Luming Li, MD, MHS, FACHE, FAPA
Assistant Professor Adjunct of PsychiatryCards
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief Medical Officer, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD
Contact Info
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief Medical Officer, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD
Contact Info
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief Medical Officer, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD
Contact Info
About
Titles
Assistant Professor Adjunct of Psychiatry
Positions outside Yale
Chief Medical Officer, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD
Biography
Luming Li, M.D. is an Assistant Professor Adjunct at the Yale School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry. She currently is the Chief Medical Officer for The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD, the regional mental health authority for Harris County). The Harris Center for Mental Health and IDD is one of the largest community mental health care centers in the United States, and the largest behavioral and developmental disability care center in Texas, serving nearly 80,000 patients and responding to approximately 130,000 crisis calls each year. As the Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Li is responsible for medical staff oversight and direct leadership of clinical quality and safety, performance improvement, pharmacy services, and utilization management. Her research and educational interests focus on administrative psychiatry and leadership, quality and safety, and clinical service delivery. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, she has written extensively about delivering psychiatric services in crisis.
Dr. Li previously served as the Medical Director of Quality Improvement of the Yale New Haven Psychiatric Hospital and the Medical Director of Clinical Operations at Yale New Haven Health System (2018-2021). Her clinical focus was on patients with severe psychiatric conditions requiring complex systems of care. During her time at Yale, she provided inpatient psychiatric care at the transitional age and dual-diagnosis psychiatric/substance disorder units, and was a consultation psychiatrist in the Nathan Smith Clinic for patients with HIV.
Dr. Li completed a 7-year B.A./M.D. program at Rutgers/Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, and residency training at the Yale School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry. She has also served on national committees within the American Psychiatric Association (APA), including the Health Systems and Financing Committee (2017-2018), and was an APA Public Psychiatry Fellowship recipient. She also was a 2019-2020 Health and Aging Policy Fellow, and American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow. She has served on CT Medicaid quality and national Medicare measurement development committees. She is currently president-elect for the American Association of Psychiatric Administrative Leaders, co-chair for the National Council, and Vice President for the Houston Psychiatric Society. She also serves on the APA's Scientific Programming Committee, MBC Workgroup, Innovation Committee, and TX HHSC's Value-Based Payment Quality Improvement Advisory Committee (VBPQIAC). She is a Houston Business Journal 40 Under 40 Awardee, and American Leadership Forum Senior Fellow.
Appointments
Psychiatry
Assistant Professor AdjunctPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Infectious Diseases
- Psychiatry
Education & Training
- MHS
- Yale School of Medicine (2021)
- MD
- Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School (2014)
Board Certifications
Psychiatry
- Certification Organization
- AB of Psychiatry & Neurology
- Original Certification Date
- 2018
Research
Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
ORCID
0000-0003-2417-9423
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Amber Wimsatt Childs, PhD
Huihui Yu, PhD
Jeph Herrin, PhD
John Krystal, MD
Elizabeth Connors, PhD
Fangyong Li, MS, MPH
Publications
2022
Implementation of simulation-based health systems science modules for resident physicians
Li L, Ray JM, Bathgate M, Kulp W, Cron J, Huot SJ, Wong AH. Implementation of simulation-based health systems science modules for resident physicians. BMC Medical Education 2022, 22: 584. PMID: 35906583, PMCID: PMC9338604, DOI: 10.1186/s12909-022-03627-w.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsResident physiciansImpact care qualityPost-session surveysSimulation-based scenariosCross-cutting domainsResidency training programsMultiple stakeholder perspectivesCare qualityCare deliveryImplementation scienceHealth careEmotional reactionsHands-on practiceEducational moduleIn-personTraining programResidency programsResidency trainingRole-play formatPhysiciansStakeholder perspectivesMedical simulationClinical practiceCareParticipantsThe Stress and Resilience Town Hall: A systems response to support the health workforce during COVID-19 and beyond
Tebes JK, Awad MN, Connors EH, Fineberg SK, Gordon DM, Jordan A, Kravitz R, Li L, Ponce AN, Prabhu M, Rubman S, Silva MA, Steinfeld M, Tate DC, Xu K, Krystal JH. The Stress and Resilience Town Hall: A systems response to support the health workforce during COVID-19 and beyond. General Hospital Psychiatry 2022, 77: 80-87. PMID: 35569322, PMCID: PMC9033303, DOI: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2022.04.009.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsHealthcare workersHealth systemHealth workforceCOVID-19 pandemicHealth workforce needsMean attendancePost-traumatic stressCOVID-19Traumatic stressorsTypes of stressorsSustainable interventionsRigorous qualitative methodsInterventionPandemicSpecific stressorsStressorsWorkforce needsHospitalWorkersCOVID-19-Related Impacts on Youth Mental Health.
