Welcome to the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at UC Davis! We are committed to promoting world class mental health services that help patients and families live their lives more fully. Our four key mission areas — patient care, academics, research and community engagement — actively support this commitment.
Joe P. Tupin Endowed Professor
Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Faculty and trainees (including residents, fellows and psychology trainees) in our department provide mental health services for adults, children and adolescents throughout the greater Sacramento area:
As part of our commitment to community mental health, we collaborate with Sacramento County to provide care to people in our community with serious mental illness. Our faculty and residents support the county’s crisis unit, 50-bed inpatient hospital, and adjacent mental health urgent care center at the Sacramento Mental Health Treatment Center. Our department also provides mental health care to people in the justice system through inpatient and outpatient psychiatric programs at the Sacramento County jail.
We are excited about new clinical services being developed in the following subspecialty areas:
We are committed to training the next generation of psychiatrists to help fill the anticipated future shortage of providers in our country. Perhaps because of our department’s strong teaching presence in the School of Medicine, UC Davis medical students choose our psychiatry program at a rate of two times the national average. Residents, who rotate through multiple clinical sites around Sacramento as part of their learning experience, are accepted into one of our three accredited residency programs:
Of significance, we are one of only two institutions in the country offering combined psychiatry residency programs in both internal medicine and family medicine.
We also support four fellowships and an internship:
Our faculty include nationally recognized researchers and our department ranks 17th in the nation for psychiatry research funding according to Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research. We have major strengths in autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders as well as imaging, aging, dementia and early psychosis. Research is conducted at a number of sites throughout northern California including UC Davis MIND Institute, the Imaging Research Center on the UC Davis Medical Center campus, and the UC Davis Center for Neuroscience located on the Davis campus.
Research in these centers focuses on neuroscience (human and animal models), including:
Faculty are also involved in telepsychiatry research at the Medical Education Technology Center and are already conducting geriatric research at the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. Other active research sites include Napa State Hospital and the California National Primate Research Center.
Our faculty have a long history of funding from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging, Brain Behavior Research Foundation, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Stanley Foundation, One Mind, Simons Foundation, as well as grants and contracts from counties and the state of California.
Our location in the capital of California allows our department to help shape policies and programs to improve quality and access to mental health services for people living in the local, county and state levels. Faculty and trainees engage in partnerships with Sacramento community organizations and stakeholders to improve mental health services in the region.
Sacramento is one of the most diverse cities in the nation, and our department has a deep tradition in cultural psychiatry to meet the diverse needs of our community. The department is deeply committed to advancing justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion (JEDI) in mental health. Trainees participate in a rich, integrated four-year curriculum that emphasizes the role of cultural psychiatry, mental health equity, and social justice that is taught by national experts in the field. The department’s Diversity Advisory Committee (DAC) is a multidisciplinary team of faculty, trainees, and staff that are focused on advancing justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion in the department and Sacramento community.
We are committed to providing a more just, equitable, diverse, and inclusive environment for our faculty, staff, trainees, students and the patients we serve. Efforts include a commitment to racial justice through health equity research, evaluation of our recruitment and retention strategies and assessment of departmental policies through a racial equity lens.
Learn more about our community programs
Learn more about JEDI
Our four mission areas are interrelated and support our commitment to improving mental health care so patients and families can live their lives more fully.
Our early psychosis programs are a prime example. Through our Early Diagnosis and Preventive Treatment (EDAPT) clinic, we provide mental health services to patients who have been newly diagnosed with psychosis, including schizophrenia and mood disorders, as well as those at high risk for psychosis. Faculty in this clinic lead a number of neuroscience studies related to cognitive control, learning, and memory in individuals with psychosis, as well as mobile health technology and health services research projects.
In the realm of teaching, the EDAPT clinic provides leading-edge training opportunities for psychiatry residents and fellows as well as psychology pre-doctoral, intern and post-doctoral trainees. Furthermore, we educate our community on the nature of mental disorders and share our unique expertise in cutting-edge assessment techniques to identify at-risk individuals early in their illness and provide comprehensive evidence-based interventions.
You are invited to explore our mission areas to learn more about the breadth, depth and reach of our academic programs, our exemplary mental and behavioral health services, our nationally funded, leading-edge psychiatric research, and our commitment to the Sacramento community and beyond.