Dr. Kratochvil has history with clinical research

Christopher Kratochvil, M.D., has conducted clinical trials for the past 10 years and he’s loved it.









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Christopher Kratochvil, M.D.
“As a clinician, I know what treatments are available to patients, and the limitations of those treatments,” said Dr. Kratochvil, child and adolescent psychiatrist and professor of psychiatry. “To be a part of the development of new interventions for patients is tremendously exciting and rewarding.”

Dr. Kratochvil’s research group studies treatments for children and adolescents with mental illness. He focuses primarily on pharmacotherapies, both alone and in combination with psychotherapy.

He and his team were part of the largest National Institutes of Health-funded clinical trial on adolescence depression. The study helped define current treatment guidelines for clinically depressed adolescents.

Dr. Kratochvil also helped develop atomoxetine (Strattera), a non-stimulant medicine approved to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. He was involved beginning with the first multisite clinical trial, conducted numerous subsequent trials and consulted with the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly that created the drug.












Dr. Kratochvil’s file



Hometown: Pender, Neb.

Medical degree: Creighton University, 1992

Residency: Duke University Medical Center, child and adolescent psychiatry.

Joined UNMC: 1999




In his new positions of assistant vice chancellor for clinical research and chief medical officer of UNeHealth Corporation, Dr. Kratochvil will assist other investigators at UNMC and The Nebraska Medical Center to expand clinical research.

“The researchers here do amazing work, and our reputation has helped poise us to expand even further in the arena of medical research,” he said.

Jim Linder, M.D., chief executive officer of UNeMed Corporation and professor of pathology and microbiology, led the search committee that picked Dr. Kratochvil for the position. He said Dr. Kratochvil is ideally qualified to lead this clinical research initiative.

“He has a broad experience as a funded clinical researcher, administrative leader and collaborator with pharmaceutical development,” he said.