“We recognize there’s a crisis. We have the tools to address it. Now, the mission is getting those tools where they’re needed,” declared Dr. Josh Gordon, psychiatrist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian and chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia, speaking to a crowd gathered 59 stories above Midtown Manhattan.
Hosted by the Young Patrons Committee of the Center for Youth Mental Health at NewYork-Presbyterian, the evening unfolded less like a formal reception and more like a spirited salon. Held at Moss New York—the members’ club poised to open its doors at 520 Fifth Avenue in Fall 2025—the event drew designers, creatives, physicians, and philanthropists. With the Empire State Building dramatically framed in oversized windows, the atmosphere was as inspired as the conversation.
Ayesha Shand, co-chair of the Young Patrons Committee, opened the program with personal reflections on the Center’s mission before introducing fellow co-chair Dr. Charlie Shaffer, a psychiatrist at Weill Cornell. The Center for Youth Mental Health was founded in 2012 by Dr. Shaffer’s late father, the renowned psychiatrist Dr. David Shaffer, with a vision to integrate care, research, and training to better address the adolescent mental health crisis. “The Center’s original goal,” Shaffer explained, “was to identify and fund the smaller pilot projects—the proof-of-concept trials—that held great potential but needed just a little support.” More than a decade later, that vision has led to the training of psychologists, the publication of landmark studies, and improved access to care for tens of thousands of youth across New York.
Dr. Gordon took the podium next, speaking to the Center’s future—one powered by data, driven by innovation, and informed by compassion. “We need answers,” he said. “We need care that pays attention to the answers research provides. And what I’ve known about the Center since its inception is that it’s doing exactly that kind of work.”
Conversation continued long after the remarks concluded. Guests clustered near settees and windows, the city glittering below, as topics ranged from new therapies to travel plans. Drs. Francis Lee, Anne Marie Albano, Shannon Bennett, Warren Ng, and Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele moved through the crowd, anchoring the night’s energy in expertise. Nearby, Dr. Shaffer was overheard discussing the nationwide shortage of child psychiatrists, while longtime supporter Zandy Forbes and Vogue‘s Mark Guiducci chatted across the room.