An Athlete’s Battle On and Off the Field: Grace Taylor's story
A Division I lacrosse player at Harvard navigates a life-changing cancer diagnosis with support from the Cancer Center's AYA program.
The Department of Psychiatry Center for Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging sponsors the annual Frances J. Bonner, MD, award, which recognizes an individual who has overcome adversity and has made significant contributions to the field of mental health and the care of minoritized communities.
The Center also organizes an annual spring speaker series, which brings nationally recognized speakers to discuss a wide range of issues with faculty, trainees and staff.
The Frances J. Bonner, MD Award was established in 2010 by the Mass General Department of Psychiatry and the Center for Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging in honor of the late Frances J. Bonner to promote diversity and inclusion in the psychiatric community.
The late Frances J. Bonner, MD, was a member of the Mass General Psychiatry Department for 50 years, and the first female African-American physician to train on a Mass General service. Dr. Bonner came to Mass General in 1949 after completing her neurology training at Boston City Hospital. She started her research career at the Mass General with a two-year fellowship from Radcliffe College to study hysteria and later conducted neurobiological research at Mass General. Dr. Bonner received her psychoanalytic certification at the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute in 1975 and with others, founded the Psychoanalytic Institute of New England. Dr. Bonner devoted most of her career to clinical practice and supervising residents in individual psychotherapy. She was a pioneer in crossing racial and gender boundaries within medicine.
2022: Lisa Fortuna, MD, MPh, MDiv
"Co-designing Mental Health Interventions and Equity with Marginalized Community Stakeholder Youth and Families"
2020-2021: David C. Henderson, MD
"Equity, Inclusion, and Justice: Is it Possible in Psychiatry?"
2019: Deborah Prothrow-Stith, MD
“40 Years of Viewing Violence as a Public Health Problem: Lessons Learned”
2018: Felton "Tony" Earls, PhD
"Collective Efficacy: From Discovery to Global Health Practice”
2017: Debora Burgard, PhD, FAED
"Dismantling the Weight Loss Prescription: One Size Does Not Fix All”
2016: Xavier E. Cagigas, PhD
"Cultural Neuropsychology: A Reverberating Zeitgeist Amidst Scientific Complacency”
2015: Jessica Henderson Daniel, PhD, ABPP
Watch Dr. Daniel's presentation at Psychiatry Grand Rounds: "The Tapestry of Difference: Weaving Cognition and Affect into Practice, Research and Training"
2014: Haji Shearer, LSW
Watch Mr. Shearer's presentation at Psychiatry Grand Rounds: "Integrating Culture and Mindfulness to Support Father, Mother and Child Well-being"
2013: Joseph E. Trimble, PhD
Watch Dr. Trimble's presentation at Psychiatry Grand Rounds: "Ethics in Mental Health: An Emphasis on Conducting Research with Ethnocultural Populations"
2012: Margarita Alegria, PhD
2011: Carl C. Bell, MD
Watch Dr. Bell's presentation at Psychiatry Grand Rounds: “Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Among Young People: Progress and Possibilities”
For 80 years, Mass General's Psychiatry Department has provided the highest quality patient care through pioneering research.
We provide care for patients of any age throughout the lifespan.
A Division I lacrosse player at Harvard navigates a life-changing cancer diagnosis with support from the Cancer Center's AYA program.
U.S. News & World Report released its “Best Hospitals” for 2024-2025 and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), a founding member of the Mass General Brigham health care system, has again earned a spot on the annual Honor Roll. MGH also ranked #1 in the nation in psychiatry.
Mass General Brigham researchers found that total weight loss did not increase for patients who took semaglutide before having weight loss surgery, suggesting that a surgery first strategy could lead to better outcomes.
Myocarditis is driven by a different immune response than the anti-tumor one, suggesting that the serious complication could one day be managed without halting cancer therapy.
Read how proton therapy saved the life of 19-year-old Chris Kobos after he was diagnosed with a rare chordoma.
MGH neighbor and West End staple, The West End Museum, is once again open to the public this summer after being closed for more than two years because of a burst pipe. The newly renovated and reimagined space formally reopened in May.
A Division I lacrosse player at Harvard navigates a life-changing cancer diagnosis with support from the Cancer Center's AYA program.
U.S. News & World Report released its “Best Hospitals” for 2024-2025 and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), a founding member of the Mass General Brigham health care system, has again earned a spot on the annual Honor Roll. MGH also ranked #1 in the nation in psychiatry.
Mass General Brigham researchers found that total weight loss did not increase for patients who took semaglutide before having weight loss surgery, suggesting that a surgery first strategy could lead to better outcomes.
Myocarditis is driven by a different immune response than the anti-tumor one, suggesting that the serious complication could one day be managed without halting cancer therapy.