Elizabeth Meadows Ph.D.
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Address: Email: meado1ea@cmich.edu Website: www.chsbs.cmich.edu/elizabeth_meadows Vita |
Bio:
Dr. Meadows joined the CMU faculty in 1997. She teaches the required graduate courses on Cognitive Behavior Therapy (Psy785) and Ethics and Professional Issues (Psy765), and directs the Trauma and Anxiety Disorders Clinic, a specialty clinic within the Psychological Training and Consultation Center. Her research and clinical interests are primarily in cognitive-behavioral assessment and treatment of anxiety disorders, and in dissemination of empirically supported treatments in general and for anxiety especially. In the TADC, we are currently piloting an exposure therapy program for anxiety disorders as a whole, as a step toward increasing the use of this treatment amongst nonacademic clinicians. Dr. Meadows is also interested in prevention of psychopathology, and in prevention of assault through the examination of risk recognition as a factor in revictimization, and in the use of CBT methods to help people with medical problems.
Recent Research:
Hirai, M., Cochran, H., Stransky, J., Butcher, J., Vernon, L., & Meadows, E.A. (under review). A Preliminary Investigation of the Efficacy of Disgust Exposure Techniques for Blood and Injection Fears.
Meadows, E.A. & Butcher, J. (2005). Anxiety-Adult. In A. Freeman (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Behavior Therapy, pp 32-35. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
