SCHOOLHOME
Kent State University111 West Centre St
Department of Psychology Baltimore, MD 21201
Kent, OH 44242 Cell: (216)-704-6363
EDUCATION
2001-2005 Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y.
Bachelor of Arts in Psychology
2007-2010 Kent State University, Kent, OH.
Masters Degree in Clinical Psychology
Specialization in Child Psychology
Thesis Title: Caregiver characteristics and the development of PTSD following traumatic injury in children
Advisor: Douglas Delahanty, Ph.D.
2010-Present Kent State University, Kent, OH.
Ph.D. Candidate in Clinical Psychology
Specialization in Child Psychology
Dissertation Title: The relationship between parenting behaviors and bereavement-related symptoms in parents and siblings involved in pediatric palliative care (PPC)
Advisor: Douglas Delahanty, Ph.D.
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS/COMMITEES
Sigma Xi, Student Affiliate
Society of Pediatric Psychology Division 54, Student Affiliate
International Society for the Study of Traumatic Stress, Student Affiliate
American Psychological Association, Student Affiliate
Clinical Training Committee, Graduate Student Representative
Graduate Student Senate, Clinical Psychology Representative
Honors and Awards
Graduate Student Senate Travel Award,2008, 2009, 2011
Kent State University, Kent OH
Applied Psychology Center Travel Award, 2008, 2009, 2011
Kent State University, Kent OH
Student Poster Winner Award,2010
International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
Montreal, Canada
CLINICAL TRAINING:
John’s Hopkins Medical Center/Kennedy Krieger InstitutePediatric Psychology Clinic and Consultation Service
Baltimore, MD / July 2013–present
Position:
Pediatrics Intern / Supervisors:
Keith Slifer, Ph.D.
Adriana Amari, Ph.D.
- Provide consultation to allied health professionals in a variety of inpatient and outpatient pediatric settings at the Kennedy Krieger Institute, the Johns Hopkins Hospital Children's Center and various schools and community health care facilities.
- Implement behavioral techniques to help avoid reliance on sedation or anesthesia for motion control or behavior management during medical procedures, as well as to supplement medical management of pain, anxiety and distress associated with medical disorders, tests and treatments.
- Provide behaviorally-oriented individual child/adolescent psychotherapy with emphasis placed on teaching or strengthening skills for coping with stress, anxiety or pain, and on problem-solving skills for identifying and overcoming barriers to adherence with health care regimens and normative psychosocial adjustment.
- Train parents and health care professionals to implement behavioral interventions that strengthen child coping, cooperation and adjustment to their medical conditions.
Akron Children’s Hospital
Akron, OH / July 2012–June 2013
Position:
Trainee in Behavioral Medicine / Supervisor:
Amy J. Ginsberg, J.D., Ph.D
- Conducted feeding-specific evaluations and treatment as part of multi-disciplinaryteam, including speech/feeding specialists, nutrition specialists, occupational therapists, and pediatric behavioral psychologists
- Provided assessments and interventions to address behavioral difficulties, adherence concerns, and coping difficulties for children withCystic Fibrosis in an outpatient medical clinic
- Conducted inpatient consultationsfor patients with Cystic Fibrosis as part of the Inpatient Consultation/Liaison Service
- Developed several research protocols assessing perceptions of the integration of behavioral psychology in medical clinics
KidsLink
Social Skills Program
Twinsburg, OH / June 2010-June 2012
Position:
Clinical Extern / Supervisor:
Michelle Depolo, Psy.D.
- Co-facilitated 3 types of psychotherapy groups for children and adolescentswith autism spectrum disorder; a cognitive-behavioral skills group for children and adolescents with co-morbid anxiety and depression, and a child/adolescent group teaching social skills and cognitive-behavioral techniques for coping with stressors, and a teen social skills group
- Provided feedback and recommendations to parents of children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorders
Akron Children’s Hospital
Partial Hospitalization Program
Akron, OH / June 2010-June 2011
Position:
Clinical Extern / Supervisor:
Alanna Updegraff, Ph.D.
- Provided individual, group, and family therapy to adolescents ages 13-17 with severe depression, anxiety, anger management problems, self-harm behaviors, suicidal ideations and suicide attempts in 5-10 day treatment program
- Conducted intake assessments and personality assessments (MMPI-A) with adolescents
- Conducted Dialectical Behavior Therapy group and check-in groups. Co-led psychotherapy and check-out groups
- Coordinated care with outpatient therapists, psychiatrists, children’s services boards, court officials and schools
- Supervision was received in weekly individual meetings, which emphasized case conceptualization and treatment planning; Attended daily multidisciplinary treatment team meetings
- Maintained outpatient caseload of individual child and family cases, including several children with medical illnesses
Kent State University
Child/Adolescent Specialty Practicum
Kent, OH / June 2008-June 2011
Position:
Graduate Student Clinician / Supervisors:
Beth Wildman, Ph.D.
