Gerald Nestadt, MBBCh

Photos

600 N Wolfe St # 131
Baltimore, MD 21287
Dr. Gerald Nestadt is the Rudolf Hoehn-Saric and Evanne Hoehn-Saric Professor of Anxiety and OCD Research in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the Johns Hopkins Medical School and Professor of Mental Health in the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins. He is the director of the Johns Hopkins OCD clinic, and teaches residents and students about this disorder.He is active in research, clinical treatment, and education in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). His research, funded by the NIMH, involves investigating the genetic etiology of obsessive compulsive disorder. He received his medical degree from the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa and a degree in Public Health at the Johns Hopkins University. He completed his psychiatric residency training at Johns Hopkins and a psychiatric epidemiology fellowship, also at Johns Hopkins. He has been on the faculty at Johns Hopkins for the past 30 years. In addition to studying OCD, he is involved in epidemiological research studying personality in the general population and the genetics of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. He has published more than one hundred and sixty papers in peer reviewed psychiatric journals. He served on the American Psychiatric Association OCD Treatment Guidelines Committee and was a consultant on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders V Revisions committee, and the OCD Foundation Scientific Advisory Committee.
Owner verified
See a problem?

You might also like

James Bennett Potash, MD
Internal medicine practitioners

James Bennett Potash, MD

Dr. Potash returned to Johns Hopkins as Director of Psychiatry and Psychiatrist-in-Chief in 2017. Prior to that he was Chair and Department Executive Officer of the University of Iowa Department of Psychiatry from 2011-17. Dr. Potash graduated in 1984 from Yale College, where he majored in English. Following graduation, he served in the Peace Corps in the West African country of Senegal, and there decided to become a physician. He completed his master’s degree in public health at Johns Hopkins, focusing on epidemiology and international health. He then went on to medical school at Hopkins, medical internship at Hopkins Bayview, and a year working as a general practitioner in another West African country, Benin. He returned to do his psychiatric residency at Hopkins and served as chief resident in 1997-98. He then joined Dr. Ray DePaulo’s mood disorders program, and eventually became the program’s research director before moving to Iowa. Dr. Potash’s work has focused on investigation of the genetic and epigenetic basis of mood disorders—depression and bipolar disorder. These efforts have resulted in over 170 publications and consistent NIH funding. He has been particularly interested in the genetic basis of the psychotic forms of bipolar disorder, and in the epigenetic mechanisms through which stress plays a role in depression. Dr. Potash co-leads the Bipolar Sequencing Consortium, and is a member of the Council on Research for the American Psychiatric Association. He serves as Treasurer for the International Society for Psychiatric Genetics, and he has played a leading role in the National Network of Depression Centers. In addition to his research endeavors, Dr. Potash is also an active clinician who sees mood disorders patients in the inpatient and outpatient settings.
United StatesMarylandBaltimoreGerald Nestadt, MBBCh

Yext