickles D, Sectish TC, Shariat H, Shaw JS, Trimm F). Contemporary Pediatrics, February 2002; 19(2): 90-106. 24. Kalmuss D, Davidson A, Cohall A, Laraque D, Cassell. Pregnancy and Disease Prevention: Linkages Between Research and Programs. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health. 2003 Mar-Apr; Volume 35(2): 87-93. 25. Hahn RA, Bilukha OO, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Liberman A, Moscicki EK, Snyder S, Tuma F, Schofield, A, Corso PS, Briss P; Task Force on Community Preventive Services (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review). First reports evaluating the effectiveness of strategies for preventing violence: Early Childhood Home Visitation. Findings from the Task Force on Community Preventive Services. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2003 Oct 3; 52(RR-14):1-9. 26. Hahn RA, Bilukha OO, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Liberman A, Moscicki EK, Snyder S, Tuma F, Briss P;Task Force on Community Preventive Services (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review). First reports evaluating the effectiveness of strategies for preventing violence: firearms laws. Findings from the Task Force on Community Preventive Services. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2003 Oct 3; 52(RR-14):11-20. 27. Laraque D, Boscarino JA, Battista A, Fleischman, A, Casalino M, Hu YY, Ramos S, Adams RE, Schmidt J, Chemtob C. Reactions and Needs of Tri-state area Pediatricians following the events of September 11: Implications for Children’s Mental Health Services. Pediatrics. 2004 May;113(5):1357-66. 28. Hahn RA, Lowy J, Bilukha O, Snyder S, Briss P, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Tuma F, Moscicki EK, Liberman A, Schofield A, Corso PS: CDC Task Force on Community Preventive Services. (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review) Therapeutic foster care for the prevention of violence: a report on recommendations of the Task Force on Community Preventive Services. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2004 Jul 2;53(RR-10):1-8. 29. Moskowitz, H*., Laraque, D, Doucette J, Shelov E. Relationships of United States Youth Homicide Victims and their Offenders: 1976-1999. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2005; 159:356-361. 30. Ho WW*, Brandfield J, Laraque D. Complexities in HIV Consent in Adolescents. Clinical Pediatrics, July/August 2005; 44:473-478. 31. Hahn R, Bilukha O, Lowy J, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Liberman A, Moscicki E, Snyder S, Tuma F, Corso P, Schofield A, and Task Force on Community Preventive Services. The effectiveness of therapeutic foster care for the prevention of violence. A systematic review. (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review) Am J Prev Med 2005;28(2S1): 72-90. 32. Hahn R, Bilukha O, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Liberman A, Moscicki E, Snyder A, Tuma F, Briss PA, Task Force on Community Preventive Services. Firearms Laws and the Reduction of Violence. A Systematic Review (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review) Am J Prev Med 2005;28(2S1): 40-71. 33. Bilukha O, Hahn RA, Crosby A, Fullilove MT, Liberman A, Moscicki E, Snyder S, Tuma F, Corso P, Schofield A, Briss PA, Task Force on Community Preventive Services. (Laraque, D. Consultation team of systematic review) Am J Prev Med 2005;28(2S1): 11-39. 34. DeMattia AE*, Kornblum J, Hoffman-Rosenfeld J, Trees DL, Laraque D. The Use of Combination Subtyping in the Evaluation of a Three-Year-Old Girl with Neisseria Gonorrhoeae. The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal; 25(5):461-463. May 2006. 35. Hu YY*, Adams R, Boscarino J, Laraque D. Training Needs of Pediatricians Facing the Environmental Health and Bioterrorism Consequences of September 11th. Mount Sinai Journal, December 2006; 73(8): 1156-1164 36. DeMattia, A*, Moskowitz, H, Kemper, KJ, Laraque, D. Who Receives Appropriate Recommendations about Complementary and Alternative Medical Therapies? Amb. Pediatr.2006 Nov-Dec;6(6):312-7. 37. Trasande L*, Schechter C, Falk R, Graber N, Boscarino J, Dunkel G, Geslani J, Kaplan-Liss E, Moline J, Miller RK, Korfmacher K, Carpenter D, Balk SJ, Laraque D, Frumkin H, Landrigan PJ. The Environment in Pediatric Practice: A Study of New York Pediatricians' Attitudes, Beliefs, and Practices towards Children's Environmental Health. . Journal of Urban Health;2006 May 31; Epub ahead of print. and Jul;83(4):760-72. 38. Chemtob CM, Conroy DL, , Hochhauser CJ, Laraque D, Banks J, Schmeidler J, Dela-Cruz M, Nelsen WC, Landrigan PJ. Children Who Lost a Parent as a Result of the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001: Registry Construction and Population Description. Death Stud. 2007 Jan-Feb;31(1):87-100. 39. Laraque D, DeMattia A, Low C. Forensic Child Abuse Evaluation: A review. The Mount Sinai Journal, December 2006; 73(8):1138-1147. 40. Waite E*, Laraque D. Pediatric Organ Transplant Patients and Long-Term Care: A Review. The Mount Sinai Journal, December 2006; 73(8):1148-1155. 41. Laraque D. Pediatric Generalism: Emergent Issues. The Mount Sinai Journal, December 2006; 73(8): 1137. 42. Zuckerbrot R, Cheung A, Jensen PS, Stein REK, Laraque D, and the GLAD PC Steering Group Steering Group. Guidelines for Adolescent Depression in Primary Care (GLAD-PC) Parts I. Identification, Assessment and Initial Management. Pediatrics, 2007;120;e1299-1312. 43. Cheung A, Zuckerbrot R, Jensen P, Ghalib K, Laraque D, Stein REK and the GLAD PC Steering Group Steering Group. Guidelines for Adolescent Depression in Primary Care (GLAD-PC) Part II. Treatment and Ongoing Management. Pediatrics, 2007;120;e1313-1326. 44. Cheung A, Zuckerbrot R, Jensen P, Stein R, Laraque D. Expert Survey for the Management of Adolescent Depression in Primary Care. Pediatrics, Pediatrics. 2008 Jan;121(1):e101-e107. 45. Steinbaum DP*, Chemtob C, Boscarino JA, Laraque D. Use of a Psychosocial Screen to Detect Children with Symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: An Exploratory Study. Ambulatory Pediatrics; 2008; Jan-Feb 8(1);32-35. 46. Brawley OW, Cornelius LJ, Edwards LR, Gamble VN, Green BL, Inturrisi CE, James AH, Laraque D, Mendez MH, Montoya CJ, Pollock BH, Robinson L, Scholnik AP, Schori M. NIH Consensus Development Statement on Hydroxyurea Treatment for Sickle Cell Disease: Draft. NIH Consens State Sci Statements. 2008 Feb 27;25(1) [Epub ahead of print] 47. Ho WW, Adams RE, Boscarino JA, Laraque D. The prevalence and characteristics of childhood overweight in a multiethnic, school-based health setting. Ethn Dis. 2008 Winter;18(1):98-103. 48. Brawley OW, Cornelius LJ, Edwards LR, Gamble VN, Green BL, Inturrisi CE, James AH, Laraque D, Mendez MH, Montoya CJ, Pollock BH, Robinson L, Scholnik AP, Schori M. NIH Consensus Development Statement on Hydroxyurea Treatment for Sickle Cell Disease. Ann Intern Med. 2008 May 5. [Epub ahead of print] 49. Laraque D and Szilagyi PG. Disparities in Utilization of Mental Health Services: Explanations and Possible Solutions. Acad Pediatr. 2009 Mar-Apr; 9(2):65-6. 50. Laraque, D, Adams R, Steinbaum D, Zuckerbrot R, Schonfeld D, Jensen P, Demaria T, Barrett M, Dela-Cruz M, Boscarino JA. Reported Physician Skills in the Management of Children's Mental Health Problems following an Educational Intervention. Academic Pediatrics 2009; 9:164-71. 51. Laraque D. A Moral Imperative for Children. JAMA, August 26, 2009—Vol. 302, No. 8 52. Oreskovic N, Kuhlthau, KA. Laraque D, Serwint J, Schuster, M. Health Care Reform for children: Views from the Academic Pediatric Association. Academic Pediatrics;10(3):153-154; May-June 2010. 53. Meschan J, Kellerher KJ, Laraque D for the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Mental Health. Enhancing Pediatric Mental Health Care: Strategies for Preparing a Primary Care Practice. Pediatrics; 125, Supplement 3, June 2010; 887-108. 54. Laraque D and Sia CCJ. Health Care Reform and the Opportunity to Implement a Family-Centered Medical Home for Children. JAMA June 16, 2010; 303(23): 2407-2408. 55. Stille C, Turchi RM, Antonelli R, Cabana MD, Cheng TL, Laraque D, Perrin J. The Academic Pediatric Association Task Force on the Family-Centered Medical Home. July-August 2010 Academic Pediatrics,;10)4):211-217. 56. Walker-Descartes I*, Laraque D, Sealy, Y, Rojas, M. Caregiver Perceptions and Prompts to Outreach after a Disclosure of Child Sexual Abuse. Child Abuse Negl. 2011 Jun; 35(6):437-47. Epub 2011 Jun 8. 57. Laraque D. Global Child Health: Reaching the Tipping Point for All Children. Academic Pediatrics, 2011 May – June issue, Volume 11(3): 226-233. 58. Berger-Jenkins E*, McKay M, Newcorn J, Bannon W, Laraque D. Parent Medication Concerns Predict Underutilization of Mental Health Services for Minority Children with ADHD. Clin Pediatr, 2011 Aug 25 [Epub ahead of print]. 59. Laraque D., Etzel R.and the Public Policy and Advocacy Committee. Statement of Principles: APA-Industry relationship. Acad Pediatr. 2011 Sept-Oct;11(5):355-6. 60. Knapp P, Chait A, Pappadopulos E, Crystal S, Jensen PS; on behalf of the T-MAY Steering Group (Laraque D- Steering Group Collaborating Member). Treatment of Maladaptive Aggression in Youth: CERT Guidelines I. Engagement, Assessment, and Management. Pediatrics. 2012 Jun;129 (6):e1562-e1576. Epub 2012 May 28. 61. Scotto Rosato N, Correll CU, Pappadopulos E, Chait A, Crystal S, Jensen PS; (Laraque D- Steering Group Collaborating Member) Treatment of Maladaptive Aggressive in Youth Steering Committee. Treatment of maladaptive aggression in youth: CERT guidelines II. Treatments and ongoing management. Pediatrics. 2012 Jun; 129 (6):e1577-86. Epub 2012 May 28. Review. PMID: 22641763 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] 62. Frintner, MP, Mendoza, FS, Dreyer BP, Cull WL, Laraque D. Resident Cross-Cultural Training, Satisfaction and Preparedness. Academic Pediatrics, 13(1):65-71. January 2013. 63. Chemtob CM, Gudino OG, Laraque D. Maternal PTSD and Depression in Pediatric Primary Care: Association with Child Maltreatment and Frequency of Child Trauma Exposure. JAMA Pediatr. Doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2013.2218. 64. Adams RE, Laraque D. Chemtob CM, Jensen PS, Boscarino JA. Does a One-Day Educational Training Session Influence Primary Care Pediatricians’ Mental Health Practice Procedures in Response to a Community Disaster? Results from the Reaching Children Initiative (RCI). Innovative Journal of Medical and Health Science [IJMHS]; 2013;15(1):3-14. 65. Laraque D. The New York Project TEACH (CAP-PC and CAPES Programs): Origins and Successes. Gen Hosp Psychiatry (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2014.07.002. 66. O'Hara M*, Legano L, Homel P, PhD; Walker- Descartes I, Rojas M, Laraque D. Children Neglected: Where Cumulative Risk Theory Fails. Child Abuse Negl. 2015 Apr 10. pii: S0145-2134(15)00089-7. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2015.03.007. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 25869185 *Mentee B. Peer-reviewed American Academy of Pediatric Policy Statements and Technical Reports (in chronological order; PubMed listing in the early years not available by author, but later, 2004 on, searchable by author) 67. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention and Committee on Adolescence. The teenage driver. Pediatrics, November 1996;98(5):990. 68. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. In-line Skating Injuries in Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics. April 1998; 101(4):720-722. 69. Laraque, D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. The hospital record of the injured child and the need for external cause-of-injury codes. Pediatrics 1999 Feb;103(2):524-6. 70. Laraque D. (lead author) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Trampolines in Home, School, and Recreational Centers. Pediatrics, May 1999; 103(5) part 1 of 2:1053. 71. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Native American Health and Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. The Prevention of Unintentional Injury Among American Indian and Alaska Native Children: A Subject Review. Pediatrics; December 1999, 104(6): 1397-1399. 72. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Personal Watercraft Use by Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics; Feb 2000, 105(2):452-453. 73. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Personal Watercraft Use by Children and Adolescents. 105(2):452-453. 74. Laraque D. (member) Committee on Sports Medicine and Fitness and Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Pediatrics; 105(4) April 200, 868-870. 75. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. All Terrain Vehicle Injury Prevention. Pediatrics; 105(6):1352-1354. 76. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Deaths and Injuries from Residential Fires. Pediatrics; 105(6):135501357. 77. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Swimming Programs for Infants and Toddlers. Pediatrics; April 2000; 105(4), Part 1 of 2:868-870. 78. Laraque D. (lead author) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Firearm-Related Injuries Affecting the Pediatric Population. Pediatrics; April 2000; 105(4), Part 1 of 2:888-895. 79. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Children in Pickup Trucks. Pediatrics, October 2000; 106(4): Part 1 of 2; 857-859. 80. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Falls from Heights: Windows, Roofs, and Balconies. Pediatrics, May 2001; 107(5):1188-1191. (Also Technical Report: www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/107/6/e106) 81. Gary A. Smith and the Committee on injury and Poison Prevention (D. Laraque, member). Technical Report: Lawn Mower-Related Injuries to Children. Pediatrics; 107(6) June 2001, e106. 82. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Fireworks-Related Injuries to Children. Pediatric, July 2001; 108(1):190-191. 83. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. School Bus Transportation of Children with Special Health Care Needs. Pediatrics; August 2001:108(2):516-518. 84. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Injuries Associated With Infant Walkers. Pediatrics; September 2001: 108(3):790-792. 85. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention and Committee on Community Health Services-APA liaison. Prevention of Agricultural Injuries among Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics; October 2001: 108(4):1016-1019. 86. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Bicycle Helmets. Pediatrics; October 2001: 108(4):1030-1032. 87. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Restraint Use on Aircraft. Pediatrics; November 2001: 108(5):1218-1221. 88. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Selecting and Using the Most Appropriate Care Safety Seats. March 2002 Pediatrics; 109(3):550-553. 89. Laraque D. (member) American Academy of Pediatrics, Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention. Skateboard and Scooter Injuries. March 2002. Pediatrics; 109(3):542-543. 90. Laraque D. (lead author) and the Committee on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention. Technical Report: The risks of non-powder guns. Pediatrics; 114(5): 13571361. November 2004 91. Laraque D. (member) and American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Committee on Health Care Access and Economics Task Force on Mental Health. Improving mental health services in primary care: reducing administrative and financial barriers to access and collaboration. Pediatrics. 2009 Apr; 123 (4):1248-51. No abstract available. 92. Laraque D (member) and the Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health and Task Force on Mental Health. The future of pediatrics: mental health competencies for pediatric primary care. Pediatrics, 2009 Jul;124 (1):410-21. 93. Laraque D (Task Force Member). Report from the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Mental Health: Introduction. Pediatrics 2010. Jun:125 Supple3: S75-86. 94. Laraque D (Task Force Member). Enhancing pediatric mental health care: strategies for preparing a community. Pediatrics 2010. Jun:125 Supple3: S75-86. 95. Laraque D (Task Force member). Enhancing pediatric mental health care: algorithms for primary care. Pediatrics 2010 Jun: 125 Suppl 3:S109-25. 96. Laraque D (Vision 2020 Task Force Member). Pediatrics in the year 2020 and beyond: preparing for plausible futures. Pediatrics 2010 Nov; 126(5):971-81. 97. Laraque D (Vision 2020 Task Force Member). Peering into the future: pediatrics in a changing world. Pediatrics 2010 Nov; 126(5): 982-8. Epub 2010 Oct 18 C. Invited contributions 98. Laraque D: Injury Prevention in the New York State Pediatrician-American Academy of Pediatrics District II 1990-1991, page 9; page 12 in Fall 1992. 99. Laraque D. Helmet Laws Save Lives in City Cyclist. May/June 1993, Transportation Alternatives. pp 12. 100. Laraque D. Commentary on the "Adolescents Training and Learning to Avoid Steroids (ATLAS) Prevention Program." Ambulatory Child Health -Current literature, Adolescent and student health monitor; 2: 288. (1997). 101. Laraque D. Commentary on the "Ethnicity and body dissatisfaction: Are Hispanic and Asian girls at increased risk for eating disorders? Ambulatory Child Health -Current literature, Adolescent and student health monitor; 3(1): 85. (1997) 102. Laraque D. Commentary on the "Nicotine Patch Therapy in Adolescent Smoker." Ambulatory Child Health -Current literature, Adolescent and student health monitor; 2: 385. (1997) 103. Madad S*. and Laraque D. Commentary on the "Patterns of smoking among inner-city teenagers: Smoking has a pediatric age of onset," Ambulatory Child Health -Current literature, Adolescent and student health monitor; 3: 301-302. (1997) 104. Laraque D. Commentary on “Safety Behaviors of Abused Women after an Intervention during Pregnancy.” Ambulatory Child Health, Current literature, Adolescent and Student Health Monitor. (1999) 105. Laraque D. A Call to End Gun Violence. American Academy of Pediatrics, News. June 1999. 106. Laraque, D. Disasters and Terrorism: Giving Children Hope. Washington Post, Tuesday, October 4, 2005. (Supplement) 107. Laraque D. and Leonardo Trasande*, MD, MPP. Lead Poisoning: Successes and 21st Century Challenges. Pediatrics in Review. December 2005 26(12):429-436. 108. Laraque D. Health Promotion: Core Concepts in Building Successful Clinical Encounters. Pediatric Annals; 37(4): April 2008. 109. Hospital Guidelines for Pediatric Preparedness. (http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/downloads/pdf/bhpp/hepp-peds-childrenindisasters-010709.pdf ) Centers for Bioterrorism Preparedness Program Pediatric Task Force NYC DOHMH Pediatric Disaster Advisory Group NYC DOHMH Healthcare Emergency Preparedness Program; 2009 D. Books and chapters in books 110. Laraque D, Barlow B. Prevention of Pediatric Injury. In the Textbook of Penetrating Trauma. Chapter 9, Eds. Williams & Wilkins Ivatury, 1996. 111. Laraque D, Cooper A, Barlow B. Emergency Medical Services for Children: An Overview. In APLS, The Pediatric Emergency Medicine Course, 3rd Edition. 1998, Dallas, Texas. American College of Emergency Medicine and American Academy of Pediatrics, Elk Grove Village, IL. School Health: Policy and Practice, 6th Edition; Manual of the American Academy of Pediatrics, 2002 (Reviewer) 112. Laraque D. Integrating Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness Into Your Pediatric Practice: In: Pediatric Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness: A Resource for Pediatricians. Summary. AHRQ Publication No. 06(07)-0056-1. Rockville, MD: Agency for Health care Research and Quality. September 2006. (Editors: Foltin, G, Schonfeld D, Shannon M. American Academy of Pediatrics) 113. Laraque D, Lopreiato, Pickles D. Partnership: Building Effective Partnerships. In Bernstein, HH. Editor-in-Chief. Pediatrics in Practice: A Health Promotion Curriculum for Child Health Professionals. New York: Springer Publishing Company, Inc. 2005, 23-65. 114. Shaw JS, Roth EJ, Pan R, Laraque D. Advocacy: Advocating for Children, Families, and Communities. In Bernstein, HH. Editor-in-Chief. Pediatrics in Practice: A Health Promotion Curriculum for Child Health Professionals. New York: Springer Publishing Company, Inc. 2005, 223-253 115. Bright Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children and Adolescents, Third Edition. Joseph F. Hagan, Jr. MD, FAAP; Judith S. Shaw, RN, MPH, EdD; and Paula Duncan, MD, FAAP, Editors. D. Laraque Listed in Volunteers – Advisory Group for Health Promotion. ©American Academy of Pediatrics, 2007. 116. Laraque D, Hoagwood H, Hoagwood K. Managing Adolescent Depression: Issues of Confidentiality, Working with Parents, and Engaging Youth as Active Partners in Managing Adolescent Depression: the Complete Guide for Primary Care Clinicians. Editors R. Zuckerbrot, A. Cheung, P. Jensen, R. Stein. Publisher, Civic Research Institute, 2011. 117. Committee on Integrating Primary Care and Public Health (Laraque D, IOM Committee Member), Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice Primary Care and Public Health. Institute of Medicine of the National Academies. The National Academies Press, Washington, DC. 2012. www.nap.edu, www.iom.edu 118. Dapul H*, Laraque D. Lead Poisoning in Children. Adv Pediatr. 2014 Aug; 61(1):313-333. doi: 10.1016/j.yapd.2014.04.004. Review. No abstract available. 119. Alvarado G*, Laraque D. Adjustment Disorder in Children. AAP Textbook of Pediatric Care. (in press) *Mentee Educationally Relevant Publications i.e., description of the development and/or publication of educational materials, e.g., teaching cases, computer software, innovative audiovisuals (include a sample copy on CD or DVD or list URL where appropriate); development of major curricular offerings or innovative educational programs at HMS or hospital. MEDIA RESOURCE EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS* Laraque, D. Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents. Part of the Bright Futures Health Promotion Video. Boston (MA): Bright Futures Health Promotion Workgroup; 2000. Laraque, D. Core Concepts in Health Promotion. In Green, M, Palfrey JS, Clark EM, Anastasi JM, eds. 2000. Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children and Adolescents. Second Edition, Pocket Guide. Arlington VA: National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health,. P.vii-xii. Pediatrics in Practice Website –A Health Promotion Curriculum. www.pediatricsinpractice.org Launched November 1, 2003. Laraque D, Jensen P, Schonfeld D. Feelings Need Check Ups Too: Addressing the mental health needs of children in response to September 11th and other catastrophic events: An educational resource for pediatricians (c). CD-ROM and booklet, @American Academy of Pediatrics, September 2004. Laraque, D. Program Developer/Contributor to Connected Kids: Safe, Strong, Secure program on CD-ROM – Violence and Injury Prevention Project. Publisher: American Academy of Pediatrics. 2006. http://www.aap.org/ConnectedKids/ClinicalGuide.pdf. Laraque D and ACMG Newborn Screening Work Group. American College of Medical Genetics’ Report to HRSA/MCHB Newborn Screening: Toward a Uniform Screening Panel and System; NEWBORN SCREENING ACT SHEETS AND CONFIRMATORY ALGORITHMS –e-publication., 2006 Laraque D, Jensen P, Schonfeld D. Feelings Need Check Ups Too: Addressing the mental health needs of children in response to September 11th and other catastrophic events: An educational resource for pediatricians (c). Toolkit @American Academy of Pediatrics, September 2006. Designed by: L.A. Bruell Inc. Parenting for Dummies. Randall Production, June 2003 – aired September 16, 2003 9 pm EST (videotape available) Pediatric Health. New Morbidities: ADHD and Depression. ITV and American Academy of Pediatrics, October 2008. DVD. Other including Non-Print Materials, e.g., filmstrips, films, videotapes and computer software relevant to appointee’s academic field (include a sample copy on CD or DVD or list URL where appropriate). Injury Free Coalition for Children – website. http://www.injuryfree.org/about_history.cfm Laraque D. Pediatrician Column. HealthQuest Magazine. Toy Safety and the Holidays. Dec/Jan. 2001. AAP Kids Health Works Video, Episode 130 – Segment on Bullying. Information Television Network, 621 NW 53rd Street, Suite 350, Baco Raton, Florida, 33487. www.itvisus.com. (888) 380-6500. Community Ideas for Improving Access – Compendium – American Academy of Pediatrics, 2002. (Project Advisory Committee member). Strategies for System Change in Children’s Mental Health: A Chapter Action Kit. Task Force on Mental Health. Laraque D. Member and Contributor. Copyright©2007 American Academy of Pediatrics. USA. Addressing Mental Health Concerns in Primary Care, A Clinicians Toolkit. American Academy of Pediatrics. AAP Mental Health Task Force member participating in the development of the toolkit. Copyright© June 2010. Treatment of Maladaptive Behavior in Youth Toolkit (T-MAY) may be accessed via the following URL: http://www.chainonline.org/content.cfm?menu_id=232. (T-MAY Steering Committee and participating developer of toolkit) June 2010. * Not listed are the numerous radio talk interviews and network television interviews around the country, focusing mostly on injury prevention and children’s mental health but representing an array of pediatric issues. In 2002 this included appearance on 60 minutes on the issue of gun violence. A video of the 60 minutes program is available. *Proceedings of Meetings, i.e., published reports of meetings for which papers were selected and which contain new data. To be listed only when they contain data not published in another journal or other medium. National Health Policy Forum, Youth Violence Prevention: How Does the Health Care Sector Respond? A background paper prepared by Anthony S. Raden, PhD, Consultant. Citations from Laraque –pages 6, 9-11. Abstracts – to be listed only when they contain data not yet published in complete form. PUBLISHED ABSTRACTS (most abstracts published as full manuscripts and not listed below) Laraque D, McCormick M, Norman M, Taylor A, Weller SC, Karp J. Blood lead, calcium status and pica in black pre-school children. Clinical Digest series: 1(11); 30, Nov 1990. (Chosen as outstanding paper – international distribution, therefore noted here). Laraque D, Brown-Peterside P, Borgia V. Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention: A computer-assisted intervention. AJDC April 1992; 146 (4):511. Moskowitz H, Laraque, D et al. Zero Tolerance for Violence: Parent and Physician Focus Groups. Pediatric Academic Societies, Abstract # 1108, April 2003: 53(4):195A (Part 2 of 2) Kamath, S, Rosen, C, Adams, R and Laraque, D. (Senior Mentor for fellow) Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Latino and African-American Early School Age Children. Pediatric Academic Societies: Abstract # 272, course number 3561; April 30, 2006. O’Hara M, Legano L, Homel P, Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Laraque D. (Senior Mentor for fellow). Children Neglected: Where Cumulative Risk Theory Fails. Presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting, May 2-4, 2014. Poster presentation. Agarwal A, Ogwara F, Khemani J, Homel P, Laraque D, Bhutada A, Filipov P. (SPR Sponsor for Pediatric Resident) Contrast Enema and Risk of Sepsis in Premature Infants: 12 year Retrospective Review. Presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting, May 2-4, 2014. Poster presentation. Pediatric Academic Societies 2015, San Diego, USA. Topic Symposium: “Health Disparities and Unconscious Bias in the Clinical Setting: An Action-Oriented Approach”. Presenter: Danielle Laraque – Adding Organizational Efforts and Collaboration to the Toolkit. April 27, 2015. INVITED PRESENTATIONS Relationship of Calcium Deficient Diet to Lead Toxicity and the Development of Pica in Children 18 months to 4 years of age. Presented at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Annual General Academic Fellowship Meeting - Princeton, June 1986. Lead Poisoning: Epidemiology and Tactics of Prevention. The Haitian Pediatric Society, June 18, 1987, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, (international meeting) Teenage Pregnancy: Socio-medical Problems. Elmhurst Hospital- Department of Pediatrics. June 15, 1988. Panelist "Survival for the Nineties: School Health in Harlem." October 23, 1989, Harlem Hospital Center. Family Unity & Career Development Conference at Salem United Methodist Church: HIV/AIDS and Adolescents June 15, 1991. Child Sexual Abuse Conference- Bridging the Gap: A Community Response. Medical evaluation and findings in cases of suspected or confirmed child sexual abuse. Workshop leader and facilitator. October 28, 1992- Harlem Hospital Center; sponsored by Harlem Dowling-West Side Center for Children & Family Services, Northside Center for Child Development, Inc. and Harlem Hospital Center. Playground Injuries -presented at the Harlem Hospital's Eighth Annual Trauma Symposium, May 23, 1989. Aids Initiative Workshop:"Sexuality" Nov. 30, 1990, Harlem Hospital Center. Exhibitor: Laraque D, Barlow B, Davidson et al: Playground Injury Prevention Project. Schoolyards Conference for Early Childhood and Elementary Schools; Oct 11, 1990; Hasbro Ind Inc. Teen Health Project -presented to the Harlem Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, January 9, 1991. Bicycle Injury Prevention: Community Awareness; Poster session, SAFEKIDS 2000; National Childhood Injury Prevention Conference, May 17-20, 1991. Laraque D (speaker) Damus K (discussant): Computer-Assisted Instruction in Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention. New York City Department of Health, Health Research Training Program Seminar Oct 2, 1991. APA Region 2 Meeting: Urban Children in Crisis: Workshop: Child Abuse/Sexual Abuse- N.Cunningham, J. Brown and D. Laraque. Oct 16. 