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4150 Clement Street, San Francisco, CA 94121

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This interactive workshop will present an overview of current and potential uses of artificial intelligence in clinical care, as well as best practices and evidence-based approaches to ethically integrating AI and large language models into mental health care. Through lectures, case vignettes, and experiential exercises, participants will explore the complexities of clinical decision-making, privacy and confidentiality, bias and equity, and professional responsibilities when using these emerging technologies.

About the speaker:
Shannon Wiltsey Stirman is a psychologist at the National Center for PTSD's Dissemination and Training Division and a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. She is the co-director of the Center for Responsible and Effective AI Technology Enhancement for PTSD Treatment (CREATE) at Stanford. As a co-lead of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science's Mental Health Innovation and Technology Hub, she worked with a team at Stanford to develop Pause a Moment, a digital wellbeing program for healthcare workers who experience COVID-19 stressors (pam.stanford.edu). Most recently, she has been working on the use of large language models to support evidence-based mental health interventions.

Important info:
This event is open to UCSF DPBS faculty members only. Space is limited and registration is REQUIRED.
Continuing education (CE) credit will be available for this four-hour workshop. Lunch will be provided.

Event Details

UCSF promotes the exchange of diverse ideas and perspectives, acknowledging that the views and opinions of our guest speakers on campus are their own and may not reflect the perspective of the University. We embrace free speech in the pursuit of greater understanding, consistent with our obligations as a public university under the First Amendment.