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Transforming the understanding
and treatment of mental illnesses.

NAMHC Minutes of the 276th Meeting

June 17, 2025

Department of Health and Human Services
Public Health Service
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Mental Health
National Advisory Mental Health Council

Introduction

The 276th National Advisory Mental Health Council (NAMHC) was convened on June 17, 2025, via Microsoft Teams and National Institutes of Health (NIH) videocast. In accordance with Public Law 92-463, the session was open to the public from 12:00 pm until 1:00 pm and was followed by the closed session at 1:15 on the same day. Andrea Beckel-Mitchener, Ph.D., Acting Director of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), presided as Chair for both sessions.

Council Members Present

  • Olusola Ajilore, M.D., Ph.D.
  • Rinad Beidas, Ph.D.
  • Daniel Gillison, Jr.
  • Angus MacDonald, III, Ph.D.
  • Velma McBride Murry, Ph.D.
  • Jyotishman Pathak, Ph.D.
  • Laura Scott, Ph.D., M.P.H.

Council Members Absent

Anita Everett, M.D., DFAPA

Others present at Open Policy Session (Appendix A)

Others present at Closed Grant Review Session (Appendix B)

OPEN PORTION OF THE MEETING

  1. Open Policy Session Call to Order & Opening Remarks, Andrea Beckel-Mitchener, Ph.D. (NIH Videocast  @02:00)

    Elizabeth Church, Ph.D., Acting Director of the Division of Extramural Activities, NIMH and Executive Secretary of NAMHC, opened the virtual NAMHC meeting. Dr. Andrea Beckel-Mitchener, Acting NIMH Director and Chair of NAMHC welcomed Council members, NIMH staff, NIH staff, and members from various constituent communities.

  2. NIMH Director’s Report, Andrea Beckel-Mitchener, Ph.D. (NIH Videocast  @03:29)
    1. HHS and NIH Leadership Changes

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener noted that there had been significant changes at NIMH. She then thanked Shelli Avenevoli, Ph.D., for her service as the previous Acting NIMH Director.

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener reported that Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., J.D., was sworn in as the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary on February 13, 2025, and James O’Neill was sworn in as HHS Deputy Secretary on June 9, 2025. Jayanta “Jay” Bhattacharya, M.D., Ph.D., was confirmed as the NIH Director on March 25, 2025, and Matthew Memoli, Ph.D., was invited to serve as NIH Principal Deputy Director. Dr. Bhattacharya’s five key priority areas for NIH to focus: 1) improving population health by preventing, treating, and curing chronic diseases; 2) ensuring reliable results through a focus on reproducibility and scientific rigor; 3) investing in innovation and collaboration to embrace new technologies and approaches; 4) strengthening public trust by improving oversight and maintaining transparency; and 5) encouraging academic freedom by fostering a culture in which researchers can engage in open academic discussions.

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener noted some of the leadership changes across other NIH Institutes and Centers, including: Courtney Aklin, Ph.D., Acting Director of the National Institute of Nursing Research; Alison Cernich, Ph.D., Acting Director of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; Monica Webb Hooper, Ph.D., Acting Director of the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities; Carolyn Hutter, Ph.D., Acting Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute; and Jeffery Taubenberger, M.D., Ph.D., Acting Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

    2. Appropriations and Budget Updates

      In FY 2024, NIMH funded 600 new and competing research grants, with a success rate of 21 percent. President Donald Trump signed the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act of 2025  on March 15, 2025. This continuing resolution included $48.5 billion to NIH for fiscal year 2025 (FY25), $2.3 billion of which was allocated for NIMH. The NIMH budget included a reduction of $40.5 million from its 21st Century Cures Act appropriation. The proposed President’s FY26 budget was released on May 2, 2025, which requested $94.7 billion in discretionary budget authority for HHS (a 25% reduction compared to FY25 enacted levels) and $27.9 billion for NIH (a 39% reduction from FY25 enacted levels). On May 14 and May 20, 2025, Secretary Kennedy testified on the President’s Budget Request for HHS before the House and Senate Committees. On June 10, 2025, Dr. Bhattacharya testified on the FY26 NIH Budget Justification before the Senate Appropriations Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee.