Li L, Swartz MS. COVID-19-Related Impacts on Youth Mental Health. Psychiatric Services (Washington, D.C.) 2022, 73: 365. PMID: 35360937, DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.22073002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAn Initiative to Improve Performance on a National Transition of Care Measure and to Reduce Readmissions in an Academic Psychiatric Hospital
Li L, Kulp W, Krieg H, Aptaker D, Klink B, Knox D, Pincus HA. An Initiative to Improve Performance on a National Transition of Care Measure and to Reduce Readmissions in an Academic Psychiatric Hospital. The Joint Commission Journal On Quality And Patient Safety 2022, 48: 205-213. PMID: 35193810, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2022.01.002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsQuality improvement projectReadmission ratesPsychiatric hospitalCompliance rateCause readmission rateDecrease hospital readmissionsClinical decision support toolAcademic psychiatric hospitalAdverse patient outcomesImprovement projectClinical diagnosis dataHospital readmissionPreintervention periodCare measuresPatient outcomesCDS toolProvider complianceReadmissionCDS toolsHospitalOutcome metricsPrimary measureYear 2Year 3Diagnosis dataClinical Redesign: An Innovative Approach to Leading Change at an Academic Healthcare System.
Li L, Davis M, Kim N, Lipka S, Branson B, Amport S, Schwartz I, Sussman S. Clinical Redesign: An Innovative Approach to Leading Change at an Academic Healthcare System. Journal Of Healthcare Management / American College Of Healthcare Executives 2022, 67: 13-24. PMID: 34982746, DOI: 10.1097/JHM-D-20-00299.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2021
Shifts in inpatient psychiatry utilization patterns at a U.S. Academic Medical Center during the COVID-19 pandemic
Kulp W, Mitchell TO, Pittman B, Li L. Shifts in inpatient psychiatry utilization patterns at a U.S. Academic Medical Center during the COVID-19 pandemic. Psychiatry Research 2021, 308: 114376. PMID: 34999295, PMCID: PMC8733685, DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2021.114376.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsInpatient psychiatry serviceU.S. academic medical centersSubstance use disordersAcademic medical centerCOVID-19 pandemicRetrospective cohortInpatient admissionsMedical CenterPsychiatry servicesPsychiatric patientsUse disordersInpatient psychiatryUtilization patternsModest decreasePatientsSignificant changesDiagnostic dataCorresponding monthsEarlier findingsOvercoming the Barriers to Resident Engagement in Quality Improvement Initiatives in Psychiatry.
Mitchell TO, Li L. Overcoming the Barriers to Resident Engagement in Quality Improvement Initiatives in Psychiatry. Academic Psychiatry : The Journal Of The American Association Of Directors Of Psychiatric Residency Training And The Association For Academic Psychiatry 2021, 45: 481-486. PMID: 33184714, DOI: 10.1007/s40596-020-01363-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchUsing a Patient Safety/Quality Improvement Model to Assess Telehealth for Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Services Among Special Populations During COVID-19 and Beyond
Li L, Childs AW. Using a Patient Safety/Quality Improvement Model to Assess Telehealth for Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Services Among Special Populations During COVID-19 and Beyond. Journal Of Psychiatric Practice 2021, 27: 245-253. PMID: 34398574, PMCID: PMC8318385, DOI: 10.1097/pra.0000000000000555.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsBehavioral health servicesHealth servicesSpecial populationsPsychiatric care needsMental health needsCoronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemicSustainability of telehealthCritical mental health needsCare needsHealth care landscapeHealth needsTelehealth servicesQuality improvement modelHealth care organizationsTelehealthCare organizationsCOVID-19Care landscapePopulationPandemicYouth populationCareShowing Up Is Half the Battle: The Impact of Telehealth on Psychiatric Appointment Attendance for Hospital-Based Intensive Outpatient Services During COVID-19
Childs AW, Bacon SM, Klingensmith K, Li L, Unger A, Wing AM, Fortunati F. Showing Up Is Half the Battle: The Impact of Telehealth on Psychiatric Appointment Attendance for Hospital-Based Intensive Outpatient Services During COVID-19. Telemedicine Journal And E-Health 2021, 27: 835-842. PMID: 33999738, DOI: 10.1089/tmj.2021.0028.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsHigh-risk individualsAppointment attendanceIntensive outpatient programNon-Hispanic white youthRace/ethnicityPsychiatric servicesTreatment programIntensive outpatient servicesOutpatient psychiatric settingsImpact of telehealthHigher clinical acuityChi-square testClinical treatment programsWarrants further investigationNon-Hispanic Black youthAdult patientsIOP groupInsurance typeOutpatient programOutpatient servicesClinical acuityPsychiatric settingsCommercial insuranceClinical programsTelehealth servicesA Visual Dashboard to Monitor Restraint Use in Hospitalized Psychiatry Patients.
Li L, Barnes T. A Visual Dashboard to Monitor Restraint Use in Hospitalized Psychiatry Patients. Joint Commission Journal On Quality And Patient Safety / Joint Commission Resources 2021, 47: 282-287. PMID: 33648859, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2021.01.004.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
News
News
- September 09, 2021
Yale Psychiatry's Anti-Racism Task Force Seeks to Address Diversity, Equity, Inclusion
- June 25, 2021Source: The Harris Center
Li Named Chief Medical Officer of The Harris Center
- March 18, 2021
Wasser, Li Serve as Faculty on New APA Leadership Curriculum
- February 28, 2021Source: Academic Psychiatry
Racial and Ethnic Differences in Psychiatry Resident Prescribing: a Quality Improvement Education Intervention to Address Health Equity
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