WHO WE ARE - AN INTRODUCTION TO CET'S BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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Dr.
Michael Terman, |
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Dr. Gustave
Manasse received the Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Columbia University. His dissertation, "Self-Regard as a Function of Environmental Demands in Chronic Schizophrenics," presaged a career-long focus on non-pharmacological factors that facilitate social adaptation and behavioral success in the face of background disturbances. Gus served on the staff of Hillside Hospital, Queens, before moving to the City University of New York, where he served for 20 years as a Director of Counseling and Psychological Services. He is now Professor Emeritus of Psychology. In the 1980's, Gus coached Michael Terman's transition from the laboratory to the clinic. In addition to his organizing role in CET, Dr. Manasse was a founder and serves on the Board of Directors of New Horizons, a community and residential training facility for the developmentally disabled, operating in Orange and Dutchess Counties with headquarters in Poughkeepsie, NY. |
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Dr. Dan
Oren received the M.D. degree, with specialty in Psychiatry, from Yale Medical School, where he serves as an Associate Professor of Psychiatry (Adjunct). He is Medical Director at Birmingham Group Health Services in Ansonia, Connecticut. Following a fellowship in the Clinical Psychobiology Branch of the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, he worked as a grants specialist in their extramural research program and as an analyst at the Food and Drug Administration. He has served as chair of the FDA's Psychopharmacology Advisory Panel. Dan's research and clinical interests include seasonal, atypical, chronic and resistant depression, clinical psychopharmacology, light therapy, sleep disorders and circadian rhythm disturbances. He has written numerous scientific articles and book chapters, and is lead author of "How to Beat Jet Lag: A Practical Guide for Air Travelers." He is a former president of the Society for Light Treatment and Biological Rhythms. Dan serves as Medical Director of CET's Chronotherapeutics Consultants, formed in 2004 to advise the hospital and managed care industries on the implementation of light and wake therapies as adjuncts to drug treatment of major depression. |
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Elaine
Tricamo, R.N. was graduated from Queens College with majors in Psychology and English Literature. Her part-time employment throughout college, working with emotionally disturbed children, led to a full-time profession as a Special Education teacher at a school for schizophrenic adolescents and a career-long interest in the role biology plays in mental illness. She joined the New York State Psychiatric Institute (NYSPI) at Columbia University Medical Center in 1976 (the very same year that marked the Institute's shift from a psychoanalytic orientation to an emphasis on biological psychiatry) where she served for 15 years as administrator of the Depression Evaluation Service. Throughout her years of monitoring clinical trials and data collection for many outstanding psychiatric researchers in a variety of investigative areas, she eventually became part of the process of designing studies and writing grant proposals. She met Michael Terman in the early 1980's when she oversaw the data collection for his first clinical trial of the antidepressant effect of light therapy. Following her service at NYSPI, she became a clinical associate in private practice, combining her experience in short-term psychotherapies with her expertise in psychopharmacology. She is a member of the American Society of Clinical Psychopharmacology. |
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Dr. Anna
Wirz-Justice is Director of the Centre for Chronobiology and Professor of Psychiatry at that Psychiatric University Clinic of the University of Basel. She received the Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of London. After a fellowship at the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, she and Thomas Wehr, M.D. received the prestigious Anna-Monika-Prize for their seminal work in the chronobiology of depressive illness. Anna introduced light therapy to Europe, and has published extensively on seasonal affective disorder and sleep physiology. She is a former president of the Society for Light Treatment and Biological Rhythms. In 2002, she received the Scholar's Prize of the City of Basel, awarded for outstanding scientific career achievement. In a thematically relevant avocation, she has interacted with architects to inspire enhanced indoor lighting, and contributed to the prize-winning 2003 volume by Philippe Rahm and Jean-Gilles Décosterd, "Physiological Architecture," which was introduced at the Venice Biennial. Anna directs CET's Chronotherapeutics Consultants, formed in 2004 to advise the hospital and managed care industries on the implementation of light and wake therapies as adjuncts to drug treatment of major depression. www.chronobiology.ch |
| ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER | |
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Nikki L.K. Hafezi |