    3. HHS Updates

      HHS adopted a new Scientific Integrity Policy  on October 16, 2024. President Trump established the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission  on February 13, 2025, which is chaired by Secretary Kennedy to focus on combating chronic disease by reforming food and health systems.

    4. NIH Updates

      On April 29, 2025, NIH announced its intent to establish an Office of Research Innovation, Validation, and Application (ORIVA)  to promote human-based research technologies and scale the use of non-animal approaches. On May 27, 2025, NIH released a Research Opportunity Announcement  for the Autism Data Science Initiative, which would bring together multiple data resources to explore the possible causes of autism. Dr. Beckel-Mitchener highlighted several NIH grants policy updates  that were recently released. There were several changes to the NIH grant application review process, including the implementation of simplified peer review framework and revisions to instructions and review criteria for fellowship and training grant applications. NIH’s planned adoption of the Common Form for Biographic Sketch and Biographical Sketch Supplement is postponed. The implementation of the NIH Public Access Policy , which removes embargo periods for NIH-funded research articles, was accelerated from December 31, 2025 to July 1, 2025.

    5. NIMH News to Know

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener presented a few key findings from the NIMH Triennial Report: NIH Policy on the Inclusion of Women and Minorities in Clinical Research (FY22-24), which is a federally mandated report on efforts to ensure that populations are included in NIH-funded research. Within the extramural program, there was a significant increase in participation, due in part to a large digital mental health study. However, many participants in this study did not report their sex or race. For both extramural and intramural clinical research, most participants identified as white, with the largest racial/ethnic minority groups being Black or African American and Asian participants. Council reviewed and electronically voted to approve this report prior to the meeting.

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener reviewed NIMH staff updates. Elizabeth Church, Ph.D., was appointed as Acting Director of the Division of Extramural Activities; Mi Hillefors, M.D., Ph.D., as Acting Director of the Division of Translational Research; Ruben Alvarez, Ed.D., as Acting Director of the Division of Data Science and Technology; and Christina Borba, Ph.D., M.P.H., as Acting Director of the Division of Services and Intervention Research. She also recognized several NIMH staff awardees, including Mark Chavez, Ph.D., (Academy for Eating Disorders Meehan/Hartley Leadership Award for Public Service and/or Advocacy); Hugo Tejada, Ph.D., (Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers); Tonya White, M.D., Ph.D., (Norbert and Charlotte Rieger Award for Scientific Achievement); Karen Berman, M.D., (American College of Neuropsychopharmacology’s Women’s Advocacy Award); and Carlos Zarate, M.D., (National Academy of Inventors Fellow, American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology’s President-Elect).

      Discussion
      Following Dr. Beckel-Mitchener’s update, Council members asked about potential budget cuts, peer reviewer training for the simplified review framework, and the recruitment timeline for the new NIMH director.

      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener clarified that NIMH aims to maintain funding for previously identified priority areas, described the training resources that were available to study section members and the extramural community, and noted NIH’s intention for restarting the recruitment process for a NIMH Director.

  3. Concept Clearances (NIH Videocast  @30:45)
    1. Research to Optimize the Effectiveness and Deployment of Suicide Prevention Services,
      Joel Sherrill, Ph.D., DSIR

      Dr. Sherrill stated that the purpose of this concept is to encourage research focused on optimizing and testing training and quality monitoring to ensure the sustained fidelity of evidence-based suicide prevention services, and to develop and test scalable and sustainable peer support interventions to complement clinical services. This concept would encourage research that would be informed by end users and may involve clinical trials to optimize approaches, validation of scalable measures, the use of novel technologies, and pilot trials to test peer support models.

