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INTRODUCTION
SETTINGS
AND
PLACEMENTS
COMMUNITY
APPLICATION
AND
SELECTION
PSYCHOLOGY
TRAINING
FACULTY
ADJUNCT
PSYCHIATRY, PEDIATRICS, &
REHABILITATION MEDICINE TRAINING FACULTY
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SETTINGS AND PLACEMENTS
Each year, additional postdoctoral clinical-research positions are
available based upon grant funding. These positions are added to
the website as they become available and are announced on the APPIC
Postdoc Listserv.
GRADY HEALTH SYSTEM
The Grady Health System, the primary teaching facility of the Emory
University School of Medicine, is a Level 1 Trauma Hospital that
serves a primarily inner-city, minority, and low income population
from metropolitan Atlanta and Fulton and DeKalb Counties . The Grady
Health System includes a general hospital (the largest in Georgia
and among the largest in the country) and a children’s hospital,
as well as multiple outpatient clinics for children and adults. Professional
services at Grady Health System are provided under contract with
Emory University School of Medicine and Morehouse School of Medicine,
so that the hospital is a teaching hospital. Grady is involved in
training for all the mental health disciplines; clinical psychology,
psychiatry, social work, nursing, occupational and recreational therapy.
Thus, there are many opportunities to engage in interdisciplinary
seminars and treatment programs. Emory University is located approximately
15 minutes driving time from Grady Health System. The psychology
faculty includes 11 full-time and 2 part-time licensed clinical psychologists.
In addition, there is an American Psychological Association accredited
internship training program based at Grady Health System, which received
initial accreditation in 1980, and was fully re-accredited in 1986,
1991, 1996, and 2001. The internship program recently was expanded
to include a position at the Center for Rehabilitation Medicine.
Adults with Serious Psychiatric Disorders. The
following half time positions can be combined with one another or
with other half time positions at Grady Health System, for a total
of 2 positions devoted to work with adults with serious psychiatric
disorders. Half time positions may be available in the Psychiatric
Evaluation and Brief Treatment outpatient unit, the Adult Inpatient
Milieu Unit, the Adult Day Treatment Psychosocial Rehabilitation
Program, the FOCUS Intensive Outpatient Program, and the homelessness
programs for adults with serious mental illness. They can be combined
with other positions as well, for the equivalent of 2 full positions.
Responsibilities for the positions devoted to work with individuals
with serious mental illness include assessments, interventions, crisis
management, consultation, clinical-research, clinical administration,
supervision and teaching, and program development and evaluation.
Research is ongoing in a number of areas including: suicide, intimate
partner violence, schizophrenia and substance abuse, psychosocial
rehabilitation-program evaluation, interactions between PTSD and
serious mental illnesses, efficacy of short-term inpatient and outpatient/community
interventions, and neuropsychological correlates of psychiatric conditions.
Women’s Health . The one-year, full-time
position includes half time on the Psychiatric Obstetrics Consultation
Liaison Service or in the Avon Breast Cancer Center . The other 50%
time entails involvement on a clinical-research project focused on
a group intervention program for suicidal African American women.
Responsibilities for the Psychiatric Obstetrics position include
consultation-liaison work with pregnant and postpartum women with
psychiatric and substance abuse problems and responsibilities for
the Avon Breast Cancer Center include evaluations; individual, group,
and family therapy; and clinical-research activities. The clinical-research
positions entail serving as a clinical coordinator for projects funded
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In this latter
role, the postdoctoral fellow is a member of an interdisciplinary
research team and is expected to take a leadership role in the research
efforts of the team (e.g., data analysis, manuscript preparation,
etc). The person will also be involved in the conduct of group, individual,
and family interventions for suicidal women. This person will also
aid in the recruitment of study participants, which includes community
outreach efforts.
- Schizophrenia Clinical Research. This one-year,
half or full time position will allow the postdoctoral fellow who
is interested in clinical research to serve as a Project Coordinator
for a study involving patients with schizophrenia and their family
members. Responsibilities of the fellow will include: coordination
of participant recruitment, administration of research assessments,
supervision of research assistants, data entry and data set management,
and collaboration on manuscript preparation. The fellow will also
be responsible for co-leading family psychoeducational groups,
as well as inpatient groups for persons with serious and persistent
mental illness.
- Clinical Child Psychology/Pediatric Psychology. One
or two, one year positions, pending funding, will be available
working with children and their families. One position will be
based in the community and is sponsored through the Georgia Parent
Support Network. The responsibilities for this position include
the conduct of cognitive, academic, social emotional, and personality
testing, as well as individual and group therapy and case management
for children and adolescents in the custody of Child Protective
Services. The fellow will also attend interdisciplinary team rounds.
Another possible position is through Project STAR, an NIMH funded
clinical-research project focused on children with asthma and their
families. Responsibilities will include serving as Project Coordinator.
In addition, the person will be responsible for data collection,
coding of family interactions, manuscript and presentation preparation,
and grant writing. Further, assessment and intervention opportunities
are available through the Family Evaluation Clinic, the MERIT Adolescent
Day Treatment Program, and the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Outpatient Clinic. In addition, there may be a half time position
working in the Teen Services Clinic conducting assessments, crisis
intervention, and therapy (individual, group, family) for at-risk
adolescents seeking gynecological and obstetrics care and other
health care services. The fellow at this placement will work on
an interdisciplinary medical team and will be a primary contact
person for the psychosocial needs of the teens. Depending on the
availability of funding for these clinical child psychology/pediatric
psychology positions at Grady, the placement(s) will be combined
to make full-time positions.