Joel Mowrey, Ph.D
- Conducted intellectual, personality, and diagnostic assessment and provided individual psychotherapy to an adult client population from the Kent State University and greater Kent community
- Provided individual and family psychotherapy for children and adolescents with behavior problems, depression, and/or anxiety; utilized evidence-based treatments for treating child anxiety and externalizing behavior problems
- Implemented parenting training strategies, primarily Triple P, as well as a systems framework in family therapy
- Created and implemented treatment plans varying in length from brief to long-term, which incorporated various theoretical orientations (e.g., Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Dialectical and Behavioral Therapy, and Family Systems)
- Conducted intellectual assessments for children and adolescents ages 7 to 17 years
- Provided feedback and recommendations utilized in school admissions and placement programs
- Provided formal case conceptualization presentations to supervisors and peers
- Supervision was received in weekly individual and small-group formats and involved videotape review
Kent State University
General Adult Practicum
Kent, OH / June 2008-June 2010
Position: Graduate Student Clinician
Clinical supervisors:
John Schell, Ph.D.,
Joel Hughes, Ph.D.
John Akamatsu, Ph.D
/Assessment supervisors:
Yossef Ben-Porath, Ph.D.
Martin Sellbom, Ph.D.
- Conducted intellectual, personality, and diagnostic assessment and provided individual psychotherapy to an adult client population from the Kent State University and greater Kent community
- Provided short- and long-term individual psychotherapy for clients with a variety of adjustment and clinical disorders including mood and anxiety disorders, substance abuse, eating disorders, and Axis II disorders
- Conducted semi-structured clinical interviews (SCID), administered psychological tests (e.g., MMPI-2; WAIS-III; sentence completion; TAT), and completed brief and comprehensive reports
PROFESSIONAL TRAINING
Executive Functions:
Concepts, Assessment, and Clinical Presentations2012
Akron Children’s Hospital, Akron, OH
Trauma Focused CBT (TF-CBT) Training2012
Coleman Professional Services Ravenna, Ohio
The Practical Art of Eliciting Suicidal Ideation: 2011
The ChronologicalAssessment of Suicide Events
Akron Children’s Hospital, Akron, OH
Nonviolent Crisis Intervention Training2010
Akron Children’s Hospital, Akron, OH
Dialectical Behavior Therapy 2010
with Adolescents Suicidal Adolescents Training
Akron Children’s Hospital, Akron, OH
Using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality 2008
Inventory-Restructured Format in Clinical Settings
Kent State University, Kent OH
Triple P (Positive Parenting Program) 2008
Training Workshop: Group Level
Kent State University, Kent OH
Using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality 2008
Inventory in Clinical Settings
Kent State University,Kent OH
RESEARCH EXPERIENCE
Graduate Research Assistant June 2007-Present
Kent State University
Advisor: Douglas L. Delahanty, Ph.D.
- Involved in research investigating biopsychosocial predictors of PTSD in children and adults
- Involved in research examining predictors of psychological outcomes in families involved in pediatric palliative care
- Conduct subject enrollment including recruitment, screening, obtaining informed consent for NIMH grant (R01 MH62042-01) examining the efficacy of early hydrocortisone treatment at decreasing PTSD symptomatology in trauma survivors
- Insure the transfer of biologic samples to the laboratory
- Perform clinical interviews usingthe Structured Interview for DSM-IV Disorders (SCID) and the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) for both adults and children
Kent State University
Supervisor: Christopher Flessner, Ph.D.
- Involved in research examining neuropsychological functioning and parenting practices in children diagnosed with OCD and related disorders
- Prepared and submitted three research proposals
- Conducted subject enrollment including recruitment, screening, obtaining informed consent for research studies
- Administered several structured diagnostic interview, including the Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Present and Lifetime Version (K-SADS-PL), the Children’s Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (CY-BOCS) and Trichotillomania Diagnostic Interview (TDI)
- Administered several behavioral rating scales and symptom report measures, including the Conner’s 3, parent report, Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC), and the Child Depession Inventory (CDI)
- Administered the Cambridge Automated Neurocognitive Assessment Battery (CANTAB)
Intervention Co-facilitatorJanuary 2009-June, 2010
Kent State University
Advisor: Beth Wildman, Ph.D.
Project title:Parenting practices, child behavior, and injury
Responsibilities:
- Conducted evidence-based manualized behavioral parent training with parents of children ages 3-7 with externalizing behavior problems in hospital setting
- Coordinated care with physicians referring children for treatment
Clinical Research Coordinator June 2005-June 2007
James J Peters VA Medical Center and Mt. Sinai School of Medicine
Division of Traumatic Stress Studies
Supervisor: Rachel Yehuda, Ph.D.