    2. Advancing Research on Empirically Supported Interventions for Older Adults Living with Serious Mental Illness,
      Jovier D. Evans, Ph.D., DTR

      Dr. Evans stated that the purpose of this concept is to fill the gap of evidence-based approaches for older adults with severe mental illness (SMI), especially in settings where older adults with SMI are likely to receive mental health services and other routine care. Research approaches could include adapting, optimizing, and implementing effective treatments and strategies to improve both clinical and functional outcomes in this population, as well as strategies for improving treatment uptake and maintenance.

    3. Accelerating Solutions to Understand the Potential of Fast-Acting Psychotomimetic Agents,
      Jonathan Sabbagh, Ph.D., DTR

      Dr. Sabbagh noted the increased interest in psychotomimetic agents (PMAs) such as psilocybin and 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), and several challenges related to PMA research. For instance, participants experience powerful subjective effects that unblind clinical studies. There are also several unknowns in terms of the mechanisms of action, the role of psychotherapy, and the complexities of polypharmacology. This concept aims to address these challenges through research focused on optimized trial designs, pharmacodynamic biomarkers, and mediators of PMA efficacy.

    4. Accelerating Medicines Partnership® Schizophrenia (AMP® SCZ),
      Suzanne Garcia, Ph.D., DNBBS

      Dr. Garcia reviewed the purpose and status of the AMP®SCZ study, which is projected to be completed by June 2027. This concept would allow the continuation of support for the data collection, processing, and analysis required to finish the study with a complete dataset. The expected outcomes of AMP SCZ include a high-quality multimodal dataset of clinical outcomes to be shared with the research community, a set of validated biomarkers and clinical measures for clinical trials, and support for the development of new therapies.

      Discussion
      Dr. Beckel-Mitchener invited Council members to comment on the concepts. Council members expressed support for all concepts. Dr. Ajilore expressed strong support for concept on older adults with SMI and noted the need to develop better interventions for the multimorbidity seen in this population. Dr. Beidas suggested more emphasis on multimodal approaches for suicide prevention services, hybrid studies to accelerate implementation for interventions for older adults with SMI, and the early incorporation of implementation approaches in PMA research. Dr. Scott asked about the timeline of the AMP SCZ study. Dr. Garcia clarified that the concept would allow analysis to be completed. Dr. Murry suggested leveraging community health workers to broaden the reach to older adults with SMI, particularly in rural areas. Dr. MacDonald suggested working with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to support the implementation of suicide prevention approaches. Dr. MacDonald also expressed concern about AMP SCZ as a competitive funding mechanism. Dr. Church responded that NIH has a mechanism for single source applications that requires additional justifications and rigorous peer review. Dr. Beckel-Mitchener further clarified that the purpose of the presentation was to gain council review of the concept that could potentially continue the project.

  4. Public Comment (NIH Videocast  @55:39)

    There were no oral public comments.

  5. Adjournment

    Dr. Beckel-Mitchener adjourned the open session of the meeting at 1:00 pm.

CLOSED PORTION OF THE MEETING

This portion of the meeting was closed to the public in accordance with the determination that it was concerned with matters exempt from mandatory disclosure under sections 552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C., and section 1009(d) of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. §§ 1001- 1014).

Dr. Elizabeth Church, Executive Secretary of NAMHC, explained policies and procedures regarding confidentiality and conflict of interest to the members of the Council.

Members absented themselves from the meeting during the discussion of and voting on applications from their own institutions, or other applications in which there was a potential conflict of interest, real or apparent. Members signed a statement to this effect.

  1. Review of Applications

    Refer to Appendix C

  2. Adjournment

    Dr. Beckel-Mitchener adjourned the closed grant review session of the meeting at 2:15 pm ET.

