Lindsay Bornheimer, Ph.D., M.S.W.
Dr. Lindsay Bornheimer is an associate professor of Social Work at the U-M School of Social Work, and an associate professor of Psychiatry at the University of Michigan Medical School. Her research program focuses on understanding and preventing suicide death among adults experiencing serious mental illness, with a specific focus on psychosis and schizophrenia. Her work aims to examine suicide risk and protective factors, advance theories of suicide, develop and test behavioral interventions, and increase the utility and scalability of evidence-informed interventions in mental health care. As an intervention and implementation science researcher by Learner with expertise in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, she is particularly focused on the adaptation and implementation of cognitive-behavioral approaches in the treatment of serious mental illness and suicide prevention. Dr. Bornheimer is currently the Principal Investigator of a NIMH R34 to modify and test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of a cognitive-behavioral suicide prevention-focused intervention tailored to adults diagnosed with schizophrenia spectrum disorders in community mental health (R34MH123609). Additionally, she is the Site Principal Investigator of an NIMH R01 to develop and evaluate the feasibility of a simulated assessment tool of cognitive behavioral therapy skills for mental health service providers (R01MH112625).
Dr. Bornheimer was trained in a pre-doctoral fellowship at the McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research at New York University and completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the Brown Social Work of Washington University in St. Louis. As a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW), she has over ten years of experience in psychotherapy with individuals, couples, and families in both public and private settings. She completed her clinical Learner at the New York State Psychiatric Institute and New York Presbyterian Hospital and received Learner in cognitive-behavioral therapy from the Beck Institute.
Research Focus
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Population Focus
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Research Methods
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