ACCEPTANCE-BASED BEHAVIOR THERAPY PROGRAM
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Alumni (Doctoral Program)           Alumni (Masters Program)

 

Alumni (Doctoral Program):

Ethan Moitra, Ph.D.

Ethan is from Cleveland, Ohio and received his Bachelor's degree from the University of Virginia. He completed pre-doctoral internship at West Virginia University Medical Center and is currently a research post-doctoral fellow at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. His interests include social anxiety; chronic medical conditions, such as HIV and chronic pain; and integrating mental health care into the primary care setting. Ethan enjoys cooking, watching movies, and attending live music events.

Peter Yeomans, Ph.D.

Peter graduated from Drexel’s Clinical Psychology program in 2008. His dissertation was funded by multiple sources and used an experimental design to explore the effect of PTSD psychoeducation in a rural and indigent Burundian sample. He received an award at graduation for “showing the most promise” among doctoral students in the social sciences. He is currently transitioning from a post-doctoral fellowship in traumatic stress at the San Francisco Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center to take a position at the Philadelphia VAMC. He will work as a staff psychologist focusing on PTSD and SUD. His interests include cultural influences on psychopathology, exposure therapies for PTSD, couples and family therapy, and the current rise of acceptance and mindfulness-based therapeutic frameworks. Peter is a proud husband and father of two children.

Email: Peter.Yeomans@va.gov

 

Angela Gorman, Ph.D.

Angela A. Gorman, Ph.D. recieved her B.A. in psychology from St. Mary's University in San Antonio, TX in 2000, her M.A. in Clinical/Counseling Psychology from Cleveland State University in 2002, and her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Drexel University in 2006. She completed her clinical internship at the Milton Hershey School in Hershey, PA in 2006, and will complete her post-doctoral fellowship in child psychology in December 2008. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Psychiatry Department at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center/College of Medicine. In addition to her faculty appointment at the HMC/COM, she will begin in an administrative position at the new Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute (PPI, a product of the partnership between HMC and Pinnacle Health systems), on the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Inpatient Unit. At PPI, she will establish a CBT-based clinical program for inpatient youth, and a CBT training program for psychiatry residents and students. Her areas of child/adolescent-focused clinical and research interest include: CBT, PTSD, ADHD, anxiety disorders, and multicultural/diverity issues in psychology and psychiatry. She currently resides in Harrisburg, PA, with her husband and son.  

Meagan Parmley, Ph.D.

Meagan Carleton Parmley, Ph.D. is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist originally from Connecticut. She graduated from Clark University in Worcester, MA in 2000 and then attended Drexel University where she was mentored by James D. Herbert, Ph.D. She graduated in 2006 and went on to complete her post-doctoral training at The Cognitive Behavioral Institute in Albuquerque, NM. Her interests include mood and anxiety disorders, eating disorders, acceptance based cognitive therapies and working with diverse patient populations. She continues to work at The Cognitive Behavioral Institute and now also works part time at the New Sunrise Regional Treatment Center, a residential treatment program for Native American adolescents in Acoma, NM. She enjoys running and hiking with her dogs, skiing, traveling and spending time with friends.  

Email: carletonparm@hotmail.com

Kristy Dalrymple, Ph.D.

Kristy received her B.A. from Hope College in Holland, MI, and her Ph.D. from Drexel in 2005. She completed her clinical internship at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, NY, and a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at Brown Medical School in Providence, RI. She currently serves as an Assistant Professor (Research) in the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at Brown Medical School, and a Staff Psychologist at Rhode Island Hospital. She conducted a preliminary trial on ACT for social phobia for her dissertation, and she has continued this line of research by developing an acceptance-based behavioral treatment for individuals with comorbid depression and social phobia. She currently is conducting a small randomized trial of this intervention, sponsored by a grant from NARSAD: The Mental Health Research Association.

Email: kristy_dalrymple@brown.edu

LeeAnn Cardaciotto, Ph.D.

After graduating from Drexel in 2005, LeeAnn completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Delaware, and subsequently joined UD's Department of Psychology faculty as a Visiting Assistant Professor for the 2006-2007 academic year. She was then appointed to the faculty at La Salle University in Philadelphia, PA, where she is the Director of Field Placement for the M.A. Program in Clinical-Counseling Psychology. Her research and clinical interests focus on constructs related to psychological wellness, including mindfulness, acceptance, defusion/ decentering, and self-compassion. Her work in this area began with the development of the Philadelphia Mindfulness Scale (PHLMS; Cardaciotto et al., 2008), and she hopes to explore other ways of measuring mindfulness and related constructs that go beyond self-report. 

Website                        Email: cardaciotto@lasalle.edu

Elizabeth Nolan, Ph.D.