1991. Laraque D, Bey-Grecia, Thompkins et al: Bicycle Injury Prevention: Community Awareness. Poster Session, Injury Prev Section -Amer Acad of Pediatrics Oct 27, 1991. YES Conference Speaker- New York City Department of Transportation sponsored Injury Prevention Conference; December 13, 1991. New School for Social Research, NYC. The State of Health of 9-12year old, inner-city girls: Physical Development in the urban environment of the 90's. The NYC Health & Hospitals Corporation, Nursing Services & Special Health Initiatives at the NYC Department of Health; January 22, 1992, D. Laraque, C. Casey, N. Gallo.Burnwise: School-based burn safety education and smoke detector giveaway program for inner city teen mothers. Presented at the American Academy of Pediatrics Spring Annual Meeting, April 1992, New York City. Helmets Save Heads: A Working Conference for New York Community Action -sponsored by Chapter 3 Committee on Injury Prevention, Einstein College of Medicine - October 1, 1992. Community School District Five -Alternatives to Violence Conference - January 28, 1993 - Workshop "Violence=Trauma + Injuries." - held at the Union Theological Seminar, New York City, NY. Harlem Hospital/Adolescent Outreach Program - Youth Against Violence Conference. 11/30/93. Harlem Hospital Family Support Group -Creating a Program; New York State Department of Social Services, Division of Family and Children Services: Syracuse, New York; April 29, 1993. Black Church National Education and Leadership Training Conference on AIDS. The Balm in Gilead, Inc; Round Table discussion - Defining our commitment to breaking through to our youth. October 5, 1993. Meeting the Transportation Needs of the Special Child; Risk Management: Injury Prevention. New York City Department of Transportation, Safety Education. Panelist, representing the American Academy of Pediatrics. October 29, 1993. Health Care Reform Conference - Organizer/Speaker co-sponsored by the Ambulatory Pediatric Association and the NY Academy of Medicine. January 20, 1994. Sexual Abuse in Adolescent African-Americans- presented at the Association of Haitian Physicians Abroad, NY Chapter April 30, 1994. Laraque, D, Barlow B, Durkin M, Howell J, Cladis F, Friedman D, DiScala C, Ivatury R, Stahl W. Children Who are Shot: A 30 year experience, risk factors, patterns of injury and lessons for prevention. Presented at the American Academy of Pediatric Annual Meeting. Dallas, Texas, October 23, 1994. Harlem's Health Crisis: A Town Meeting with US Surgeon General Dr. Jocelyn Elders. Adolescents: A Major Health Crisis in Harlem. October 3, 1994. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. The Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Project. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Altanta, Georgia; February 17-19,1994. Approaches to Health Care Behaviors: The Central Harlem Experience. The Johns Hopkins Center for Adolescent Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland October 12, 1994. The health care environment and its impact on academic and clinical pediatrics. Ambulatory Pediatric Association, Region II Annual Winter Meeting; Region Co-Chair; January 25, 1995. Solutions to gun violence at the Together Against Gun Violence Conference. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York, May 13, 1995. Extent of the Problem of Child Abuse in the USA. Presenter, XXII Congress of the Association of Haitian Physicians Abroad, Catskill, New York, July 26, 1995. Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention and Birth Outcomes in Harlem and New York City. Presenter, Third Annual Forum on Minority Health Outcomes in a Changing Health Care Environment. September 16, 1995, Tarrytown, New York. Injury Prevention: Framework for Community Interventions. Buffalo Pediatric Society, September 21, 1995. Impact of Violence on Health: Outcomes of Community-Based Interventions. Moderator at the Third Annual Forum on Minority Health Outcomes in a Changing Health Care Environment. September 15-16, 1995, Tarrytown, New York Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention. Seminar series, Harlem Center for Health Promotion. November 16, 1995. Safe Communities: A vision for the future. A community-based approach to health care for children and youth. U.S. Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Alburquerque, New Mexico, April 13, 1996. The Battered Child: A continuum of uncertainty. Speaker. St Vincent's Medical Center of Richmond. February 2, 1996. Gun violence in America. Speaker. Central Synagogue. February 7, 1996. Overview of Public Health Approach to Violence. Faculty American Academy of Pediatrics, Emergency Department section; Boston, October 26, 1996. Fourth Annual Childhood Violence Symposium "Violence Prevention: A multifaceted and multidisciplinary, community-based approach" -The Children's Hospital of Buffalo, Buffalo New York, April 14, 1997. The Nineteenth NYS Surgical Symposium -Strategies for Injury Prevention in the Pediatric Population. Upstate Chapter of American College of Surgeons, May 17, 1997, Syracuse New York. Selected Topics in the Care of Children and Youth; Violence Prevention- New York University Medical Center, May 19, 1997. Bright Futures Pediatric Training Meeting: Cultural Competence -The Inn at Harvard, Cambridge Massachusetts - May 20, 1997. Developmental and Psychosocial Issues in Firearms Injury Prevention. Firearm Training Conference, Chicago, IL, American Academy of Pediatrics, Faculty, March 14, 1998. Panelist -“White Papers.” Emergency Medical Services for Children. Continuity Between Primary Providers and the EMSC System. Washington, DC, June 19, 1998. American Academy of Pediatrics. Media Matters. Leadership Conference. July 11-12, 1998 Keynote Speaker- 1998 Michigan Trauma Symposium. “Violence Society’s Nightmare. Healthcare’s Challenge.” May 18, 1998. Kalamazoo Center. Schlegel Lectureship- Progressive Approaches to Child Health: Turning Away from Violence, the Central Harlem Experience. Department of Social Pediatrics, King Drew Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA. September 8, 1998. Faculty, American Academy of Pediatrics. D. Laraque and A. Woolf. Discussion of the Best Articles from 1997 on Injury and Poison Prevention. American Academy of Pediatrics, 1998 Annual Meeting, October 19, 1998, San Francisco, CA. Pediatric Grand Rounds: State of the Art Lectures on Advances in Pediatrics. Sisters of Charity Health Care, Department of Pediatrics Affiliated with New York University School of Medicine. An Ecological Approach to Health Care Delivery: The Bright Futures Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants and Adolescents. February 12,1999. The Teenage Driver. American Academy of Pediatrics, representative to Armonk High School. Presentation to community leaders and parent and teachers association. April 15, 1999. John Jay College of Criminal Justice – Victims Services. Overview of the Continuum of Trauma. Speaker. April 30, 1999. Keynote: Injury Prevention Support Conference. Sponsored by the Hackensack University Medical Center’s Trauma & Injury Prevention Section and the National Traffic Safety Administration, Region II. The Community of Injury Prevention: Team Building at its Best. May 7, 1999. Keynote: Service to the Community as a Primary Care Physician. Valhalla Medical Center, Valhalla, New York, September 27, 1999. Keynote: AMSA Conference: Community and University Partnerships. April 15, 2000. New York, New York. Advancing Children’s Health 2000 (PAS/AAP Annual Meeting) - Workshop: Time to Teach Something New -An Innovative Curriculum Designed to Teach Health Promotion concepts to Residents. Bright Futures Health Promotion Work Group, Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston. Boston, MA May 16, 2000. Grand Rounds: Youth Violence. The Brooklyn Hospital Center. May 23, 2000. Brooklyn, New York. SuperCME 2000: Advance and Thrive in Pediatrics: Handguns and Advocacy. June 23, 2000, Hilton, New York, New York. XXVII- AMHE Convention: Medicine and its Challenges. Jointly sponsored by the Association of Haitian Physicians Abroad and the University of Miami School of Medicine. Violence in Children. July 26, 2000. Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Keynote: Child Abuse Awareness Day, Harlem Hospital Center, September 26, 2000. History of Child Abuse Awareness and Need for Program Development. Grand Rounds- Valhalla Medical Center. A Comprehensive Approach to Child Abuse: Planning for Prevention, Detection, and Treatment. December 13, 2000. Valhalla, New York. Nassau Health Care Corporation, Nassau University Medical Center. Invited Grand Rounds: Data-driven Injury Prevention Policy and Applications to Practice. February 14, 2002. Urban Health Initiative Medical Student Round Table, New York Academy of Medicine; Panelist, Addressing the Needs of Children, October 29, 2002. New York Forum for Child Health, New York Academy of Medicine. Providing Mental Health Services for Children: Post 9/11 Children’s Health Needs Survey of Pediatricians: Preliminary Results. January 8, 2003. Greater New York Hospital Association. Mental Health Component of Pediatric Issues in Emergency Preparedness. February 25, 2004, NY, NY. Eastern Pediatric Research Society. Moderator General Pediatric Session and presenter: Psychosocial Issues in Pediatrics. March 27, 2004; Greenwich, CT. HELP Network Conference. Opening Remarks: Defining a Medical Standard for Gun Injury Prevention. April 16, 2004. Children’s National Memorial in Chicago, Ill. HELP Network Conference. Children and Youth – Counseling on gun injury prevention. April 17, 2004. Children’s National Memorial, Chicago, Ill. Taking Action for Children’s Well Being: Injury Prevention, a continued challenge to optimal child health. A conference of the Westchester Children’s Association, September 27, 2004. WHO conference on Child Maltreatment – Elmhurst Hospital (invited speaker) November 2004. Grand Rounds and Faculty Development Seminar at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, NJ – invited for academic year 2004-2005. Invited Visiting Professor - Diana L. and Stephen A. Goldberg Center for Community Pediatric Health Children's National Medical Center, CNMC Minority Faculty Affinity Group – February 10, 2005. Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting, Platform session Moderator. "General Pediatrics: Quality of Care and Medical Education." Hyatt Regency in Old Greenwich, CT. March 4 - 6, 2005. Eastern Society for Pediatric Research (ESPR) “Meet the Professor” Greenwich, CT. March 4 - 6, 2005 Pediatric Section Scientific Assembly – 2005 National Medical Association: Forensic Sexual Abuse. July 28, 2005 – New York, NY. APA Region II meeting - Funding for child advocacy endeavors: Paving the way to success and avoiding the pitfalls. Spring 2007. Association of Haitian Physicians Abroad – General Membership Meeting; December 9, 2006. Speaker: Depression in Children and Adolescents for the Primary Care Physician. Children’s Health Fund Health Care Policy Summit: Comprehensive Health Care for Children: What do Children Need? Mental Health and the Medical Home. Washington, DC, Building, May 3, 2007. Careers Outside of the Office: Advocacy, Administration and International Health. NCE, AAP, Section on Residents October 27, 2007. Healthy People 2010 Award Presentation. NCE, AAP, Chapter Sharing Session, October 28, 2007. Adolescent Depression and Anxiety. NCE, AAP Section on Community Pediatrics October 29, 2007. Nassau Pediatric Society Meeting – The Pediatrician and the Media –November 19, 2007, Smithtown, NY. Evaluating Physically and Sexually Abused Children and Preparing for Expert Witnesses for Trial: Child Abuse: A Developmental Perspective: Relevance to Expert Testimony. Bar Association of NY, House of the Association, 42 W 44th Street, NY, NY. January 23, 2008 Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Grand Rounds. Child & Adolescent Mental Health: Framing the problem and the solutions. Bronx, NY, February 19, 2008. Academic Pediatric Association, Leadership Conference. Mentorship Workshop Leader. March 13, 2008. Academic Pediatric Association, Leadership Conference. Panelist. Barriers to Diversity in Academics. Orlando, Florida. March 14, 2008. Excellence through Innovation; 7th Annual Forum for Improving Children’s Healthcare, National Initiative for Children’s Healthcare Quality (NICHQ). Socio-Emotional Screening and Care: Lessons from the Field. Presented by Danielle Laraque, Neil Baker, Loretta Au, Diane Bloomfield, Lynn Davidson. March 21, 2008. Improving Mental Health Care for Children in New Jersey. The NJ Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the New Jersey Council of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. April 16, 2008. Medical Home: Content and Policies. Speaker, June 2008 at Columbia University- Forum. CATCH/Healthy Tomorrows Plenary Speaker. Community Access to Child Health & Healthy Tomorrows Partnership for Children: The Meaning of Cultural Competence. Chicago, IL, August 15, 2008. Unclaimed Children Revisited: Implications for Implementing a Public Health Framework: The Role of Pediatric Primary Care. The Twenty-Fourth Annual Rosalynn Carter Symposium on Mental Health Policy. November 21, 2008. Pediatric Behavioral Health in the Primary Care Setting: Opportunities and Challenges presented on February 5, 2009 at the Building Bridges to Effective Pediatric ADHD Practice; at the Lighthouse Conference Center, New York; sponsored by the NYS Department of Health, Office of Health Insurance Programs. The Concept of the Healthcare Home. George Rust, MD, Danielle Laraque, Md, Ken Thompson, MD. Smoky Mountain Integrated Care Conference II: The Behaviorally Enhanced Healthcare Home. April 23rd and 24th 2009; Cherokee Health Systems, Knoxville Tennessee. Disasters, Mental Health and Primary Care. Conference at New York Medical College; October 28, 2009 at the Disaster Management and Emergency Preparedness: the Pediatrician’s Role. Grand Rounds: Staten Island University Hospital, December 17, 2009. The Reaching Children Initiative: An educational intervention. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Vancouver, Canada May 2, 2010; Invited Science: Global Child Health: Exploring Effective Models To Guide Cross-National Collaborations in Research, Training and Clinical Care.” Chairs: Danielle Laraque, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY and Judith Palfrey, Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Vancouver, Canada May 1, 2010. Opening Session of the PAS. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Vancouver, Canada May 3, 2010. Academic Pediatric Association, Presidential Address: Global Child Health: Reaching the Tipping Point for All Children. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Denver, Colorado April 30-May 3, 2011. Global Child Health, II. Chairs: Danielle Laraque, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY and Judith Palfrey, Children’s Hospital of Boston, MA. J Foy and D Laraque. Introducing the New AAP Mental Health Toolkit. Faculty for the National Conference and Exhibition, American Academy of Pediatrics, October 5, 2010. National EPSDT Improvement Workgroup: Behavioral Health Subgroup. Behavioral Health Screening Component –what should a screen consist of? Presenter to CMS Workgroup. June 16, 2011. Laraque D. Conference. Sexual Abuse Recognition, Reporting and Evaluation. March 8, 2012. GHESKIO Center, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Laraque D. Grand Rounds Conference. Child Maltreatment and Application to Child Protection in Haiti. March 9, 2012. Quisqueya University, School of Medicine, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Laraque D. Medical Student Conference on Ti Moun An Nou Li and Health Literacy. Quisquesya University, School of Medicine, Port-au-Prince, June 24, 2014. PEER REVIEWED PRESENTATIONS Welborn C, Laraque, D, Davidson L et al. "Prevention of Playground Injuries in Central Harlem", Injury Control in New York State: Where Do We Stand? Poster Session. Department of Health NYC. Albany, NY April 20-21, 1988. Laraque, D. Playground Injuries: Parental Perception of Safety. Presented to the APA Special Interest Group. May 3, 1989; Washington, D.C. Laraque D. Playground Injuries: Designing an Intervention, Poster Session at the National Conference on Pediatric Trauma, September 21-23, 1989; Michigan. Davidson L, Laraque D, Welborn C et al: Safe Kids/Healthy Neighborhoods Coalition: Injury Control in Harlem- 1990 APHA Annual Meeting NYC Oct 3, 1990. D.Laraque, P. Brown-Peterside, V. Borgia. Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention: A computer-assisted intervention for Harlem youth. American Public Health Association, November 10, 1992, Washington, D.C. Brown-Peterside P. and Laraque D. Research in Tandem with Health Education: A Healthy Partnership. Presentation at the American Public Health Association meeting in San Francisco, October 25, 1993. Laraque D, McLean DE, Brown-Peterside P. Predictors of Condom use in Harlem Youth: Gender differences and attitudes toward pregnancy prevention. Platform presentation at the Ambulatory Pediatrics Association annual meetings, Washington, D.C. May 4, 1993. Also presented at the AmericanPublic Health Association annual meeting in San Francisco, October 27, 1993. Brown-Peterside P, Laraque D, Ashton D. Sexually transmitted diseases in pregnant adolescents, a cause for concern. Presented poster APHA, San Diego, October 1995. Durkin MS, Olsen S, Laraque D, Barlow B. Epidemiology and prevention of traffic injuries to children in northern Manhattan. Presentation, APHA Fall 96. Olsen S, Colyer E, Thompkins T, Durkin MS, Laraque D, Barlow B. Do school-based conflict resolution programs work? Presentation APHA Fall 96. M.R. Hammerschlag, S. Ajl, D. Laraque . Inappropriate use of Nonculture Tests for Detection of Chlamydia trachomatis in Suspected Victims of Sexual Abuse. Poster Presentation, Society for Pediatric Research May 1999. Moskowitz, H, Laraque D, Shelov E. Victim-Offender Relationships for Homicides: 1976-1999. Platform presentation, May 5, 2002. Pediatric Academic Societies. DeMattia, EA, Moskowitz H, Kemper K, Laraque D. Who Receives Appropriate Recommendations About Complementary and Alternative Medical Therapies? Platform presentation, May 16, 2005. Pediatric Academic Societies. Steinbaum D, Englander L, Balija T, Tzavaras A, Boscarino J, and Laraque D, "Use of a Psychosocial Screen to Detect Children with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Does Mother Know Best?” Platform Presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies' Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, May 17, 2005. Steinbaum D, Englander L, Balija T, Tzavaras A, Boscarino J, and Laraque D, "Use of a Psychosocial Screen to Detect Children with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Does Mother Know Best?” Poster Presentation, Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting, Old Greenwich, CT, March 4, 2005. Steinbaum D, Englander L, Balija T, Tzavaras A, Boscarino J, and Laraque D, "Trauma and Distress in Primary Care Pediatrics,” Poster Presentation, Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting, Old Greenwich, CT, March 5, 2005. Steinbaum D, Englander L, Balija T, Tzavaras A, Boscarino J, and Laraque D, "Trauma and Distress in Primary Care Pediatrics,” Poster Presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies' Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, May 17, 2005. Kamath, S, Rosen, C, Adams, R and Laraque, D. Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Latino and African-American Early School Age Children. Pediatric Academic Societies: Poster presentation, April 30, 2006. Maan Dela Cruz, MPH1; Deborah Steinbaum, MD, FAAP; Anthony Battista, MD, FAAP, Rachel Zuckerbrot, MD, FAAP, Jason Kassay, Danielle Laraque, MD, FAAP. Web-Based Child Psychiatry Access Project: A Feasibility Study. AAP 2006 National Conference and Exhibition October 8, 2006 Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Sealy Y, Laren S, Laraque D. Does the type of child sexual abuse affect caregiver’s willingness to act. ESPR Platform Presentation, March 10, 2207. Berger E, McKay M, Newcorn J, Bannon , Laraque D. Undertreatment of Minority Children with ADHD. ESPR Platform Presentation, Philadelphia, Crowne Plaza, March 10, 2007. Berger E, Ho WW, Zylbert S, Rojas M, Laraque D. Assessing Health Risk Behaviors in Pre-Adolescent Children. ESPR Platform Presentation, Philadelphia, Crowne Plaza, March 10, 2007. Dela-Cruz M, Steinbaum D, Battista A, Zuckerbrot R, Laraque D. Web-based child psychiatry access project (Web-CPAP): A feasibility study. APHA Nov 2007 Adams R, Laraque D. The Reaching Children Initiative. APHA, Nov 2007. Laraque D, Baker N, Au L, Bloomfield D. Socio-Emotional Screening and Care: Lessons from the Field. Excellence through Innovation, March 21, 2008 in Miami, Florida. Vangeepuram N, Gault A, Schranz E, Laraque D. Parent and Pediatrician Input in the Development of an Obesity Program. Publication 4474.34. Pediatric Academic Societies, May 4, 2008; Honolulu, Hawaii. Vangeepuram N, Gault A, Schranz E, Laraque D. Clinical Manifestations of Obesity in a Sample of Urban Minority Children. Publication 4474.36. Pediatric Academic Societies, May 4, 2008; Honolulu, Hawaii. Laraque D, Des Jarlais DC, Adams R, Rivara F. Meeting the Evaluation Needs of Educational and Public Health Interventions. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting, May 5, 2009, Mini-course. Prina A, Adam RA, Kleinman .L, Laraque D.. [5515.287] Bright Present? The Relationship of Developmentally Focused Anticipatory Guidance and Parenting Practices. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting, May, 2009 Laraque D. Mendoza F, Dreyer B, Frintner MP, Cull W. Graduating pediatric residents: Who plans to work in underserved areas? Accepted for poster presentation at the Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting, Vancouver Canada, (abstract # 754414) May 1-4, 2010. Laraque D. Mendoza F, Dreyer B, Frintner MP, Cull W. Cross cultural and linguistic appropriate care. Pediatric residents preparedness. Accepted for poster presentation at the Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting, Vancouver Canada, (abstract # 753038) May 1-4, 2010. MacArthur.KR, Adams R, Laraque D. 2010 APHA Platform presentation #219979. Changing Practice Procedures to Better Diagnose and Treat Mental Health Problems in Children and Adolescents: The Reaching Children Initiative. APHA 2010, Denver Colorado, November 6-10, 2010. Adams ER, Laraque D. Primary Care Clinician’s Perceived Skills and Knowledge in Diagnosing and Treating Mental Health Problems in Children and Adolescents: The Reaching Children Initiative. Presented at the APHA, October 20-Nov 2, 2011. Washington, DC. Laraque D, (Chair and Speaker). Transforming Pediatric Mental Health care through the Science of Behavior Change. April 30, 2012; Hynes Convention Center, Room 202. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting April 28-May1 2012. Boston, Mass. Laraque D. Moderator, Adolescent Medicine Platform Session. Eastern Society for Pediatric Research. March 22-24, 2013. Argawal A, Ogwara F, Homel P, Laraque D, Filipov. (mentor/sponsor) Contrast enema an risk of sepsis in premature babies: A 12 year retrospective study. Presented May 5, 2014 at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting, Vancouver, CA. O’Hara M, Legano L, Homel P, Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Laraque D. (mentor) Children Neglected: Where Cumulative Risk Theory Fails. Presented May 3, 2014 at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting, Vancouver, CA. Bruell L, Laraque D, Kachur E, Rojas M, Walker-Descartes I. Stop, Look, Listen: Separating fact from fiction in cases of physical child abuse. Poster presented at: Association of American Medical Colleges Annual Meeting; November 2014; Chicago, IL. Fuentes-Afflick E., Sabin J, Mendoza FS, Newhouse D, Laraque D. Health Disparities and Unconscious Bias in the Clinical Setting: An Action-Oriented Approach. Topic Symposium, Pediatric Academic Societies, April 27, 2015 San Diego, USA. 1-3pm, Speaker. Children and Disasters-How to Respond to the Physical and Mental Health Impacts of Pediatric Disasters. Workshop – Co-leader, Pediatric Academic Societies, April 27, 2015 8:30-11:30. Eastern Society for Pediatric Research. Adolescent Platform Session, Moderator. 8-9:30AM. March 21, 2015. Educational Philosophy: I have been teaching medical students, residents, fellows, and interdisciplinary trainees inclusive of master, doctoral and postdoctoral trainees, and faculty for over thirty years. My goal in teaching is to invite a spirit of inquiry which invites innovative thought and creative interaction with the purpose of improving clinical care and translating new knowledge to practice. Attention to detail, based on a strong fund of knowledge, supported by self-directed learning, is a core value. This is then bolstered by the interaction brought about by team-based learning that instills a yearning for an intellectual and inquisitive approach to clinical care, education, and research. This approach is also applicable to advocacy efforts that can be based on theory and evidence-based approaches. Service-learning is an example of an approach that is contextually relevant and promotes the application of sound community-based approaches. In addition, community-based participatory research is integral to service learning. It is essential for trainees and life-long learners to understand the ever changing medical literature, to critique it and specifically apply it to different patient populations. These tenets have served me well in all venues – whether in the 80-90s in Central Harlem, Upper East Side/East Harlem (2000) or Brooklyn, NY (2010-present). Teaching Experience TEACHING ACTIVITIES (See also Presentations for national and international teaching conferences) 1986-2000 Preceptor for Health Training Research Program students, New York City Department of Health- (at least one student per year, usually undergraduate at times graduate students). 1986-2000 Lecturer to physician-assistants yearly; subject lead toxicity. 1 hour. 1986-2000 Harlem Hospital Grand Rounds with CME credits awarded (yearly 3-5 lectures, 1 hour) not included in presentations. Grand Rounds also presented to the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology. Topics covered include: Lead toxicity, pediatric gynecology, sexual abuse, child abuse, multidisciplinary team approach, adolescent health risk behaviors (including injury, sexual behavior), injury prevention, anticipatory guidance, health promotion; 1986-2000 Columbia University at Harlem Hospital Pediatric Resident Teaching (clinic and inpatient ward). Attending physician. 1986-2000 Columbia University at Harlem Hospital -Third year medical student teaching weekly in Pediatric clinic. August 25, 1992 Panelist- Columbia University School of Medicine- Introduction to Clinical Medicine-Robert Wood Johnson Grant - Discussion topic- Adolescent pregnancy. Summer 1992 Preceptor - Sophie Davis Medical School placement at Harlem Hospital. March 4, 1993 Health Promotion/Disease Prevention Seminar Series and co-sponsored by the Division of Socio-medical Sciences at Columbia University's School of Public Health and the Harlem Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention at Harlem Hospital-Adolescent Pregnancy - -Hammer Health Science Center. (1 hour) March 25, 1993 Child Health Course/Population & Family/ Public Health -Epidemiology of Pediatric Injury - -lecture series November 4, 1993 Adolescent Outreach Program -Strategies for reducing adolescent high risk behaviors. Sophie-Davis Medical School, City University of New York. 1994-2000 First year medical student primary care clerkship rotation through the Harlem Hospital Family Support Clinic. (1, 3hour session/week) March 31 1994 Community Approaches to Injury Prevention -Maternal and Child Health Seminar Series. Columbia University. December 1995- September 2009 Fourth year medical student elective - course preceptor. 