Department of Psychiatry Behavioral Sciences

Education

The Einstein Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science's training programs offer unparalleled dedication to professional growth and personal development. Founded on the tenets of academic excellence, personal diversity, and individual attention, they are designed to help trainees actualize their being and becoming, as all technical and professional skills are, ultimately, contextually tailored manifestations of one's self.

Programs

Psychiatry Residency Program
The Montefiore Einstein Psychiatry Residency Program prepares trainees to become excellent clinicians, able to integrate biological, psychodynamic, phenomenological and socio-cultural models in the effective treatment of patients. program website 

Fellowship Programs
Montefiore Einstein Psychology Fellowship Programs offer ACGME-accredited professional development opportunities in child/adolescent psychiatry, addiction psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, forensic psychiatry, and psychosomatic medicine. fellowship website 

Psychology Internship Program
The Montefiore Einstein Psychology Internship Training Program is an APA-accredited, year-long predoctoral internship with an established reputation for providing exceptional training opportunities for future psychologists. more info 

Medical Student Clerkship
The six-week psychiatry clerkship trains medical students to evaluate patients under the clinical care of psychiatrists and to integrate the mental status examination into general clinical care.

Upcoming Events

50th Annual Leadership Conference

Date: June 2 - 4, 2023

Brochure 2023

CRLC Registration Form 2023

Calendar

Tuesday, February 27, 2024 | 12:00 PM
Annual Marie Daly Lecture
Price Center/Block Pavilion, LeFrak Auditorium

view calendar

 

Media Spotlight

Less Snacking, More Satisfaction: Some Foods Boost Levels of an Ozempic-Like Hormone

Gary Schwartz, Ph.D., describes how GLP-1, a hormone that is released during digestion, acts to stimulate insulin and slow how quickly food moves through the stomach into the intestine. Dr. Schwartz is professor of medicine and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and in the Dominick P. Purpura Department of Neuroscience at Einstein.

(Monday, Oct 30, 2023)

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