What you'll learn

  • Describe the bidirectional relationships between mental health and metabolic health.

  • Evaluate and implement metabolic and lifestyle-based interventions—including nutrition and dietary strategies, exercise, sleep optimization, medications, supplements, stress-reduction, and light therapy—for their potential roles in mental health care.

  • Explain emerging evidence linking metabolic and bioenergetic dysfunction to neuropsychiatric disorders.

  • Apply principles of integrated, team-based care to address mental health, metabolic health, and social determinants of health simultaneously across diverse clinical settings.

Course description

Mental health conditions rarely occur in isolation; they frequently co-occur with one another and with common medical illnesses such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, cancer, and neurological disorders. These conditions often overlap, interact, or present with shared symptoms, making coordinated, integrated care essential to improving long-term outcomes—particularly for individuals with chronic illness.

People living with mental illness die, on average, 10–20 years earlier than the general population, with much of this excess mortality driven not by suicide, but by preventable cardiometabolic disease and lifestyle-related factors. At the same time, metabolic conditions such as obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes—now increasingly prevalent—are strongly associated with higher rates of depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, psychosis, and cognitive decline. Together, these observations underscore a growing consensus: mental and physical health are fundamentally interconnected.

A robust and expanding body of research now demonstrates shared pathophysiological pathways underlying both mental and metabolic disorders. These include chronic inflammation, immune and neuroendocrine dysregulation, insulin resistance, circadian disruption, alterations in the gut microbiome, and mitochondrial and bioenergetic dysfunction. Collectively, these mechanisms challenge traditional diagnostic silos and point toward the need for more integrated, systems-based models of care.

In many respects, this work builds on familiar foundations—such as the integration of behavioral health into primary care, attention to social determinants of health, lifestyle medicine, preventive care, and mind–body approaches. However, this conference goes further. It synthesizes emerging mechanistic science—particularly in metabolic biology—with clinical evidence, patient experience, evolving therapeutics, and real-world health system considerations. In doing so, it offers a more complete framework for understanding why mental illness so often co-occurs with metabolic disease, why standard treatments may fall short or, at times, worsen outcomes, and how targeted metabolic interventions may improve care.

Through expert lectures, interdisciplinary panels, patient perspectives, and an optional one-day clinical workshop, participants will explore how integrated metabolic and mental health approaches can complement existing treatments, inform personalized care, and support recovery. The conference emphasizes scientific rigor, clinical safety, ethical responsibility, and team-based implementation, making it relevant for physicians, psychotherapists, nurses, dietitians, health coaches, researchers, and health care leaders.

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