1 month/year. 1994-1995 National Medical Association, National Minority Mentor Recruitment Network-Mentor 1995-1997 Faculty -Clinical Practice I: Health related behavior. Columbia University School of Medicine course. (1 hour) 1998-2000 Bright Futures Health Promotion –Facilitated monthly resident seminars at Harlem Hospital (1 hour sessions) July 21, 2000 Health Promotion: From Theory to Practice. Grand Rounds, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics. (1 hour) October 27th – December 15th, 2000 Molecules and Cells small group discussion –Clinical Co-facilitator; Mount Sinai School of Medicine. (1, 3 hour session/week) February 15, 2001 Youth Violence and Minority Communities – Mount Sinai Hospital; sponsored by the African-American Cultural Committee. Speaker, Attending physician. April 12, 2001 A Comprehensive Approach to Child Abuse: Planning for Prevention, Detection and Treatment. Grand Rounds, Mount Sinai Medical Center. (1 hour) April 30, 2001 Workshop at the Pediatric Academic Societies’ Annual Meeting. Health Care Delivery Models: Key Elements of Success. D. Laraque, J. Cox, M. LoFrumento, T. Tonniges, J. Cox, K. Capitulo, K. Felix-Aaron. , Baltimore, Maryland. (3hours) 2000-2010 Teaching Attending – Mount Sinai Inpatient Ward- yearly, 3days/week/4 weeks. 2001-2007 Pediatric Research Day Steering Committee Member. (Organizer) 2001-2004 Art and Science of Medicine Course II. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. (3 hours/week) October 16, 2001 Today’s Adolescent: Solving Old Problems Dealing with New Ones. Organized by the American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3, D. Laraque President. . Crown Plaza, White Plains, NY. (CME, speaker) October 18. 2001 Annual Conference on Domestic Violence: Violence Hurts: Family Violence. Mount Sinai School of Medicine. (3 hours) February 25, 2002 Mount Sinai Medical Center, Child & Family Support Program. Beyond the Looking Glass Conference on Child Maltreatment. 1 hour. May 4, 2002 Workshop: Open Access Appointment Scheduling: The Cure for the Ailing Pediatric Practice? J. Brown, D. Laraque, J. Cox, G. Randolph. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, Baltimore, Maryland. 3 hours May 4, 2002 Educational Seminar Leader: Minority Faculty Development. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, Baltimore, Maryland. (3 hours) October 19-23, 2002 Providing Health Care Services to Underserved Populations: Immigrant, Homeless, Refugees and Migrant Children. Co-leader. American Academy of Pediatrics’ National Conference and Exhibition Meeting, Boston. 2003 Workshop: Open/Advanced Access II: Improving Patient Access and Care While Increasing Physician and Patient Satisfaction. J.A. Swanson, G. Randolph, J. Brown, D. Laraque. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, Baltimore, Maryland. 3 hours May 3-7, 2003 Educational Workshop Leader: Minority Faculty Development. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, Seattle. 3 hours 2002-2010 Child & Family Support Program – residents in ambulatory block rotation. 3 hours/week. October 8, 2002 Violence Hurts Conference –Panelist – “The Role of Mental Health Screening in the Pediatric Primary Care Setting”: (Organizer) October 28, 2002 Panelist in AMSA’s Mount Sinai Chapter National Primary Care Week, January 2003 Poisonings in Childhood, Grand Rounds St. Vincent’s Hospital at Staten Island (1 hour) October 29, 2002 Urban Health Initiative, Medical Student Forum, New York Academy of Medicine. One year post 9/11: Addressing the Needs of Affected Communities. . January 8, 2003 Children’s Health Forum. New York Academy of Medicine. Children’s Health Needs Post September 11 Survey: Preliminary Findings. . March 7, 2003 Ambulatory Pediatric Association Region II Annual Meeting: Keynote speaker: Health Promotion: Reaching the Healthy People 2010 Objectives, New York April 4-6, 2003 Symposium Organizer- American Academy of Pediatrics, Violence Prevention Symposium- April 8, 2003 Children’s Health Needs Post September 11 Survey: Preliminary Results. Faculty Research Seminar. September 23, 2003 Children’s Health Forum Speaker. Disaster Planning After 9/11, New York, NY. October 20, 2003 Keynote Speaker. AMSA Primary Care Week. Primary Care: Looking to the Future. . Mount Sinai School of Medicine, NY. January 22, 2004 Mount Sinai Pediatric Grand Rounds – Review of Child Maltreatment Case Referrals, Hospitalized Children: A Focus on Neuroimaging. (1 hour) April 16-18, 2004 HELP (Handgun Epidemic Lowering Plan) 8th Conference, Planning Committee Member, Speaker: Opening Remarks and Workshop Reducing Child and Youth Access to Guns. 2002-2004 Ambulatory Pediatric Association (APA)’s Educational Guidelines Revision Project, grant award to the APA by Josiah Macy, Jr., Foundation. (Project Director: Diane Kittredge). Contributor to APA Educational Guidelines for Pediatric Residency Section 3, Middle Childhood. Available at Ambulatory Pediatric Association website, www.ambpeds.org/guidelines. May 2, 2004 Educational Workshop Leader: Minority Faculty Development: Year Three. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA. October 2004-May 2005 Course Co-Director: Survey Design, Questionnaire Development and Survey Analysis. Course in MPH program. Course, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. (3 trimesters, 1hour/week) September 2004- May 2005. Course Co-Director: Clinical Research Design, Statistics and Academic Life Course. Specialty Fellows course for compliance with American Board of Pediatrics. Mount Sinai School of Medicine –(no course number); (1 hour/week; 3 trimesters) 2004-2005 Key Faculty - MCO800 Seminar in Applied Clinical Epidemiology & Health Services Research. Mount Sinai Primary Care Clinician-Research Fellowship/ MPH course. (1.5 hours/bi-weekly; 3 credits; 3 trimesters) February 27-28, 2005 United Nations Opening Ceremony – Strengthening Health Care Response to Domestic Violence. Plenary Panel – Elmhurst Hospital. –cancelled. March 16-17, 2005 Visiting Professor – UMDNJ – Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. A Conversation about Faculty Career Development. Grand Rounds: Psychosocial Issues in Primary Care. (2 days) May 15, 2005 Educational Workshop Leader. Minority Faculty Development: Individual Academic Plans Helping Focus Career Paths. Laraque D, Dennery P, Mendoza F. Workshop, Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Washington, D.C. (3 hours) May 14, 2005 Division Director’s Special Interest Group Panel; Danielle Laraque, Christian Derauf, Tina Cheng. How Do We Keep the (Three-Legged) Stool Standing? Balancing our missions of clinical care, education, and research. Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting. Washington, D.C. (2 hours) October 7, 2005 Connecting for Children’s Sake. Integrating Physical and Mental Health Care in the Medical Home. American Academy of Pediatrics, Pediatrics for the 21st Century (Peds-21). Focus Group Leader, Clinician Support. (4 hours) 2005-2006 Course Director: Reaching Children Initiative, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Tri-state training of pediatricians in children’s mental health. (American Red Cross grant); Contact hours -8.5hours; 8 full days total. November 18, 2005 Child Health Disparities: An Overview. Grand Rounds Speaker – The Center for Multicultural and Community Affairs, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. April 30, 2006 (Done yearly since 2002) Individual Academic Plans: Valuing and Supporting Diversity: (Workshop Leader) Laraque, D, Dennery PA,, Mendoza FS, Cora-Bramble, D, Konopasek, L, Niebuhr, V. Workshop #1300. Pediatric Academic Societies, San Francisco, CA. (3 hours) April 30, 2006 Panel Discussion: APA Health Care Delivery and Mental Health at PAS. Pediatric Academic Societies, San Francisco, CA. (2 hours) May 2, 2006 Panel Discussion: Women in Medicine. Pediatric Academic Societies, San Francisco, CA. (2hours) 2006-2010 Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Pediatric Specialty Fellows Course: IRB –Historical Perspective and Ethical Considerations. (1 hour) May 26, 2006 Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Pediatric Specialty Fellows Course: –Academic Communication. (1 hour) June 5, 2006 Culture & Illness Course- Masters in Public Health, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Research Ethics in Vulnerable Populations. (2 hours) July 1, 2006-present Neuroscience Education Institute- faculty of Mini-fellowship on Psychopharmacology. . Faculty, contact hours 3 days; at least yearly. February 12, 2007 CERTS – Youth Aggression. Chair of the Panel on Family Engagement. Dallas, Texas. (3 hours) February 11-13, 20009 National Leadership Conference in General Pediatrics. Sponsored by the Academic Pediatric Association. , New Orleans, LA. Workshop A/B: Developing Research Capacity, presented by Peter Szilagyi and Danielle Laraque. (2 -2 hours) February 11-13, 20009 National Leadership Conference in General Pediatrics. Sponsored by the Academic Pediatric Association. , New Orleans, LA. Diversity in Academic Pediatrics. Panelist. (2 hours) 2002-2010 Founder and course faculty- Seminar in Applied Clinical Epidemiology and health service research. Mount Sinai Department of Community & Preventive Medicine. (3 credits/year (starting 2005), 3 semesters/year, 1 hour session/bi-weekly) 2002-2005 Course Director, Primary Care Clinician Research Fellowship. 2005-2010 Course Key Faculty 2008-present Founder and course director: Seminar in Applied Pediatric Health Services Research. Mount Sinai Department of Community & Preventive Medicine. (non-credit, fellowship course, 1 hour session/bi-weekly) September 21-22, 2010 APA-APPD Leadership Conference, Faculty; Virginia The Dynamics of Change Peer-Peer Mentoring, Facilitator April 29, 2011 Global Health Summit Anschutz Medical Campus, Children’s Hospital of Denver Academic Pediatric Association Panelist April 30, 2011 Health Care Reform: Are we making Progress for America’s Children (Hot Topic) Chair: Danielle Laraque and Steve Berman Presented a the Pediatric Academic Societies and Asian Society for Pediatric Research Denver, Colorado, USA April 30, 2011 Global Health, Part II: PAS State of the Art Plenary Chair: Danielle Laraque and Judith Palfrey Presented a the Pediatric Academic Societies and Asian Society for Pediatric Research Denver, Colorado, USA May 1, 2011 Race in Medicine/Women in Medicine Special Interest Group, Panelist Pediatric Academic Societies Meeting Colorado Convention Center May 3, 2011 Culture, Ethnicity & Healthcare, Special Interest Group Diversity in Academic Medicine Benefits and Challenges across the Continuum Surendra Varma, Danielle Laraque, Carol Berkowitz -Presenters April 17, 2012 Laraque D. Grand Rounds at New York University, Department of Pediatrics. The Deep End of the Ocean: Children’s Mental Health Legacy and the Changing Paradigm. June 18, 2012 Laraque D. Psychiatry Grand Rounds, MMC. The Deep End of the Ocean: Children’s Mental Health Legacy and the Changing Paradigm: A Primary Care Perspective. June 12, 2013 Laraque D. Grand Rounds at Maria Ferrari Children’s Hospital. Suicide, Homicide and Guns: A Persistent Pediatric Problem in the 21st Century. September 3, 2013 Laraque D. Challenges of the 21st Century: Child Health and Well-Being. Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn. Training Record of Child Abuse Pediatrics Fellowship: 1. Ingrid Walker-Descartes, MD, MPH – Board Certified for Child Abuse Pediatrics (CAP) subspecialty – Now Pediatric Residency Program Director at Maimonides Infants & Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn 2. Deborah Steinbaum, MD, MPH – Board Certified for CAP – now in private practice. 3. Prima Amin, MD, MPH – Board Certified for CAP –now faculty at Cornell, Department of Pediatrics 4. Mandy O’Hara, MD – MPH 2014, Columbia University, Fellow (2011-2014); now faculty at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Department of Pediatrics. 5. Anastesia Feifer, MD – Fellow (2013-2016) See Also Trainee Abstracts; Below listed are sponsored abstracts to the ESPR and PAS, not listed in published or presented abstracts. Maida Galvez: (2005) Food Availability in an Inner-City Community: What's Near Our Elementary Schools? (2005)Using GIS to Assess the Availability of Physical Activity Resources in an Inner City Community (2006) Body Size and Neighborhood Characteristics: Does Food Store Availability Make a Difference? (2007) Elemental Mercury Exposure in a New Jersey Daycare Center located at a former Mercury Thermometer Manufacturing Site (2009) Neighborhood Food Store and Physical Activity Resource Utilization by Inner-City, Minority Children and Risk for Obesity Leo Trasande: (2005)Environmental Pollutants and Disease in New York States Children: Estimates of Morbidity, Mortality and Costs for Lead Poisoning, Asthma, Cancer and Developmental Disabilities (2005) The Environment in Pediatric Practice: A Pilot Study of New York Pediatricians Attitudes, Beliefs and Practices for Childrens Environmental Health (2005) Social Costs of Mental Retardation Associated with Methylmercury Exposure in America (2005) Does New York State Need A System of Clinical Centers for Children with Environmental Health Concerns? (2007) Projecting the Burden of Childhood Obesity in America to 2030: Demographics and Disparities Nathan Graber: (2006) Prenatal Lead Exposure in New York City Immigrant Communities. Under your direct supervision: Name type of position time period present position Arpit Agarwal: (resident) (2013) Title: Contrast Enema and Risk of Sepsis in Premature Babies: A 12-year Retrospective Study Arpit Agarwal, MD1, Frederick Ogwara, MD1, Peter Homel, PhD2, Danielle Laraque, MD1 and Panayot Filipov, MD1. 