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Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center | Bradley Hospital
Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center | Bradley Hospital
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Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center
Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center
Center for Translational Neuroscience
COBRE Center for Sleep and Circadian Rhythms
Early Childhood Research
HIV Research Team
InVita Research Lab
Pediatric Anxiety Research Center (PARC)
Supporting Underserved Children, Caregivers, and Emerging Adults in Systems and Services (SUCCESS)
Medical Education and Training Programs
Research Areas
Biological Basis of Psychiatric Disorders
Early Childhood Research and Services
Forensic Issues and Juvenile Justice
Health Services Research at Bradley Hospital
Pediatric Behavioral Health
Chronic Disease Management
GI Psychology Partnership
Allergy Play
Sibling Adaptation
SibLink
Adolescent Obesity
Sleep
Prevention and Early Intervention
HIV Prevention
Adolescent Relationships (Dating Violence and Sexual Risk Behaviors)
Meet Our Researchers
Current Studies
Bradley Hospital Researchers Study How Sleep Impacts Childhood Achievement
Bradley Hospital Sleep Experts Assess California’s Legislation for Later School Start Times
Bradley Hospital Receives $10M to Establish Sleep, Circadian Rhythms Research Center
InVita Research Program Examines Treatment for Suicidal Behavior among Hispanic/Latinx youth
Study Tests Effect of Video Game on Impulse Control
The Hidden Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Children
Support Our Research
Flexible Content
Children's Mental Health Research
At
Bradley Hospital
and
Hasbro Children’s
, our role as leaders in child mental health research stretches back more than 75 years. As a field of scientific investigation, you could say that pediatric psychopharmacology began at Bradley Hospital, with the 1937 publication of the results of stimulant trials in children.
We have continued a long tradition of taking our valuable clinical research and applying it directly to our mission of improving the lives of children and their families. Today, for example, our pioneering research groups study children’s sleep, infant development, psychophysiology, risk prevention, behavioral health promotion, and specific disorders such as anxiety, depression, and OCD. This work has translated into new and effective treatments and strategies for children and their families.
Since 2002, the majority of the
child mental and behavioral health researchers
have been in one location at the Bradley Hasbro Children’s Research Center (BHCRC) in Providence (see below). Having most researchers from both hospitals at one site has promoted collaboration among research groups and maximized our impact on our field. Our research interests and projects have continued to grow. Approximately 50 BHCRC investigators direct over 100 externally funded projects. Grant support is extensive: awards to the BHCRC average over $30 million each year, and the total grant awards for all years of
currently active projects
averages $110 million.
Training the Next Generation of Investigators
Our commitment to training the next generation of researchers runs deep. Research training in child mental health at Bradley Hospital, Hasbro Children’s and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health since 1994 and has continued to expand. Today, we are known as one of the nation’s
premier child mental and behavioral health research training
sites. Our highly successful, NIH-supported research training programs for PhD and MD trainees are producing the next generation of young investigators.
Leading the Nation in Clinical Research
Our investigators
continually seek answers to the most important questions in the realm of child development and child mental and behavioral health. We explore new insights into the genetic roots of autism and the psychobiology of depression. We are developing and testing the latest therapeutic approaches to more effectively treat depression; create effective therapies for OCD; devise effective prevention strategies for adolescent risks such as suicide and substance use; strengthen families coping with illness and trauma; and much more. Every day, we generate new projects, test new therapies, and challenge conventional wisdom in new ways—all with the single aim of helping children develop into healthy adults.
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Related Programs
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