![]() ![]() He is a member of the NYS Suicide Prevention Coalition and the National Council for Suicide Prevention and a core team member of the Media and Mental Health Initiative hosted by Stanford University Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Outside of the higher education area, he has served as an advisor to the NFL, NBA, NCAA, US Olympic and Paralympic Committee, American Ballet Theater, Harpo Productions, the Ad Council, HBO, Facebook/Instagram, Gun Free Kids, Brady Campaign, Dear Evan Hansen, MTV, and numerous other movies and media outlets. Schwartz has advised on development of trainings by Kognito, Everfi, Get Inclusive, has developed his own psychoeducation and gatekeeper training programs, and is a founding member of the Higher Education Mental Health Alliance. In the higher education and youth mental health education spaces, Dr. He has provided guidance and consultation to many universities including Columbia, U of Pennsylvania, Harvard, Tulane, USC, Carnegie Mellon, Hamilton, Rutgers Medical Center, Washington State, GW, Johns Hopkins, Manhattan School of Music and Truman State University. He has written and lectured extensively on college mental health and suicide prevention particularly concerning the management of mental health crises and suicide in colleges and legal issues in college mental health. He was also a co-chair of the Committee on the College Student of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry. He is a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and was a member of the APA's Presidential Task Force on College Mental Health, and co-chaired its working group on law and college mental health. He also served as assistant director of residency training in psychiatry at NYU Medical Center. Schwartz was medical director and chief psychiatrist at the NYU Student Counseling Service. He is currently Senior Associate Dean for Wellness and Student Life at CUNY School of Medicine and clinical associate professor of psychiatry at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Previously, he was university dean of students at Yeshiva University for six years after establishing and serving as director of that institution's Counseling Center. Schwartz was a highly sought-after advisor and consultant and was a leader in developing approaches to messaging to young people about mental health and helping organizations develop their mental health activities and programming. Schwartz served for eight years as chief medical officer of The Jed Foundation, a leading non-profit focused on youth and young adult suicide prevention and mental health promotion. ![]()
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