1Pediatrics, Maimonides Infants and Children's Hospital (MICH), Brooklyn, New York, 11219, United States and 2Research Administration, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, United States. Teaching Awards Received 2010 Job Lewis Smith Award – This national award is given for outstanding service in community pediatrics. It is made for outstanding community service to children through teaching, public service, and innovations in patterns of care. Faculty for the REACH Institute: National training in psychopharmacology and mental health assessment. Faculty (20006-2012) and now Advisor. Mean score as faculty exceeded 4 consistently on a Likert scale of 1-5 with 5 being excellent. See website and http://www.thereachinstitute.org/files/documents/reach-trains-1000-doctors-12-10-12.pdf. Mentoring of Graduate Students, Residents, Post-Doctoral Fellows in Research TRAINING RECORD (Fellows, Residents and Medical students taught as part of continuity practice, inpatient ward or other clinical services are not listed individually. Medical students at Harlem, MSSM and Maimonides informally mentored not listed. Mentees at Harlem Hospital not listed, but included two residents per year for fourteen years and one medical student per month. Listed are research fellows, residents involved in research and other child health professionals involved in clinical research, and those I am currently mentoring). Most mentored faculty not listed. Name Level of Trainees Role in training/Dates Trainee’s Current Position Anastesia Feifer Fellow Fellowship Director, Child Abuse Pediatrics Fellow (ACGME) Mandy O’Hara, MD Fellow Fellowship Director, Child Abuse Pediatrics (2011-2014) ACGME MPH from Columbia University received June 2014 as part of training in CAP; accepted position as faculty, Asst. Prof. at Mount Sinai School of Medicine Robert Accordino 3rd/4th year medical student 2009/Mentor on Elective 4th year medical student MSSM intern 2011 Sonia Desikan, MD General Academic Pediatrics and MPH 2009-2010 Fellow Jeanhee Park, MD General Academic Pediatrics and MPH 2009-2010 Fellow Perry Sheffield, MD Environmental Fellow and MPH 2007-present Mentor Fellow Angkana Roy, MD General Academic Pediatrics Fellow/Environmental Fellow and MPH 2008-present Academic Advisor Fellow Asha Willis, MD HRSA Clinician-Research Fellow And MPH 2007-present Academic and Thesis Advisor Fellow Faculty: Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn, 2010 Prina Amin, MD HRSA Clinician-Research Fellow and MPH 2006-present Academic and Thesis Advisor Fellow Instructor at Cornell/Weill Child Abuse Boarded Boarded in CAP Jessica Petros, MD Medicine/Pediatrics resident 2006-present Resident Max Gomez Sinai School of Medicine – 4th year Medical Student 2005-06 Research Mentor Resident Nita Vangeepuram, MD Fellow, General Academic Pediatrics and Environmental Fellow and MPH 2005-08 Academic Advisor Faculty in Pediatrics and Community & Preventive Medicine Laura Englander Post-baccalaureate student, Research Assistant 2004-05 Research Mentor Medical Student Kemesha Delisser 2nd year Medical Student –Mount Sinai School of Medicine (CMCA MORE Program) 2004-8 Academic mentor Resident Maan Dela-Cruz, MPH Research Coordinator and Graduate Student at Mailman School of Public Health 2003-present Thesis Advisor Grant Administrator Alexander Tzavaras 4th year medical student, MSSM – Special Matriculation Status for Research 2003-04 Research Mentor Resident Faculty, Montefiore Hospital Natalie Davis, MD Fellow, General Academic Pediatrics 2003-05 General Mentor Faculty Richard Lyncook, MD Fellow, (MED/PEDS) General Pediatric & Medicine Academic HRSA Faculty Development in Primary Care Fellowship and MPH 2003-05 General Mentor Department of Health Yue-Yung Hu Research Assistant. Community Health Project 2004-2007 Research Mentor Medical Student Sania Perez, MD, MS Medical Director – Child & Family Support Program 2002-2008 General Mentor Academic Faculty Anabel Bejarano, PhD Mount Sinai, postdoctoral fellow 2002-04 Research Mentor Academic Faculty Janine Rethy, MD Pediatric Resident 2002 Academic Faculty Research Mentor Evelyn Berger, MD General Academic Pediatric Fellow 2004-07 Academic and Thesis Advisor Academic Faculty Columbia University, Amy DeMattia, MD HRSA Clinician-Research Fellow, MSSM Fellow and MPH 2002-05 Academic and Thesis Advisor Clinical Faculty MSSM James Celestin Mount Sinai, Medical student mentee 2001-5 General Mentor Resident Jeffrey Miller Mount Sinai, Medical student advisor 2001-02 Research Mentor Resident Eric Shelov Research Assistant – Community Health Project 2001-02 Research Mentor Resident, CHOP Harry Moskowitz, MD, MS Faculty research mentee 2001-2003 Research Mentor Private Practice Shuba Kamath, MD . Mount Sinai Pediatric Resident . HRSA Faculty Development in Primary Care Fellowship 2001-06 2003-06 Academic and Thesis Advisor Academic Faculty Tufts Medical School Cindy Wong Mount Sinai Medical Student 4th year Elective 8/01-9/01 Mentor Resident, unclear now Ingrid Walker-Descartes, MD . Rochester Medical Student –Research Assistant . Pediatric Resident Methodist Hospital; General Academic Pediatric Fellow . MPH 1999-2001 2004-07 Academic and Research Advisor Academic Faculty Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn Board Eligible CAP Deborah Steinbaum, MD . Mount Sinai Mentee, Piloting of Advocacy rotation . (Academic Advisor) HRSA Clinician-Research Fellow Development in Primary Care Fellowship . MPH . Research Faculty 10/2000 2002-05 2005-present Academic and Thesis Advisor Research Mentor Academic Faculty Boarded in CAP (2011) Pamela Brown-Peterside, PhD . Graduate Student at Socio-medical Sciences -Columbia University . Current position: Research Associate on HIV vaccine trial. New York Blood Center 1990-95 Research Mentor Research Associate Lisa Eiland . Third year and fourth year of medical school, clerkship and off-site thesis preceptor - Yale Medical student . Accepted to Babies and Children’s Pediatric Residency Program, Columbia University; Neonatology Fellow, Cornell 1998-2000 2006- Research Mentor Resident Nabeel Najib, MD Pediatric Resident Harlem Hospital Center 1996 Research Mentor Practice Shirin Madad Student Health Research Training Program, NYC Department of Health (see publications) 1997 Research Mentor Medical Health Research Associates (MHRA). Juanita Guerra, PhD current position psychologist for the Harlem Hospital Pediatric Resource Center, (license pending, year of supervision needed) 1999-2000 Mentor Psychologist (Harlem Hospital) Annelie Hartmann, PhD current position psychologist for the Harlem Hospital Pediatric Resource Center (license pending, year of supervision needed) 1999-2000 Mentor Psychologist (Harlem Hospital) Bhavna Vaswani Harlem Hospital, psychology student 1991-1993 Mentor Graduate student completed Vicky Borgia Columbia University undergraduate 1992 Research Mentor Don’t know Teaching Evaluations: (Most not kept over the years, but a sampling is presented below) Most recent: Faculty for Pediatric Disaster Mental Health Initiative: Course Directors: Laraque, MD and George Foltin, MD (Americares Grant). THE PDMHI is patterned after the Reaching Children Initiative and the CAP-PC (Child and Adolescent in Primary Care) training which funds 5 medical centers in the model developed with assistance of D. Laraque, REACH, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. The training of the PDMHI is embedded in a disaster framework. (See also published articles from Laraque #50 in bibliography). Below are two summary charts: The evaluation of Laraque, and summary evaluation of the course. Likert scale 5=Excellent 4= Very good 3=Good 2=Fair 1=Poor Quality of Presenter Value to my Practice Danielle Laraque Mean: 4.75 Median: 5 Mode: 5 No Response: 4/12 Mean: 4.58 Median: 5 Mode: 5 No Response: 13/56 (23.21%) Mean: 4.80 Median: 5 Mode: 5 No Response: 7/12 Mean: 4.61 Median: 5 Mode: 5 No Response: 28/56 (50%) PDMHI Training Sessions Summary: Course Directors: D. Laraque and G. Foltin Date of Presentation Location Number of Participants Type of Participants Presenters Mean Overall Evaluation Score on Learning Objectives (1-5 scale) May 22, 2013 Fort Hamilton Community Club 22 MDs – 11 RNs – 3 Social Workers – 3 Missing Information – 3 PhDs - 2 Intro – George Foltin PFA – Victor Fornari Expectable Responses – Carmel Foley Common Presentations – Danielle Laraque Who is at Risk – David Kaye Working in a Disaster Zone – Michael Frogel Lessons Learned – Victor Fornari 3.97 June 26, 2013 Dyker Beach Golf Course 31 RNs – 11 MDs – 9 Social Workers – 3 APRNs – 2 PhDs – 1 NP – 1 Paramedic – 1 Other – 1 Intro – Michael Frogel PFA – Peter D’Amico Expectable Responses – Carmel Foley Common Presentations – Diane Bloomfield Who is at Risk – David Kaye Working in a Disaster Zone – Michael Frogel Lessons Learned – Victor Fornari 4.14 September 11, 2013 Hofstra University Club 14 MDs – 13 Social Workers - 1 Intro; Danielle Laraque PFA – Peter D’Amico Expectable Responses – Carmel Foley Common Presentations – Diane Bloomfield Who is at Risk – Rachel Zuckerbrot Working in a Disaster Zone – Michael Frogel Lessons Learned – Victor Fornari 4.49 October 7, 2013 Oklahoma 39 Social Workers - 20 Other - 8 MDs – 6 Residents - 2 RNs – 1 PAs - 2 Intro – Michael Frogel PFA – Victor Fornari Expectable Responses – Carmel Foley Common Presentations – Michael Frogel Who is at Risk – Carmel Foley Working in a Disaster Zone – Michael Frogel Lessons Learned – Victor Fornari 4.42 Additional Details of Record of Accomplishments of HRSA Clinician-Research Fellowship: These include General Academic Pediatric and Internal Medicine Fellows. Principal Investigator: Laraque, Danielle Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Goldstein, Cheryl 2001-2003 Physician's Adherence to Hypertension Guidelines PUBLICATIONS: Hypertension management in minority communities: a clinician survey. Goldstein CE, Hebert PL, Sisk JE, McLaughlin MA, Horowitz CR, McGinn TG. J Gen Intern Med. 2008 Jan;23(1):81-6. Using structured debate to teach a controversial topic: mammography for women in their 40s. Helenius IM, Goldstein CE, Halm EA, Korenstein D. Teach Learn Med. 2006 Fall;18(4):292-6. Internists training medical residents in pelvic examination: impact of an educational program. Goldstein CE, Helenius I, Foldes C, McGinn T, Korenstein D. Teach Learn Med. 2005 Summer;17(3):274-8. Research Teaching Clinical Last update: approx 2007 Asst Professor, University of Alberta, Canada Helenius, Ira 2002-2004 Use of Hormone Therapy After the Women's Health Initiative PUBLICATIONS: A case-based approach to outpatient evaluation and management service coding. Staiger TO, Chew LD, Helenius I; Practice Management 3/2010 (Part time FTE 60%) Research: 0% Teaching:55% Asst Professor, MSSM Clinician Educator Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Subcommittee of Society For General Internal Medicine's Clinical Practice Committee. Postgrad Med. 2008 Nov;120(4):101-6. Review. Real-time EBM: from bed board to keyboard and back. Stark R, Helenius IM, Schimming LM, Takahara N, Kronish I, Korenstein D. J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Dec;22(12):1656-60. Changing use of hormone therapy among minority women since the Women's Health Initiative. Helenius IM, Korenstein D, Halm EA. Menopause. 2007 Mar-Apr;14(2):216-22. Using structured debate to teach a controversial topic: mammography for women in their 40s. Helenius IM, Goldstein CE, Halm EA, Korenstein D. Teach Learn Med. 2006 Fall;18(4):292-6. Internists training medical residents in pelvic examination: impact of an educational program. Goldstein CE, Helenius I, Foldes C, McGinn T, Clinical: 25% Admin 20% Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Korenstein D. Teach Learn Med. 2005 Summer;17(3):274-8. Demattia, Amy 2002-2005 CAM, Health Disparities, Patient Satisfaction PUBLICATIONS: DeMattia, A, Moskowitz, H, Kemper, KJ, Laraque, D. Who Receives Appropriate Recommendations about Complementary and Alternative Medical Therapies? Ambul. Pediatr. 2006 Nov-Dec;6(6):312-7. DeMattia AE, Kornblum J, Hoffman-Rosenfeld J, Trees DL, Laraque D. The Use of Combination Subtyping in the Evaluation of a Three-Year-Old Girl with Neisseria Gonorrhoeae. The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal; 25(5):461-463. May 2006. Laraque D, DeMattia A, Low C. Forensic Child Abuse Evaluation: A review. The Mount Sinai Journal, December 2006; 73(8):1138-1147. POSTER/ABSTRACTS: DeMattia A, Johnson CE, “Pediatric Associate’s Patient Satisfaction Survey”. Interdisciplinary meeting of Mount Sinai Medical Assistant Clinical Professor, MSSM Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Center’s Pediatric Associates, New York, NY, July, 2004. DeMattia A, Moskowitz H, Kemper K, McKinsey S, Wepner M, Tzavaras L, Guzman E, Laraque D, “Mapping Complementary and Alternative Medicine Information: A Study of Treatment Recommendations.” Poster presentation, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Pediatric Research Day, New York, NY, May 2004. DeMattia A, Johnson CE, Gordon L, “Evaluation of the Core Pediatric Resident Continuity Clinic Curriculum.” Poster presentation, Medical Education Research Day, Mount Sinai Institute for Medical Education, October 2004. Steinbaum, Deborah 2002-2005 Children’s Mental Health, Trauma, HIV PUBLICATIONS: Steinbaum DP, Chemtob C, Boscarino JA, Laraque D. Use of a Psychosocial Screen to Detect Children with Symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: An Exploratory Study. Ambulatory Pediatrics (accepted for publication Aug 2007) POSTER/ABSTRACTS: Steinbaum D, Kamath S, DeMattia A, Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position “Ambulatory Rounds: A Case-Based EBM Forum,” Poster presentation, Medical Education Research Day, Mount Sinai Institute for Medical Education, New York, NY Oct 20, 2004 Steinbaum D, Rethy J, Kamath S, Forman J, “Resident Advocacy Group as a Force for Curricular Change: A Blueprint for Resident Initiated Advocacy” 2004 Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting, Advocacy Special Interest Group, San Francisco, CA, May 2004 Steinbaum D, Tzavaras A, Laraque D, “Trauma and Distress in Primary Care Pediatrics,” Plenary Session Presentation, Society of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL Oct. 3, 2004. Steinbaum D, Tzavaras A, Laraque D, “Psychosocial Dysfunction and Trauma Related Distress in Primary Care Pediatrics,” Platform Presentation, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Pediatric Research Day, New York, NY May 20, Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position 2004. Lewis, Beth 2003-2005 Preventive Services Used by Women Under the Care of Generalists, Gynecologists and Both PUBLICATIONS: Preventive services use among women seen by gynecologists, general medical physicians, or both. Lewis BG, Halm EA, Marcus SM, Korenstein D, Federman AD. Obstet Gynecol. 2008 Apr;111(4):945-52. 3/2010 Research 15% Teaching+Clinical 85% Last update: 3/2010 Asst Professor, Drexel University, New Jersey Clinical position: director of obstetric medicine, maternal fetal medicine department, Saint Peters University Hospital. Lyn-Cook, Richard 2003-2005 Determinants of Influenza Vaccination Among Inner City Adults with Asthma PRECOURSE: Development and Implementation of a Patient-Based Musculoskeletal Curriculum for Internal Medicine Residents, SGIM 28th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana, May 11, 2005. Project title: Determinants of Influenza Vaccination Among Inner City Adults with Asthma 3/2010 Research 0% Teaching 25% Clinical 75% Last update: 3/2010: Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Assistant prof in Family and Community Medicine/ MedPeds Shuba Kamath 2003-2006 Obesity, Adolescent Health, Community Pediatrics POSTER/ABSTRACTS: Kamath S, Rosen C, Laraque D, “Assessing the Health Beliefs of Parents of Early School Age Children on Obesity” 2004 Annual Pediatric Research Day at Mt. Sinai, New York, Pediatrician Assistant Professor, Associate Residency Program Director Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position NY, May 20, 2004 Kamath S, Alpert I “Integrating a School-Based Outreach Program for Pregnant and Parenting Adolescents into Pediatric Residency Curriculum” American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference, Section on School Health, San Francisco, CA, October 2004 Kamath S, Rethy J, Klein G, Korn S, Greenberg A, Mogilner L, Forman J, “Community Advocacy for Pediatric Residents” Institute for Medical Education’s 2nd Annual Educational Research Day at Mt. Sinai, New York, NY, October 2004 Kamath S, Rosen C, Adams R, Laraque D “Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Minority School Age Children” Poster Presentation, Mount Sinai Pediatric Research Day, New York, NY April 6, 2006 Kamath S, Rosen C, Adams R, Laraque D “Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Minority School Age Children” Poster Presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA April 30, 2006 Kamath S, Rosen C, Adams R, Laraque D "Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Minority School Age Children" Oral Presentation, Ambulatory Pediatric Association Region 2 and Region 3 Annual Meeting, New York, NY March 9, 2006 Kamath S, Rosen C, Adams R, Laraque D “Parental Beliefs on Overweight and Lifestyle Changes in Minority School Age Children” Oral Presentation, Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting, Old Greenwich, CT March 18, 2006 Walker-Descartes, Ingrid 2004-2007 Health Disparities, Child Abuse PUBLICATIONS: Walker-Descartes I, Laraque D, Sealy, Y, Rojas, M. Caregiver Perceptions and Prompts to Outreach After a Disclosure of Child Sexual Abuse. (accepted for publication, International Journal of Child Abuse & Neglect Aug 2009) POSTERS/ABSTRACTS: Walker-Descartes I, Assistant Program Director, Attending Pediatrician at Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital (MICH)2007-2010; Residency Program Director and Associate Program Director Child Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Laren S, Laraque D. “The Effect of Parental Cultural Beliefs on Sexual Abuse Disclosures in Males vs. Female (Ages 3-9).” Poster Presentation: Mount Sinai School of Medicine Annual Pediatric Research Day, 2005. Walker-Descartes I, Laren S, Laraque D. “Does Social Support and Trust in the Medical Profession on Affect Caregiver Actions after a Hypothetical Disclosure of Child Sexual Abuse?” Poster Presentation: Mount Sinai School of Medicine Annual Pediatric Research Day, 2006. Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Sealy Y, Laren S, Laraque D. “Does the Perceived Level of Invasiveness of Child Sexual Abuse Affect Caregiver’s Willingness to Act?” Poster Presentation: Mount Sinai School of Medicine Annual Pediatric Research Day, March 2007. Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Sealy Y, Laren S, Laraque D. “Does the Perceived Level of Invasiveness of Child Sexual Abuse Affect Caregiver’s Willingness to Act?” Poster Presentation: Abuse Pediatrics (MICH) Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Ambulatory Pediatric Association Regional Meeting – Stratford, New Jersey. March, 2007 Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Sealy Y, Laren S, Laraque D. “Does the Perceived Level of Invasiveness of Child Sexual Abuse Affect Caregiver’s Willingness to Act?” Platform Presentation: Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting. March 2007 Walker-Descartes I, Rojas M, Sealy Y, Laren S, Laraque D. “Perceptions of Primary Care’s Role in the Management of Sexual Abuse.” Poster Presentation: Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting- Toronto Canada. May 2007. Evelyn Berger-Jenkins 2004-2007 Health Disparities, ADHD POSTERS/ABSTRACTS: Berger E, Ho L, Zylbert S, Rojas M, Laraque D. "School Health Advancement Program of East Harlem - Addressing Health Risk Behaviors in Pre-Adolescent Children". Poster Presentation, Mount Sinai Annual Pediatric Research Day, 2006. Berger E, McKay M, Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Newcorn J, Bannon W, Laraque D. " Sources of Healthcare Disparities in the Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder". Platform Presentation, Eastern Society for Pediatric Research Annual Meeting, March 2007. Berger E, Ho L, Zylbert S, Rojas M, Laraque D. "School Health Advancement Program of East Harlem - Addressing Health Risk Behaviors in Pre-Adolescent Children". Platform Presentation, Eastern Society for Pediatric Research, March 2007. Berger E, McKay M, Newcorn J, Bannon W, Laraque D. " Sources of Healthcare Disparities in the Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder". Poster Presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies National Meeting, May 2007. Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Kronish, Ian 2004-2005 Depression in Post-Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients and Adherence to Post-ACS Therapy PUBLICATIONS: Is depression after an acute coronary syndrome simply a marker of known prognostic factors for mortality? Kronish IM, Rieckmann N, Schwartz JE, Schwartz DR, Davidson KW. Psychosom Med. 2009 Sep;71(7):697-703. Real-time EBM: from bed board to keyboard and back. Stark R, Helenius IM, Schimming LM, Takahara N, Kronish I, Korenstein D. J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Dec;22(12):1656-60. Letter by Kronish et al regarding article, "Residual arachidonic acid-induced platelet activation via an adenosine diphosphate-dependent but cyclooxygenase-1- and cyclooxygenase-2-independent pathway: a 700-patient study of aspirin resistance". Kronish IM, Rieckmann N, Shimbo D, Davidson KW. Circulation. 2007 Jan 23;115(3):e45; author reply e46. Course of depressive symptoms and medication adherence after acute coronary syndromes: an electronic medication monitoring 3/2010: Research 70% Teaching 20% Clinical 10% Last update: 2010: Assistant Professor, Clinician Researcher MSSM Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position study. Rieckmann N, Gerin W, Kronish IM, Burg MM, Chaplin WF, Kong G, Lespérance F, Davidson KW. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006 Dec 5;48(11):2218-22. Persistent depressive symptoms lower aspirin adherence after acute coronary syndromes. Rieckmann N, Kronish IM, Haas D, Gerin W, Chaplin WF, Burg MM, Vorchheimer D, Davidson KW. Am Heart J. 2006 Nov;152(5):922-7. Persistent depression affects adherence to secondary prevention behaviors after acute coronary syndromes. Kronish IM, Rieckmann N, Halm EA, Shimbo D, Vorchheimer D, Haas DC, Davidson KW. J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Nov;21(11):1178-83. Medication utilization in an urban homebound population. Kronish IM, Federman AD, Morrison RS, Boal J. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2006 Apr;61(4):411-5. POSTER/ABSTRACT: A New Patient-based Primary care Mental Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Health curriculum for internal Medicine. I.M. Kronish; E.A. Halm; D.C. Thomas; D.R. Korenstein. Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY. Society of General Internal Medicine, 29th Annual Meeting, Los Angeles,California, April 2006. Oparaji, Anthony 2004-2006 Adherence to Colorectal Cancer Screening Project Title: Adherence to Colorectal Cancer Screening Research Teaching Clinical 2006: Attending, North General Hospital attempted update 3/2010: ??hospitalist at Newton Memorial Hospital 973-579-8419, no contact made Ponieman, Diego 2005-2007 Self Regulation & Self Management in Type 2 Diabetes PUBLICATIONS: The Statin Choice decision aid in primary care: A randomized trial. Mann DM, Ponieman D, Montori VM, Arciniega J, McGinn T. Patient Educ Couns. 2009 Dec 1. [Epub ahead of print] Impact of positive and negative beliefs about inhaled corticosteroids on adherence in inner-city asthmatic patients. Research10% Teaching 20% Clinical care 70% Updated 3/2010: Underserved Practice site: Harlem, zip code 10026 Hospital affiliation: Mount Sinai Hospital Academic title: Assist Clinical Professor Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Ponieman D, Wisnivesky JP, Leventhal H, Musumeci-Szabó TJ, Halm EA. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2009 Jul;103(1):38-42. Predictors of adherence to diabetes medications: the role of disease and medication beliefs. Mann DM, Ponieman D, Leventhal H, Halm EA. J Behav Med. 2009 Jun;32(3):278-84. Misconceptions about diabetes and its management among low-income minorities with diabetes. Mann DM, Ponieman D, Leventhal H, Halm EA. Diabetes Care. 2009 Apr;32(4):591-3. The utility of B-type natriuretic peptide in the diagnosis of heart failure in the emergency department: a systematic review. Korenstein D, Wisnivesky JP, Wyer P, Adler R, Ponieman D, McGinn T. BMC Emerg Med. 2007 Jun 26;7:6. Self management plus usual care was more effective than usual care alone for lower urinary tract symptoms in men. Ponieman D, McGinn T, Evid Based Med. 2007 Jun;12(3):73. Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Vangeepuram, Nita 2005-2008 Overweight in Childhood and Risk of Asthma PUBLICATIONS: Vangeepuram N, Ong G.L. and Mattes M.J. “Processing of antibodies bound to B-cell lymphomas and lymphoblastoid cell lines.” CANCER Supplement, December 1997,Vol. 80, No. 12, pp. 2425-2430 DesBordes C., Vangeepuram N and Lea M.A. “Combined effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids on formation of peroxidation products by liver and breast cancer cells.” FABEB J. 12, A1376 (1998) Vangeepuram N. “Review of Recent Environmental Health Articles.” APA Newsletter 2007. Vangeepuram N, Teitelbaum SL, Galvez M, Brenner B, Doucette J, Wolff MS. Measures of Obesity Associated with Asthma Diagnosis in Minority Children. (in review, submitted to Clinical Pediatrics) Biro FM, Galvez M, Greenspan LC, Clinical Instructor, MSSM Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, MSSM 2013 Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Vangeepuram N, Pinney S, Kushi LH, Wolff MS. Pubertal assessment methodology and baseline characteristics in the Breast Cancer and Environment Research Centers (BCERC) cohort (in review, submitted to Pediatrics) Teitelbaum SL, Vangeepuram N, Mervish N, Britton J, Brenner B, Calafat A, Wolff MS. Phthalate Metabolites and Body Size Characteristics in Urban Minority Girls (in preparation) POSTERS/ABSTRACTS: Vangeepuram N, Britton JA, Galvez M, Brenner B, Wolff MS, Teitelbaum S. “Obesity and Asthma Association in a Cohort of Inner City Children.” Presentation, Mount Sinai Fellows Research Seminar, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Vangeepuram N, Britton JA, Galvez M, Brenner B, Wolff MS, Teitelbaum S. “Obesity and Asthma Association in a Cohort of Inner City Children.” Presentation, Ambulatory Pediatrics Association, Pediatric Environmental Health Scholars Meeting, Reston, Virginia, Dec Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position 2005, 2006, and 2007. Vangeepuram N. “Diagnosis and Management of Childhood Obesity.” Presentation, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Pediatrics Residency Program, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Vangeepuram N, Graber N. “Recommended revisions to Brownfields Soil Clean Up Objectives to better protect child health.” Presentation, New York State Environmental Committee Ad Hoc Advisory Panel Meeting, Albany, New York, Jan 2006 Vangeepuram N. “Diagnosis and Management of Childhood Obesity.” Presentation, Mount Sinai Weight Management Fair, Mar 2006 and Feb 2007. Vangeepuram N, Perez D. “Summary information and highlights of clinical consultations for the year and case presentation of mercury exposure at a NJ daycare center.” Presentation, Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit Annual Meeting, Sept 2006. Vangeepuram N, Forman J. “Use of the Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Internet to find information about pediatric environmental health.” Presentation, American Academy of Pediatrics District 2 Fall Meeting, Oct 2006. Vangeepuram N, Littman, L. “Childhood Malnutrition in the Developing World.” Presentation, Mount Sinai School of Medicine Masters in Public Health Global Health Course, Jan 2007. Vangeepuram N, Britton JA, Galvez M, Brenner B, Wolff MS, Teitelbaum S. “Obesity and Asthma Association in a Cohort of Inner City Children.” Poster Presentation, Mount Sinai Pediatrics Research Day, Apr 2007. Vangeepuram N, Schranz E. “Healthy Eating and Exercise.” Presentation, I Have a Dream Foundation community health lecture series, Apr-May 2007. Vangeepuram N, Britton JA, Galvez M, Brenner B, Wolff MS, Teitelbaum S. “Obesity and Asthma Association in a Cohort of Inner City Children.” Presentation, Growing Up Healthy Community Advisory Board Meeting, Oct Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position 2007. Vangeepuram N, Perez D. “Case presentation: Pesticide exposure at a NJ middle school – lessons for risk communication.” Presentation, Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit Annual Meeting, Oct 2007. Stark, Rachel 2005-2007 Developing Guidelines for Professionalism to Meet ACGME requirements PUBLICATION: Impact of a 360-degree professionalism assessment on faculty comfort and skills in feedback delivery, Stark R, Korenstein D, Karani R, J Gen Intern Med. 2008 Jul;23(7):969-72. POSTER/ABSTRACT: Professionalism: Getting Comfortable Talking the Talk R. Stark; R. Karani; D.R. Korenstein. Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY. Society of General Internal Medicine, 30th Annual Meeting, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, April 2007 POSTER/ABSTRACT: Professionalism: What Does it Mean? A Qualitative Anaylsis R. Stark; J. Jue; D.R. Korenstein; R. Karani. Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY. Society of General Internal Medicine, 30th Annual Meeting, Toronto, Ontario, 2010: Currently between jobs. Looking for: clinical 50% teaching 50% Possibly Brigham Womens/Boston Medical Center 2007-2009:Asst Professor, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Associate Program Director, Primary Care Residency, Montefiore Med Ctr update 3/2010: maternity leave, moved to Boston Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Canada, April 2007. Jae, Gina 2006-2008 Survivors of Trauma: Provider's Attitudes Toward Clinical Program POSTER/ABSTRACT: Primary Care Services for Survivor of Torture: A Qualitative Study of Provider Attitudes. G.A. Jae; A.Rasmussen; A.S. Keller. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, NY and New York University, New York, NY., Society of General Internal Medicine 31st Annual Meeting. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, April 2008. POSTER/ABSTRACT: Preparing First Year Medical Students For International Service. G.A. Jae1; C. Defillipo1; J. Zeidman1; D.C. Thomas1. 1Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY. Society of General Internal Medicine, 30th Annual Meeting, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, April 2007. n/a currently PhD student Student: Columbia University, phD in medical anthropolgy Amin, Prina 2006-2009 Early Childhood Literacy Instructor Assistant Professor, Cornell-Weill 2013 Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position m Willis, Asha 2007-present Overweight and liver disease PUBLICATIONS: Willis A, Vanhuse C, Newton K, Wasserstein, M, Morotti, R. Farber Disease Type IV Presenting with Cholestatic Jaundice and Neonatal Liver Failure: Report of Two Cases. Pediatr Dev Pathol. 2007 Sept 28;:1 [Epub ahead of print] Asha D. Willis, M.D., Fellow, Pediatric Gastroenterology and General Academic Pediatrics; The Mount Sinai Medical Center, 2007 Fellow Assistant Professor NYU Maimonides Medical Center faculty Acinapura, Lauren 2007-2009 Medical Education Chronic Disease Model Teaching self-efficacy POSTER/ABSTRACT: An Ambulatory Curriculum on Collaborative Goal Setting and Action Planning to Improve Patient Self-Management of Chronic Diseases. Acinapura L. The Institute for Medical Education, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Educational Research Day, October 23, 2008. ORAL PRESENTATION/ABSTRACT: Teaching Research Teaching Clinical Updated 3/2010: Weill Cornell Assistant Attending Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Residents to Help Patients Make a Change: An ambulatory Curriculum on Action Planning, Regional SGIM meeting 2009 POSTER/ABSTRACT: Teaching Residents to Help Patients Make a Change: A ambulatory Curriculum on Action Planning, Society of General Internal Medicine, 32nd Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Florida, May 2009. Nissim, Julie 2007-2009 Medical Education And Use of Information Technology in Med Ed POSTER/ABSTRACT: Can Charting Smartphrases Improve Patient Care? J.A. Nissim; A. Amsterdam; D.C. Thomas; J. Kannry. Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY. Society of General Internal Medicine, 32nd Annual Meeting, Miami Beach, Florida, May 2009. Research 0% Teaching: 30% Clinical: 70% Updated 3/2010: Assistant Professor Mount Sinai Medical Center, FPA-Primary Care Sigel, Keith 2007-2009 Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Health Service Outcomes Project: HIV as a risk factor for Lung Cancer PUBLICATION: Effect of age on survival of clinical stage I non-small-cell lung cancer. Sigel K, Bonomi M, Packer S, Wisnivesky J. Ann Surg Oncol. 2009 Jul;16(7):1912-7. POSTER: Effect of age on survival of clinical stage I non-small-cell lung cancer. ID meeting in Portugal 3/2009 n/a current clinical fellow (Infectious Disease) Updated 3/2010: Infectious Disease Fellowship @ Mount Sinai Medical Center Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Bishop, Tara 2008-present Health Policy/ Economics of health care POSTER/ABSTRACT: Physicians views on Defensive Medicine: A National Survey, Bishop T, Federman A, Keyhani S, SGIM National Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, April 2010. POSTER/ABSTRACT: Laboratory Test Ordering at Physician Offices with and without On-Site Laboratories SGIM National Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, April 2010. n/a current fellow Updated 3/2010: Job Accepted: Cornell Medical Center Clinician Researcher Perez, Xavier 2008-present Health Disparities, Health beliefs in COPD n/a current fellow Roy, Angkana 2008-present Asthma PUBLICATION: Angkana Roy, MD, Linda Lurslurchachai, MPH, Ethan A. Halm, MD, MPH, Xiu-Min Li, MD, Howard Leventhal, PhD, Juan P. Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. Herbal Remedy Use and Adherence to Inhaled Corticosteroids Among Inner-city Asthmatics. Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. 2010; 104(2): 132-138. Angkana Roy, MD, Juan P. Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. Racial and Ethnic Differences in the Use of Environmental Control Practices Among Children with Asthma. Journal of Asthma Fellow Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position (Accepted for Publication) Angkana Roy, MD, Martin J. Downes, DipComp MVB, Juan P. Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. Comprehensive Environmental Management of Asthma and Pediatric Preventive Care. (Submitted) Martin J. Downes, DipComp MVB, Angkana Roy MD, Thomas G. McGinn MD, MPH, Juan P. Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. Factors Associated with Pet Ownership Among Patients with Asthma. (Submitted) POSTERS/ABSTRACTS: Angkana Roy, MD and Juan Wisnivesky, MD,MPH. Comprehensive Use of Environmental Control Practices Among Children with Asthma - Platform presentation, Eastern Society of Pediatric Research Annual Conference. Philadelphia, PA. March 2009. - Poster presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies. Baltimore, MD. May 2009. - Platform presentation, CDC National Environmental Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Health Conference. Atlanta, GA. October 2009. Angkana Roy, MD and Juan Wisnivesky, MD,MPH. Disparities in the Use of Environmental Control Practices Among Children with Asthma. - Platform presentation, Mount Sinai Pediatric Research Day, New York, NY. April 2009. - Poster presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies. Baltimore, MD. May 2009. Angkana Roy, MD, Perry Sheffield, MD, Kendrew Wong, Leonardo Trasande, MD, MPP. Breathing Easy: the Economic Implications of Outdoor Air Pollution and Pediatric Asthma Hospitalizations. - Platform presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies. Vancouver, B.C. May 2010 (upcoming) - Platform presentation, Eastern Society of Pediatric Research Annual Conference. Philadelphia, PA. March 2010. (upcoming) Angkana Roy, MD, Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Lauren Steele, Emily Blanchard, Atray Dixit, Juan Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. The Association between Asthma Education and Use of Environmental Control Practices - Platform presentation, Eastern Society of Pediatric Research Annual Conference. Philadelphia, PA. March 2010. (upcoming) - Poster presentation, Pediatric Academic Societies. Vancouver, B.C. May 2010 (upcoming) Angkana Roy, MD, Lauren Steele, Juan Wisnivesky, MD, DrPH. The Association between Disease Beliefs and Indoor Environmental Control Practices Among Children with Asthma - Poster presentation, Eastern Society of Pediatric Research Annual Conference. Philadelphia, PA. March 2010. (upcoming) Perry Sheffield, MD, Angkana Roy, MD, Amir Miodovnik, MD, Sophie Balk, MD. What Gets Said: Deconstructing Media Messages about Pediatric Environmental Health Concerns. - Workshop, Pediatric Academic Societies. Vancouver, Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position B.C. May 2010 (upcoming) Peccoralo, Lauren 2009-present Medical Education Project: Continuity in Resident Clinic POSTER/ABSTRACT: Improving attending feedback to ward residents: could a pocket card be the ticket? Peccoralo L, Karani R, Coplit L, Korenstein D MSSM, Poster Presentation: SGIM Annual Meeting, Miami, FL, May 2009. Poster Presentation: APDIM Fall Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, Oct. 2009. ORAL + POSTER PRESENTATION/ABSTRACT: ACT: An Ambulatory Care Team Model to Improve Continuity of Care in a Resident Clinic. Peccoralo L, Stulman J, Korenstein D, Federman A, Thomas D. MSSM. Oral Presentation: SGIM Mid-Atlantic Regional Meeting, NY, NY, March 2010, Poster Presentation: SGIM National Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, April 2010. n/a current fellow Name Fellowship Training Period Title of the Research Project Contact Info Publications & Posters/Abstracts Research/teaching Clinical percent Current Position Krauskopf, Katie 2009-present HIV and General Medicine Project: Health belief accuracy in HCV vs. HIV ORAL PRESENTATION/ABSTRACT: A Comparison of HIV and Hepatitis C health beliefs in an inner-city community: the need for more effective Hepatitis C education, Krauskopf K, McGinn T, Federman A, Oster AS, Kronish I. Division of General Internal Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Oral Presentation: SGIM Mid-Atlantic Regional Meeting, NY, NY, March 2010, Oral Presentation: SGIM National Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, April 2010. n/a current fellow Desikan, Sonia 2009-present Youth Development and Adolescent Health Fellow Park, Jeahnee 2009-present Obesity Fellow SUNY-NYC LH.jpg Upstate Medical University Presidential Interviews SUNY-NYC LH.jpg SUNY-NYC LH.jpg Photo of Danielle Laraque Dr. Danielle Laraque - Arena Tuesday, August 25th 2015 Dr. Danielle Laraque - Arena’s Biography from Mount Sinai Website: Danielle Laraque-Arena, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics and the endowed Debra and Leon Black Professor of Pediatrics, is the Chief of the Division of General Pediatrics at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics (2000-present). Dr. Laraque-Arena completed her medical studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. She received the Roy Markus Scholarship (1977-1981) in support of her medical studies. Her internship and residency were completed at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia where she was also a Robert Wood Johnson Fellow in General Academic Pediatrics (1984-86). She was the Ambulatory Pediatric Association Regional Co-Chair from 1993-1996. She joined the faculty at Columbia University at Harlem Hospital in 1986 where she was until 2000. During that period of time she founded and directed many programs including the Adolescent Outreach Program, The Family Support Program and the Family Friends Program. She was the Director of the Harlem Hospital Pediatric Resource Center (1996-2000) and Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University (1997-2000). In 2000 Dr. Laraque-Arena joined the faculty at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. In 2001 she was a United States Public Health Service Primary Care Policy Fellow. She was the APA National Nominating Committee Member (1995-1997, 2004-2006) and a member of the APA Board of Directors (1999-2002) during which time she chaired the APA Health Care Delivery Committee. She currently serves on the Editorial Board of the Ambulatory Pediatrics journal. She is the Immediate-Past-President for the American Academy of Pediatrics, NY Chapter 3 (2003-2005), the AAP NY Chapter 3 President (2000-2002), and AAP District II Vice Chair (2004-2007). She is on the editorial board for Pediatrics in Review and completed her six-year term (1996-2002) as a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' National Committee on Injury, Violence and Poison Prevention. Her collaborative injury prevention work in community-based interventions is recognized as a national model. She is a nationally and internationally recognized expert in injury prevention, child abuse, adolescent health risk behaviors and in the issues critical to health care delivery in underserved communities. She has served on the Mayor's Task Force for Child Abuse and helped establish standards for referral of abused children for emergency medical services. She is a member of the Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Bright Futures National Health Promotion Workgroup. Most recently she has focused her research and training activities on children's mental health. Dr. Laraque-Arena is the recipient of numerous academic, research, community and public service awards. She serves on numerous committees both locally and nationally. Since her recruitment as Division Chief for General Pediatrics here at Sinai, a major focus has been placed on growing of innovative clinical pediatric programs, strengthening the academic teaching in support of the primary care residency training (86 residents), and building the infrastructure for robust research in primary care. These endeavors, which involve the vision of building an academic division with a national reputation for excellence, have been supported through vigorous pursuit of extramural grants from federal, state and foundation sources and recruitment of key faculty. Faculty members are engaged in teaching at the medical school, act as course directors in the MPH program, and mentor medical students, residents and fellows. The central themes for research and clinical care have included children's mental health, children with special health care needs, community pediatrics, asthma, obesity, violence prevention, and policy/advocacy. The division continues to recruit academic generalists. The research productivity is being marked by submission and publication of a number of manuscripts.