Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health
Elizabeth Dohrmann currently serves as a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist in the Juvenile Justice Mental Health Program at the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health. In addition, Elizabeth holds multiple positions at UCLA Health, including Associate Director of the Community & Global Psychiatry Area of Distinction in the Child Division, Chief Fellow of the Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Training Program, and Fellow Physician in Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. Prior experience includes serving as a Resident Physician in Psychiatry at NYU Langone Health and completing medical training at The University of Tennessee Health Science Center, where Elizabeth earned a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree. Elizabeth's earlier background includes roles as a Research Coordinator at Vanderbilt University and a Project Coordinator at UC San Diego, focusing on autism spectrum disorders and related developmental studies. Elizabeth obtained a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Yale University.
Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health
The Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health (LACDMH) is the largest county mental health department in the country. LACDMH directly operates 75 program sites and more than 100 co-located sites. Additionally, LACDMH contracts with approximately 1,000 providers, including non-governmental agencies and individual practitioners who provide a spectrum of mental health services to people of all ages to support hope, wellbeing and recovery. Our diverse workforce, including nurses, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, marriage and family therapists, medical doctors, community workers, trained family members and trained mental health consumers, serve over 250,000 residents of all ages each year. Mission Our mission at LACDMH is to optimize the hope, recovery, wellbeing, and life trajectory of Los Angeles County's most vulnerable through access to care and resources that promote not only independence and personal recovery but also connectedness and community reintegration.