Resilience | CHOP Research Institute
 

Resilience

Published on
Jan 11, 2023
Diversity Fellow Alfonso Floyd, PhD, studies the impact of risk and resilience on the mental health of minority youth with type 1 diabetes.
Published on
Sep 21, 2021
Through the COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists, CHOP is driving workforce equity by supporting researchers with caregiving responsibilities.

The mission of the Stress Neurobiology Research Program is to further the understanding of the neural basis of individual differences in response to stressful experiences.

Published on
Aug 28, 2020
This week, we feature findings on the pandemic’s impact on mental health and asthma visits, a new high-risk tumor treatment, and more.
Published on
Apr 9, 2020
Dr. Ran Barzilay is researching the effects of resilience on mental health and sleep during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Published on
Feb 14, 2020
Read about a breakthrough peanut allergy treatment, support for teen resilience, healthcare disparities in pain treatment, and pediatric medical device awards.

Through clinical and translational research, the Center for Amplified Musculoskeletal Pain Syndrome (CAMPS) research lab seeks to advance understanding of successful treatments for pediatric amplified musculoskeletal pain syndrome, with the overall goal of improving patients' and families' lives.

Dr. Bhatnagar's research aims to further the understanding of the neural basis of individual differences in response to stressful experiences. This includes identifying neural substrates that produce resiliency or vulnerability to the effects of stress and determining treatments to mitigate vulnerability and to promote resiliency through both preclinical and translational studies.

E-mail:
bhatnagars [at] chop.edu
Published on
Sep 28, 2018
Guest blogger Kenneth Ginsburg, MD, MSEd, tells how the Center for Parent and Teen Communication offers a shift from the stereotypical ‘survival guide' to adolescence.
Published on
May 16, 2017
What's going on inside our bodies and brains when we respond to stress? Previously, we covered research into powerful little neuropeptides called orexins that may help regulate an individual's vulnerability to stress.