Dr. Marco Solmi profile picture

Marco Solmi

MD, PhD, Psychiatrist

Clinician Investigator, Neuroscience

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Associate Professor, Psychiatry

University of Ottawa

Contact

613-798-5555 ext 78043

Research Groups

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Research Group
Hatching Ideas Lab
The Hatching Ideas Lab is a research lab headed by Dr. Simon Hatcher based out of the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. Our program of research f...

Bio

Marco Solmi, MD, psychiatrist, PhD, is Clinical Research Chair in Evidence-Based Mental Health, Associate Professor and Director of Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Ottawa, Canada, Medical Director of On Track First Episode Psychosis program and of the Eating Disorders program, The Ottawa Hospital, Scientist, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, Charité University Medicine Berlin, and visiting academic at University of Southampton, School of psychology, UK. He is Chair of ECNP Physical And meNtal Health (PAN-Health) Network, member of the board of directors of the Canadia consortium for Early Intervention in Psychosis, and member of the others European and Canadian psychiatric associations. He is interested in meta-research and epidemiology, to study prevention/early interventions, psychopharmacology, and physical health in those with mental disorders.


He authored over 580 publications in leading medical journals, cited over 55,000 times, among the top 1% cited in the world on mental health according to Stanford analyses of Elsevier bibliometric data.


Google scholar link: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=Q822tUIAAAAJ&hl=it
PubMed publication list: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=solmi+m
Top cited scientists: https://topscinet.com/scientist_profile/Solmi,%20Marco/2012/?stype=single_year

Dr. Solmi's clinical interests include:

Clinical focus 1. Eating disorder 
Clinical focus 2. First episode psychosis and schizophrenia
Clinical focus 3. Bipolar disorder
Clinical focus 4. Psychopharmacoloy
Clinical focus 5. Physical health in those with mental disorders

 

Research Goals and Interests

Dr. Marco Solmi's main area of interest is epidemiological and evidence-based psychiatry, leveraging both meta-research techniques and national databases to answer clinically relevant questions. Clinically, he is most interested in prevention/early interventions for mental disorders, psychopharmacology, and physical health in those with mental disorders. He has experience in coordinating large international projects. He has an active pipeline of research proejcts with the ultimate gola to bridge the gap between evidence and clinical practice.

The SCIENCES lab, headed by Dr. Marco Solmi, focuses on epidemiology studies and evidence synthesis projects in the areas of COVID-19, physical health among those with mental health disorders, the effectiveness and safety of biological and psychosocial treatments for mental health disorders, and eating disorders. 

Dr. Solmi's current ongoing research activities include:

  1. U-REACH transdiagnostic (www.u-reach.org) stands for Umbrella-Review, Evaluation, Analysis and Communication Hub. It is an initiative and methodological framework designed to bridge the gap between complex scientific evidence and the real world. Its primary goal is to make high-quality health data accessible, understandable, and useful for everyone—including clinicians, patients, and the general public—rather than keeping it locked in academic journals.
  2. Real world evidence studies from international cohorts on risk prediction: these studies aim to develop or replicate individualized prediction models to predict the onset of severe mental disorders, leveraging the U.S. database NeuroBlu.
    1. A cohort study using NeuroBlu data aims to replicate an existing prediction model to forecast the onset of a subsequent first psychotic or bipolar disorder in individuals with a non-psychotic/non-bipolar mental disorder. Postdoctoral Fellow: Gabriele Lo Buglio
  3. Real world evidence studies from international cohorts on psychopharmacology response prediction: these studies aim to replicate and extend our prior nationwide Swedish register findings, in close collaboration with Heidi Taipale's group.
    1. A cohort study using the Holmusk-Neurublu data aims to build a prediction model among individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder and major depressive disorder to examine which factors predict improvement in depressive symptoms after treatment initiation. PhD student: Saguna Katya
    2. A population-based cohort study using Ontario administrative data to examine the long-term safety and effectiveness of ADHD medications in individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders, focusing on outcomes such as psychiatric and somatic hospitalizations, and mortality. Postdoctoral Fellow: Olivier Corbeil
  4. Disparities in physical healthcare for those with and without mental disorders: A systematic review and quantitative appraisal of currently available cardiovascular risk assessment tools for use in clinical practice among people with severe mental illnesses.
  5. Prediction Model of Antidepressant Response in Bulimia Nervosa: this retrospective cohort study aims to develop an prediction model for bulimia nervosa using real-world EHR data to support personalized treatment selection. Outcome measures include antidepressant treatment response, depressive and anxiety symptoms. PhD student: Gyselle de Geus

News


Publications

Editorial: Physical Exercise as a Treatment for Anxiety and Depression in Children and Adolescents?

2026-02-01 Go to publication

Prevalence of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder/hyperkinetic disorder of pediatric and adult populations in clinical settings: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression

2026-01-01 Go to publication

Deliberate self-harm and suicide in individuals with cannabis-related hospital contacts in Ontario, Canada

2025-12-09 Go to publication

Hospital-based care for hallucinogens and risk of mania and bipolar disorder: A population-based cohort study

2025-12-02 Go to publication

A Chatbot for the Management of Bipolar Disorder: Using Retrieval-Augmented Generation with an Open-Weight Large Language Model to Answer Clinical Questions Based on the CANMAT and ISBD 2018 Guidelines for Bipolar Disorder

2025-12-02 Go to publication

Related Research at The Ottawa Hospital