    APPENDIX A
    Department of Health and Human Services
    Public Health Service
    National Institutes of Health
    National Advisory Mental Health Council
    Summary of 276th Meeting, June 17, 2025
    Staff Present Virtually for Open Policy Session:

    Sabiha Ahmad-Khan

    Ruben Alvarez

    Phyllis Ampofo

    Paige Anderson

    Elizabeth Ankudowich

    Frank Avenilla

    Brian Barnett

    Anita Bechtholt

    Andrea Beckel-Mitchener

    Mesfin Awoke Bekalu

    Yvonne Bennett

    Rebecca Berman

    Lora Bingaman

    Christina Borba

    Susan Borja

    Linda Brady

    Marcy Burstein

    Holly Campbell-Rosen

    Mindy Chai

    Mark Chavez

    Hung-Lien Chia

    Serena Chu

    Elizabeth Church

    James Churchill

    Elan Cohen

    Ashley Cornell Smith

    Didi Cross

    Leonardo Cubillos

    Jennifer Donahue

    Jaclyn Durkin

    Jovier Evans

    Michele Ferrante

    Elizabeth Finch

    Suzanne Garcia

    Karen Gavin-Evans

    Christopher Gordon

    Margaret Grabb

    Lauren Hill

    Mi Hillefors

    Jennifer Humensky

    Eliza Jacobs-Brichford

    Daniel Janes

    Katelyn Janicz

    Eugene Kane

    Ashley Kennedy

    Douglas Kim

    Eunyoung Kim

    Erin King

    Megan Kinnane

    Arina Knowlton

    Susan Koester

    Collene Lawhorn

    David Leitman

    Tamara Lewis Johnson

    Jane Lin

    Ti Lin

    Allen Lo

    Victor Lushin

    Yael Mandelblat-Cerf

    Mary Marro

    Nicole Martino

    Kristina Max

    Cooper McLendon

    Douglas Meinecke

    Tatiana Meza-Cervera

    Dawn Morales

    Sarah Morris

    Eric Murphy

    Laurie Nadler

    Nicole North

    Stephen O'Connor

    Nicolette O'Reilly

    Anna Ordóñez

    Jennifer Pacheco

    Christina Page

    David Panchision

    Jane Pearson

    Jonathan Pevsner

    Suzanne Pollard Branchard

    Amanda Price

    Cara Pugliese

    Mauricio Rangel-Gomez

    Vasudev Rao

    Dianne Rausch

    Alexandria Renfro

    Mary Rooney

    Andrew Rossi

    Matthew Rudorfer

    Jonathan Sabbagh

    Lori Scott-Sheldon

    Joel Sherrill

    Galia Siegel

    Jansen Sikder

    Belinda Sims

    Carolina Smith

    Dawn Smith

    Abigail Soyombo-Shoola

    Michael Stirratt

    Mary Sweeney

    Alexander Talkovsky

    Julie Thai

    Laura Thomas

    Maria Tietcheu

    Ira Tigner

    Jessica Tilghman

    Farris Tuma

    Ashlee Van't Veer

    Siavash Vaziri

    Vidya Vedham

    Natalie Washington

    Heather Weiss

    Todd White

    Kesi Williams

    Abera Wouhib

    Steven Zalcman

    Caitlin Zarley

    Julia Zehr

Others Federal Employees:

Robert Hamer, NIH Videocast Producer

Ronny Zavoski, NIH Captioner

Others Members Present Virtually for Open Session:

Deborah Krat, Miami Environmental & Energy Solutions

Aimee Oczkowski, 1Source Events

Marie Rowland, Science Writer

APPENDIX B
Staff Present Virtually for Closed Grant Review Session:
Staff Present Virtually for Closed Grant Review Session:

Sabiha Ahmad-Khan

Ruben Alvarez

Phyllis Ampofo

Paige Anderson

Elizabeth Ankudowich

Frank Avenilla

Brian Barnett

Anita Bechtholt

Andrea Beckel-Mitchener

Mesfin Awoke Bekalu

Rebecca Berman

Lora Bingaman

Christina Borba

Susan Borja

Linda Brady

Andrew Breeden

Eliza Jacobs-Brichford

Marcy Burstein

Holly Campbell-Rosen

Mindy Chai

Zieta Charles

Mark Chavez

Hung-Lien Chia

Serena Chu

Elizabeth Church

James Churchill

Christine Clarkson

Elan Cohen

Ashley Cornell

Di Cross

Leonardo Cubillos

Beshaun Davis

Jennifer Donahue

Jamie Driscoll

Jaclyn Durkin

Jovier Evans

Jelena Fay-Lukic

Michele Ferrante

Elizabeth Finch

Michael Freed

Dawn Smith

Theresa Smith

Abigail Soyombo-Shoola

Anais Stenson

Michael Stirratt

Mary Sweeney

Alexander Talkovsky

Julie Thai

Laura Thomas

Nicholas Gaiano

Rebecca Garcia

Suzanne Garcia

Karen Gavin-Evans

Christopher Gordon

Margaret Grabb

Gregory Greenwood

Adam Haim

Robert Hamer

Rochelle Hentges

Lauren Hill

Mi Hillefors

Andrew Hooper

Jennifer Humensky

Daniel Janes

Katelyn Janicz

Tamara Lewis Johnson

Eugene Kane

Rachel Kane

Ashley Kennedy

Douglas Kim

Eunyoung Kim

Erin King

Megan Kinnane

Arina Knowlton

Susan Koester

Collene Lawhorn

Sarah Leinwand

Jane Lin

Ti Lin

Christina Liu

Allen Lo

Victor Lushin

Yael Mandelblat-Cerf

Annette Marrero-Oliveras

Mary Marro

Nicole Martino

Brittany Mason-Mah

Kristina Max

Douglas Meinecke

Maria Tietcheu

Ira Tigner

Jessica Tilghman

Farris Tuma

Siavash Vaziri

Vidya Vedham

Ashlee Van't Veer

Natalie Washington

Heather Weiss

Tatiana Meza-Cervera

Rhoda Moise

Dawn Morales

Sarah Morris

Robert Munk

Eric Murphy

Laurie Nadler

Nicole North

Stephen O'Connor

Nicolette O'Reilly

Anna Ordóñez

Jennifer Pacheco

Christina Page

David Panchision

Kathryn Partlow

Jane Pearson

Emma Perez-Costas

Jonathan Pevsner

Suzanne Pollard Branchard

Amanda Price

Cara Pugliese

Mauricio Rangel-Gomez

Vasudev Rao

Dianne Rausch

Alexandria Renfro

Mary Rooney

Andrew Rossi

Matthew Rudorfer

Heather Rusch

Jonathan Sabbagh

Lori Scott-Sheldon

Benjamin Shapero

Pamela Shell

Joel Sherrill

Galia Siegel

Jansen Sikder

Todd Silber

Belinda Sims

Ashley Smith

Carolina Smith

Todd White

Kesi Williams

Abera Wouhib

Jewel Wright

Yong Yao

Steven Zalcman

Caitlin Zarley

Julia Zehr

Others Members Present Virtually for Closed Session:

Deborah Krat, Miami Environmental & Energy Solutions

Aimee Oczkowski, 1Source Events

APPENDIX C
Summary of Primary NIMH Applications Reviewed
May 2025 Council

 

Category

Scored #

Scored
Direct Cost $

Not Scored (NRFC) #

Not Scored (NRFC)
Direct Cost $

Other #

Other
Direct Cost $

Total #

Total
Direct Cost $

Research

722

$1,438,003,016

603

$1,070,531,424

12

$23,474,396

1337

$2,532,008,836

Research Training

0

 

0

 

0

 

0

 

Career

96

$78,850,360

48

$40,512,333

0

 

144

$119,362,693

Other

0

 

0

 

0

 

0

 

Totals:

818

$1,516,853,376

651

$1,111,043,757

12

$23,474,396

1481

$2,651,371,529

APPENDIX D
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH
NATIONAL ADVISORY MENTAL HEALTH COUNCIL 
(Terms end 9/30 of designated year)
CHAIRPERSONEXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Andrea Beckel-Mitchener, Ph.D.
Acting Director
National Institute of Mental Health
Bethesda, MD
Elizabeth Church, Ph.D.
Acting Director
Division of Extramural Activities
National Institute of Mental Health
Bethesda, MD
NATIONAL ADVISORY MENTAL HEALTH COUNCIL BOARD

MEMBERS

Olusola Ajilore, M.D., Ph.D. (25)
Associate Professor
Director, Mood, and Anxiety Disorders Program
Department of Psychiatry
University of Illinois Chicago
Chicago, IL
Velma McBride Murry, Ph.D. (25)
Lois Autrey Betts Endowed Chair
Associate Provost, Office of Research and
Innovation
University Distinguished Professor
Departments of Health Policy
& Human and Organizational Development
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
Rinad S. Beidas, Ph.D. (26)
Ralph Seal Paffenberg Professor
Chair, Department of Medical Social Sciences
Feinberg School of Medicine
Northwestern University
Chicago, IL
Jyotishman Pathak, Ph.D. (26)
Frances & John L. Loeb Professor of Medical Informatics
Department of Population Health Sciences
Weill Cornell Medicine
Cornell University
New York City, NY
Daniel H. Gillison, Jr. (25)
Chief Executive Officer
National Alliance on Mental Illness
Arlington, VA
Laura Scott, M.P.H., Ph.D. (25)
Research Professor
Department of Biostatics
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
Angus W. MacDonald, III, Ph.D. (26) 
Professor and Director of Clinical Training 
Department of Psychology 
University of Minnesota 
Minneapolis, MN
 

EX OFFICIO MEMBERS

Office of the Secretary, DHHS
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., J.D.
Secretary
Department of Health and Human Services
Washington, DC

National Institutes of Health
Jayanta Bhattacharya, M.D., Ph.D.
Director
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD

Liaison Representative
Anita Everett, M.D., DFAPA
Director
Center for Mental Health Services
US, HHS Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Rockville, MD

Appendix E

Public Comment

June 12, 2025

Re: The Need to Prohibit Animal Testing and the Use of Private Medical Data in Autism Research; June 17, 2025 National Advisory Mental Health Council (NAMHC) Open Policy Session

Dear Director Avenevoli and members of the NAMHC,

On behalf of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit health advocacy organization supported by nearly one million members and supporters worldwide, thank you for the opportunity to comment on this meeting and for your ongoing work to improve the well-being of individuals who rely on mental health research.

With a recent investment in federal resources to study autism, I ask that the funding is not used for animal studies, and that any human-based approaches protect individuals’ privacy. I applaud the recent announcement by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to invest further in New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) and move away from the use of animals. This announcement underscores the need for autism research to utilize human-specific research methods. Human-specific research methods involve the collection of data from humans, as with clinical trials, epidemiological studies, and the use of human-derived data using other approaches like in vitro studies using human cell lines, organ-on-a-chip technology, and computational modeling. While shifting to human-based approaches is essential, they must be conducted with the highest ethical standards. Broad, centralized registries of personal medical data, even anonymized, can be misused and risk eroding public trust. Instead, studies should use de-identified datasets that participants consent to share.

There is a need for research that assesses how to improve the lives of autistic individuals. The utilization of applied social research, participatory action research (PAR), and community-based participatory research (CBPR) could improve the lives of autistic individuals, which should be a priority.

I urge the National Advisory Mental Health Council (NAMHC) to adopt two clear principles for autism research funded through the NIH:

  1. No federal funding for autism studies that use animals. These methods are ill-suited to address complex human neurodevelopmental conditions.
  2. Only ethical, privacy-protective human-based research. Ensure research protocols include meaningful informed consent, privacy protections for individuals, as well as secure and anonymized data handling.

This approach will demonstrate to the autistic community and the broader public that autism research is held to the highest standards of scientific integrity.

Sincerely,

Megan Amos, JD
Government Affairs Outreach Coordinator
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine