Date
21 February 2024
Organised by
RANZCP Tasmania BranchPresenter

Conjoint Professor Jackie Curtis AM
Dr Jackie Curtis AM is the Executive Director of the Mindgardens Neuroscience Network and Clinical Lead of Youth Mental Health, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District. Jackie is Conjoint Professor with the Discipline of Psychiatry and Mental Health, UNSW, Sydney.
She has a long-standing interest in the physical health of people living with psychosis and her clinical research has had strong research translation implications, influencing clinical practice, health service delivery, policy and guidelines in mental health services locally, nationally and internationally. She co-founded the international group concerned with physical health in young people experiencing psychosis (iphYs) in 2010 which she co-chairs.
Dr Curtis is regularly invited to speak nationally and internationally on youth mental health, and physical health co-morbidities and was invited to be part of the WHO guideline development group for physical health in people experiencing severe mental illness.
Dr Jackie Curtis AM is the Executive Director of the Mindgardens Neuroscience Network and Clinical Lead of Youth Mental Health, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District. Jackie is Conjoint Professor with the Discipline of Psychiatry and Mental Health, UNSW, Sydney.
She has a long-standing interest in the physical health of people living with psychosis and her clinical research has had strong research translation implications, influencing clinical practice, health service delivery, policy and guidelines in mental health services locally, nationally and internationally. She co-founded the international group concerned with physical health in young people experiencing psychosis (iphYs) in 2010 which she co-chairs.
Dr Curtis is regularly invited to speak nationally and internationally on youth mental health, and physical health co-morbidities and was invited to be part of the WHO guideline development group for physical health in people experiencing severe mental illness.
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