Project title: Genetics, Endocrinology, and PTSD Risk in the Population
- Conducted subject enrollment including recruitment, screening, obtaining informed consent, and maintaining subject-specific databases using SPSS
- Administered self-report measures
- Corresponded with Internal Review Board/Grants & Contracts Office to ensure regulatory compliance for NIMH and VA MERIT funded studies
- Scheduled blood draw for NPY, DHEA and glucocorticoid receptor measures and insure the transfer of biologic samples to the laboratory
- Mentored and trained junior clinical research coordinators
- Collaborated with members of an inter-disciplinary team including clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, and other research coordinators
ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Delahanty, D. L., Gabert-Quillen, C. A.,Ostrowski, S., Morris, A. T., Fallon, W. (submitted). The efficacy of early hydrocortisone treatment at decreasing symptoms of PTSD.Psychoneuroendocrinology, 18, 103-111.doi:10.1017/S1092852913000096
Morris, A., Lee, T., Delahanty, D. (2013). The relationship between parent and child negative event appraisals and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in children: a moderation analysis. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Practice. doi: 10.1037/a0029894
Morris, A., Gabert-Quillen, C., Delahanty, D. (2012). The association between parent PTSD/depression symptoms and child PTSD symptoms: a meta-analysis. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 37(10):1076-88.doi:10.1093/jpepsy/jss091
Morris, A, Mckee, T. (2009). Disaster-related trauma and children: A proposed parent training program. Early Childhood Services, 3, 99-112.
Yehuda, R., Schmeidler, J., Labinsky,E., Bell, A., Morris, A. ,Zemelman, S., Grossman, R. (2009). Ten-year follow-up study of PTSD diagnosis, symptom severity and psychosocial indices in aging holocaust survivors. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 119, 25-34.
Yehuda R, Morris A, Labinsky E, Zemelman S, Schmeidler J. (2007). Ten year follow-up study of cortisol levels in aging Holocaust Survivors with and without PTSD. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 20, 757-61.
Yehuda R, Teicher MH, Seckl JR, Grossman RA, Morris A, Bierer LM. (2007). Maternal but not paternal PTSD is a ‘vulnerability’ factor for low cortisol trait in offspring of Holocaust survivors. Archives of General Psychiatry, 64, 1040-8.
PUBLICATIONS UNDER REVIEW
Flessner, C., Morris A. (submitted) Intermediate Phenotypes, Anxiogenic Parenting Practices, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): A Testable Model for Describing the Pathogenesis of Child-onset OCD. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology
ABSTRACTS/SYMPOSIA/PRESENTATIONS
Morris, A., Gabert-Quillen, C., Delahanty, D. (2011, November). The relationship between parent functioning and the development of child posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms: a meta-analysis. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Society of Traumatic Stress Studies, Baltimore, MD.
Babyar H., Morris, A., Wildman B., Duby, J. (2011, April) Effects of Behavioral Parent Training on Parental Psychosocial Functioning, Discipline Styles, and Injury Risk Behaviors in Children. Poster presented at presented at the meeting of the Society of Pediatric Psychology, San Antonio, TX.
Babyar, H., Morris, A., Wildman, B., Duby, J. (2010, September). Effects of Behavioral Parent Training on Injury Risk Behaviors in Children. Poster presented at presented at the meeting of the Society for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics (SDBP), Boston, MA.
Morris, A., Delahanty, D., & Christopher, N. (2010, November). Caregiver characteristics and the development of PTSD following traumatic injury in children. Poster presented at the meeting of International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Montreal, Canada.
Morris, A., Nugent, N., Christopher, N., Delahanty, D. (2010, November). Depression as a moderator of early propranolol administration to prevent PTSD in child trauma victims. Poster presented presented at the meeting ofthe International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Montreal, Canada. (First Place, Student Poster Award)
Gabert, C. A., Ostrowski, S., Morris, A., Humphrys, K., Fallon, W., Bon, J., & Delahanty, D.L. (2009, January). Early secondary interventions with hydrocortisone for in-hospital trauma patients. Poster presented at the meeting ofthe Northeastern Ohio Regional Trauma Network (NORTN), Canton, OH.
Gabert, C. A., Ostrowski, S., Morris, A., Humphrys, K., Fallon, W., Bon, J., & Delahanty, D.L.(2008, November). Early secondary interventions with hydrocortisone for in-hospital trauma patients. In Zatzick, D. (Chair)Acute Medical Interventions for Prevention andTreatment of PTSD: Considerations and New Findings. Symposium presented at the meeting ofthe International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Chicago, IL.
Morris, A., Sledjeski, Fallon, W., Spoonster, E., Delahanty, D. (2008, November). Longitudinal Analysis of Memory for Trauma and Symptoms of PTSD. Poster presented at the meeting of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Chicago, IL
TEACHING EXPERIENCE
Course Instructor
Psychological Interventions Summer 2011
Department of Psychology, Kent State University. Junior-level undergraduate course with 30 students. Independently developed and carried out curriculum including lectures, class discussion, multiple-choice exams, and supplemental reading materials.
Course InstructorFall 2009, Spring 2010
Child Psychology
Department of Psychology, Kent State University. Sophomore-level undergraduate course with 300 students. Independently developed and carried out curriculum including lectures, class discussion, multiple-choice exams, and supplemental reading materials.
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