Thomas Heinrich, MD
Thomas Heinrich, MD, is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin where he also completed his medical degree and a combined residency in Family Medicine and Psychiatry. He then completed a fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital in consultation psychiatry. He is board certified in Family Medicine, Psychiatry and Psychosomatic Medicine. After fellowship, Dr. Heinrich returned to the Medical College of Wisconsin to serve as Chief of Consultation Psychiatry at Froedtert Hospital. He is now the Director of the Division of General Hospital Psychiatry. Most recently, Dr. Heinrich was appointed Vice Chairman for Clinical Services in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine. In this newly created position, he will oversee development of the department’s academic specialty and subspecialty clinical programs. Dr. Heinrich remains very active clinically, seeing patients with medical and psychiatric comorbidity at Froedtert Hospital as a member of the Consultation Psychiatry Service. His research interests include neuropsychiatric disorders in patients with medical illness and the clinical ethics issues which may arise in the care of these patients. He is currently an investigator in a NIMH-funded study examining behavioral interventions to reduce adverse metabolic consequences of atypical antipsychotic medication.
Robert McCarron, D.O.
Robert McCarron, D.O., completed a combined residency in Internal Medicine and Psychiatry at Rush University and is board certified in Psychiatry, Psychosomatic medicine and Internal Medicine. He is an Assistant Clinical Professor at the University of California, Davis School of Medicine, and is the founding Training Director of the combined Internal Medicine / Psychiatry residency program. He was recently awarded a 1.4 million dollar grant from the California Department of Mental Health to create, replicate and implement a “Med Psych” curriculum that can be used by primary care practitioner training programs. Dr. McCarron is the Associate Medical Director for the Sacramento County Mental Health Treatment Center Emergency Psychiatry Unit and also oversees the UC Davis MedPsych clinic where he serves as a primary care psychiatry consultant. Dr. McCarron has published on unexplained physical complaints, depression and anxiety in the primary care setting, metabolic syndrome and medical education. He recently edited a textbook Lippincott’s Primary Care Psychiatry, and is active training primary care practitioners in this area.
Susan Padrino, MD
Susan Padrino, MD, received her medical degree from the University of Maryland in 1999. She completed the combined Internal Medicine-Psychiatry training program at Duke University Medical Center in 2004. During residency, she was a Member in Trainee (MIT) trustee at the American Psychiatric Association. After graduation, she joined the faculty at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio. Dr. Padrino is active in medical student and post-graduate education. She is the Director of Physical Diagnosis Course for medical students at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. She is also currently the Medical Director of the Internal Medicine Residency Training Clinic at Case Medical Center and precepts post-graduate continuity clinic experiences. Clinically, Dr. Padrino also performs psychiatric consultation in Oncology and Hepatology. In addition, she works in a community psychiatry setting seeing patients in a specialized Mental Health clinic for the homeless.
David Resch, MD
David Resch, MD, is Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine and the Chair of the Division of Medicine Psychiatry at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine (SIU). He completed his training in Internal Medicine and Psychiatry at Southern Illinois University and then University of Iowa Hospitals in 1992. He was also Chief of Residents in Internal Medicine at SIU in 1991. He is board certified in Internal Medicine, Psychiatry, Geriatric Psychiatry and Psychosomatic Medicine. He has served as Acting Chair for the Department of Medicine at SIU. Clinically, he works in an outpatient combined Medicine Psychiatry clinic and rounds on inpatient Psychiatry Consultation Liaison. He is active in medical student and post-graduate education and recently published on peer assessment of professionalism. In 2007, he received the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine Award from the Arnold P. Gold Foundation and the Golden Apple Award for outstanding teaching. His research interests include delirium and medical education.
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