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AACAP-PAC and You:
Stronger Together

AACAP-PAC and You

Stronger Together

2024 AACAP Legislative Conference

April 15-16, 2024
Washington, DC

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AACAP-PAC supports congressional candidates who support advancing children’s mental health and the child and adolescent psychiatry profession.

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AACAP Resident Advocacy Scholar

The American Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry’s Government Affairs & Clinical Practice Department hosts the AACAP Resident Advocacy Scholar, a four-week elective experience in Washington, D.C., designed to allow current or rising child and adolescent psychiatry fellows to experience the political, legislative, and regulatory factors that affect the delivery of patient care.

During the fellowship, the Resident Advocacy Scholar will achieve comprehensive understanding of health care policy and politics, gain first-hand experience of a political environment, assist in day-to-day activities in AACAP’s Government Affairs and Clinical Practice Department, help craft policy statements, create specific research projects, and explore and report on new law and policy changes affecting child and adolescent psychiatrists. During the fellowship, the Resident Advocacy Scholar will be supervised by AACAP’s Chief of Advocacy and Practice Transformation.

This fellowship is ideal for a trainee interested in advocating for children’s mental health, learning more about mental health policy and legislation, and further understanding what is occurring in the political realm in both the state and national levels.

This fellowship requires the Resident Advocacy Scholar to be in Washington, D.C., for up to four weeks, and to secure his or her own housing, if necessary. A stipend of $2,000 is provided to offset living expenses.

If interested in applying to the 2025 cohort, please submit a one-page statement of interest, updated CV, letter of recommendation from an AACAP member, and a letter of support from your program director by Friday, November 14, 2025. Applicants will receive notification of decision by December 2025. Please send these documents and any questions to govaffairs@aacap.org.

Learn more about this program by reading the first-hand experiences of recent AACAP Resident Advocacy Scholars published in AACAP News.

  • Melissa Peace, MD
  • Joe Piks, MD
  • Jad Hilal, MD (2024)
  • Israel Taylor, MD, MPH (2023)
  • Courtney Kandler, MD (2023)
  • Justin Schreiber, DO (2016)
  • Laura Willing, MD (2016)

Quick Links

  • AACAP Engagement Pathways
  • AACAP Mentorship Programs
  • Medical Students
  • Mentorship Matters
  • Why Child and Adolescent Psychiatry?
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AACAP-PAC is a separate segregated fund established by the American Association of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. Contributions to AACAP-PAC are completely voluntary. You may choose not to contribute without reprisal. Contributions are not limited to the suggested amount, subject to overall limits. Contributions or gifts to AACAP-PAC will be used for political purposes and are not tax deductible. Federal law requires us to use our best efforts to collect and report the name, mailing address, occupation and name of employer of individuals whose contributions exceed $200 in a calendar year. Voluntary political contributions are subject to limitations of FEC regulations. Foreign nationals cannot contribute to AACAP-PAC.
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