“Becky” Mintzer Nolan graduated from Drexel’s Clinical Psychology Program in 2005. Her dissertation research, completed under the mentorship of Dr. James Herbert, focused on the long-term effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral treatment for social anxiety disorder. Becky completed her predoctoral internship at Friends Hospital in Philadelphia, focusing on the delivery of services for individuals with mood, anxiety, and eating disorders. Upon graduation, Becky accepted a post-doctoral fellowship at the University Counseling Center at Villanova University. Becky has been working in private practice for the past two years and is interested in the use of evidence-based treatments in her work. She is a licensed psychologist in Pennsylvania with offices in Rosemont and King of Prussia. Becky resides in the Philadelphia suburbs with her husband and two young children.  

Brandon Gaudiano, Ph.D.

Brandon Gaudiano, Ph.D. obtained his doctorate in clinical psychology at Drexel University in 2004 under the mentorship of Dr. James Herbert. He completed his predoctoral clinical internship at Brown University. Following graduation, he stayed at Brown to complete a National Institute of Mental Health-funded postdoctoral research fellowship under the mentorship of Dr. Ivan Miller, Professor of Psychiatry & Human Behavior. Currently, he is an Assistant Professor (Research) of Psychiatry at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. Dr. Gaudiano works at Brown-affiliated Butler Hospital, where he conducts research as a faculty member in the Psychosocial Research Program. He currently receives grant funding from the National Institute of Mental Health and NARSAD: The Mental Health Research Association to study new treatments for patients with severe mood disorders.

Website                        Email: Brandon_Gaudiano@brown.edu

 

Kia Crittenden, Ph.D.

Kia Crittenden, Ph.D. received her B.S. in psychology from Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1998 and her doctorate in clinical psychology from Drexel University in 2004 under the mentorship of Dr. James D. Herbert. She completed her pre-doctoral internship at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan in the Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry Department where she remained as a post-doctoral fellow. During her fellowship, Dr. Crittenden continued to perform duties on the consultation-liaison service, while also serving as the psychology fellow with the Henry Ford Hospital Organ Transplant Institute and as house psychology resident within the Henry Ford Hospital Chronic Pelvic Pain Clinic within the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Following the completion of the fellowship in 2005, Dr. Crittenden joined the MedAvante, Inc. team, where she continues to work as a clinical interviewer for pharmaceutical company sponsored CNS clinical trail research.

Ian Sharp, Ph.D.

Upon completion of the Ph.D. program in 2003, Ian spent two years as an NIMH Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Psychopathology Research Unit in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania with Aaron T. Beck and Greg Brown. In 2005, he joined a small start-up company, MedAvante, as a clinician/trainer and research scientist. MedAvante provides centralized clinical assessments via telephone and videoconferencing for pharmaceutical trials. His current research interests at MedAvante include telepsychiatry, rating scale development and evaluation, and the assessment of suicidality in clinical trials.

Email: IS@medavante.net

 

Alumni (Masters Program):

Kara Blacker, M.S.

Kara completed her masters degree in 2009. Her thesis combined her interests in human pain and neuroimaging with the Herbert-Forman lab's interest in acceptance-based therapies. She assessed an acceptance- and a control-based pain management strategy using the cold pressor test and by measuring EEG to determine differential neural mechanisms exhibited in the two types of strategies. This study showed promising results and she hopes to publish in the near future. She is now working towards a Ph.D. in the Brain, Behavior, and Cognition program at Temple University. 

Email: kjb57@drexel.edu

 

Jessica Collins, M.S.

After working in the Forman-Herbert lab for two years, Jessica successfully defended her masters thesis in the spring of 2009. Her thesis investigated the interrelationships among BMI, dietary restraint, physical activity, and body image satisfaction in a sample of college freshman women. She is now working towards a Psy.D. in Clinical psychology, with a concentration in Health psychology, at LaSalle University. At LaSalle she continues to integrate her interests in acceptance-based treatments, body image satisfaction, and obesity prevention within the adolescent population.

 Email: collinsj2@lasalle.edu

Amanda Feinstein, M.S.

After working in the Forman-Herbert lab for two years, Amanda completed her masters degree in 2008. Her thesis combined her interests in acceptance and mindfulness with her primary focus of pediatric health psychology (pain management/coping, in particular). Collecting data at a local Philadelphia children's hospital, Amanda found some interesting and significant results in her thesis titled Acceptance as a Moderator of Functional Variables in Adolescents with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis, which she hopes to publish in the near future. She is now working towards a Ph.D. in clinical psychology at Georgia State University continuing to integrate her interests in ACT and pediatric pain. Amanda also teaches Therapeutic Yoga to children and adults.

Email: afeinstein1@student.gsu.edu