CHILDREN’S HEALTHCARE OF ATLANTA (CHOA)
- With 430 licensed beds in two hospitals (Egleston and Scottish
Rite), more than 15,500 inpatient visits annually, and an extensive
and comprehensive interdisciplinary outpatient program (6 immediate
care centers, 5 primary care centers, other facilities providing
specialty care), CHOA is one of the largest pediatric healthcare
systems in the country. CHOA is recognized for excellence in cancer
treatment, cardiology, transplant services, etc.
- Pediatric Psychology - Children’s Healthcare of
Atlanta. Four full-time pediatric psychology postdoctoral
fellowship positions are available in the Department of Hematology-Oncology.
These positions provide inpatient and outpatient services to
children and adolescents receiving treatment for cancer, hemophilia,
and sickle cell. Clinical responsibilities include consultation
with interdisciplinary teams or single disciplines; individual,
group, and family therapy; and psychological and neuropsychological
evaluations. Candidates for these positions need to demonstrate
a reasonable level of competence in child assessment (cognitive,
achievement, and social/emotional), child/family intervention,
and research.
Maternal Substance Abuse (MSA) and Child Development Project
This program combines the resources at two sites, the MSA laboratory
in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the Fetal
Alcohol Center at the Marcus Institute, which is a clinical site
serving developmentally disabled children that is affiliated with
the Department of Pediatrics. The MSA project carries out longitudinal
research on several cohorts of children, adolescents, and young adults
prenatally exposed to alcohol, cocaine and tobacco and, through a
contract with the Department of Human Resources in Georgia , is involved
in a range of prevention activities focusing on the impact of maternal
substance abuse and secondary disabilities affecting offspring. The
Fetal Alcohol Center provides diagnostic and intervention services
to children exposed to alcohol and other drugs and their families
and carries out clinic research within in this setting. The postdoctoral
fellow, therefore, has the opportunity to be involved in a wide range
of activities and collaborations with other scientists and practitioners.
At the Marcus Institute, fellows’ clinical activities include
participation in interdisciplinary diagnostic evaluations, individual
evaluations, and therapy with children and families. At the MSA laboratory,
fellows participate in longitudinal research studies, both through
research activities and direct contact with research participants.
Prevention activities include the design and implementation of workshops
and teaching modules, as well as outcome research. Fellows may design
and carry out their own independent research or prevention activities
as well.
EMORY UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE
The Division of Neuropsychology and Behavioral Health is an integral
part of the multidisciplinary Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
in the Emory University Medical School . Housed in the Center for
Rehabilitation Medicine on the Emory Medical School campus, the Division
provides neuropsychological services to a 56-bed inpatient adult
rehabilitation hospital with dedicated stroke, brain injury, spinal
cord, orthopedic, day hospital, and outpatient programs. Consults
are also received from various departments within the Medical School
including Rehabilitation Medicine, Neurology, the Emory Epilepsy
Center , Psychiatry, Neurosurgery, and Cardiac Surgery. Services
include neuropsychological assessment, cognitive rehabilitation,
individual psychotherapy, behavioral health interventions (e.g.,
biofeedback for pain disorders), and amobarbital testing and corticol
mapping in seizure surgery candidates. Faculty provide consultation
to interdisciplinary teams on cognitive and behavioral disorders
and play a vital role in developing rehabilitation programs for persons
recovering from stroke, traumatic brain injury, tumor surgery, and
other conditions affecting the central nervous system. Neuropsychology
faculty also maintain an active research program and serve as project
directors or consultants on a number of federal grants.
Neuropsychology. The postdoctoral fellowship in
neuropsychology meets International Neuropsychological Society/American
Psychological Association Division 40 training guidelines. The program
has been reviewed and approved by the Association for Postdoctoral
Programs in Clinical Neuropsychology (APPCN).
The fellowship provides two years of intensive training and supervised
clinical experience in neuropsychological diagnosis, cognitive rehabilitation,
and team consultation. Neuropsychological assessments incorporate
both quantitative and qualitative approaches to testing and are focused
on the diagnosis of cognitive syndromes, the specification of functional
strengths and weaknesses, and the development of detailed and practical
recommendations for patient rehabilitation. The approach to cognitive
rehabilitation emphasizes the enhancement of real world performance
using compensatory aids and strategies. Fellows conduct neuropsychological
examinations (including Wada testing and corticol mapping assessments),
provide feedback to patients and family members, provide consultation
to rehabilitation teams, develop and carry out cognitive rehabilitation
programs, and acquire supervisory skills as they work with practicum
students and technicians. Optional supervised psychotherapy and behavioral
health intervention experiences also are available.
In addition to receiving individual supervision, fellows participate
in a variety of conferences and seminars including Rehabilitation
Medicine, Neurology, and Psychiatry Grady Rounds; and a weekly Neuropsychology
Case Seminar. Fellows also attend weekly brain dissections in the
Neuropathology Department of the Emory Medical School . Fellows are
involved in research and are expected to develop a research idea
by the end of the first year and to conduct a study during the second
year. Fellows are provided with supervised grant writing experience.
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