The Institute on Trauma and Victimization (ITV) was founded to create a focus of interest in the area of trauma and victimization and to form a network for collaboration between students and colleagues from both within and outside of the center. The mission of the institute is to stimulate research and sponsor training and service delivery in the field of trauma and victimization, and to develop and evaluate innovative interventions for those exposed to trauma. The activities of the institute include maintaining a colloquium series on trauma and victimization, sponsoring an annual conference on trauma and victimization, establishing links with relevant groups, organizations and colleagues in the local, national, and international community, and involving students in existing CPS trauma- related programs that share a three-fold mission:
- Provision of specialized psychological services to a particular population of clients exposed to trauma;
- Doctoral level clinical training in the provision of psychological services to that population of traumatized clientele;
- Execution of an ongoing program of research on that population of traumatized clientele.
The programs listed below are all specialty clinical programs within the Psychology Services Center, a publicly-funded facility administered by College of Psychology that provides mental health services to individuals throughout Greater Fort Lauderdale. Each of these clinical specialty programs has a three-fold mission:
- Provision of specialized psychological services to a particular population of clients exposed to trauma;
- Doctoral level clinical training in the provision of psychological services to that population of traumatized clientele;
- Execution of an ongoing program of research on that population of traumatized clientele.
Specialty Clinical Programs
- Child and Adolescent Traumatic Stress Program (CATSP), Director - Jan Faust, Ph.D.: serves children and adolescents experiencing acute, chronic, and/or genetic medical disorders exhibiting a psychological reaction directly related to the medical problem; physical symptoms as a function of behavioral and psychological problems; and psychological problems and physical complaints due to trauma such as child abuse.
- Family Violence Program (FVP), Director - Vincent Van Hasselt, Ph.D.: serves both victims and perpetrators of domestic violence. FVP provides standardized psychological assessment, crisis intervention, short-term therapy, and longer-term treatment. Intervention procedures address a broad base of individual, couple, and family clinical issues.
- Trauma Resolution and Integration Program (TRIP), serves adults age 18 and above who: were sexually, physically, or verbally abused as children or adolescents, and are currently experiencing problems in functioning as a result of the abuse; are experiencing dissociative phenomena that are disturbing to them or are interfering with their ability to function effectively; or have experienced a traumatic event such as rape, physical assault, or a life threatening accident or injury that is creating ongoing distress that interferes with day to day functioning. A combination of individual psychotherapy and participation in coping skills training groups form the core of the treatment package provided by TRIP.
Ralph "Gene" Cash, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, received his doctorate from New York University. His research
interests include school psychology; psychoeducational assessment, diagnosis, and
treatment; depression; anxiety disorders; suicide prevention; forensics, including
child custody, wrongful death effects, and disabilities; stress management; and psychology
and public policy.
Jan Faust, Ph.D.
Professor, received her doctorate from the University of Georgia, and is founder and
director of the Child and Adolescent Traumatic Stress Program (CATSP) and is co-editor
of the Journal of Trauma Practice and of the book Conceptualization and Treatment of Child and Adolescent Psychopathology.
Steven N. Gold, Ph.D.
Professor, received his doctorate from Michigan State University, and is founder and
director of the Trauma Resolution and Integration Program (TRIP). He is author of
the book Not Trauma Alone: Therapy for Child Abuse Survivors in Family and Social Context, and co-editor of the revised edition of the volume Handbook on Sexual Abuse of Children and of the Journal of Trauma Practice. Dr. Gold's clinical and research interests include adult survivors of childhood
abuse, delayed recall of abuse, dissociation, and sexual addiction/compulsivity.
Jeffrey L. Kibler, Ph.D.
Professor, completed his doctoral training at the University of Miami (1999). His
research is in cardiovascular behavioral medicine, and has focused particularly on
behavioral and psychological factors associated with cardiovascular risks in PTSD.
Dr. Kibler's research team recently completed a study funded by the National Heart
Lung and Blood Institute to comprehensively assess cardiovascular risks and cardiovascular
reactivity and recovery patterns among young women with PTSD.
Scott Poland, Ed.D.
Associate Professor, received his doctoral degree from Ball State University. He is
internationally known for his work in school crisis and suicide intervention and he
is the author of four books and numerous chapters on the subject. He is the chairman
of the National Emergency Assistance Team for the National Association of Schools
and has over a decade of national crisis experience serving on teams after tragedies
such as Columbine and many other school tragedies.
David Shapiro, Ph.D., ABPP
Professor of Psychology and teaches courses in criminal law and in forensic assessment
as well as Ethics,, and Supervision and Consultation; he has been actively involved
in the development of forensic psychology as a unique discipline for over 35 years
and was one of the founders of the American Board of Forensic Psychology. He is particularly
interested in how trauma is used (and misused) in courts of law, and has written and
lectured in this area. Dr. Shapiro is involved in research developing an assessment
instrument to predict domestic violence in populations of male batterer.
Vincent Van Hasselt, Ph.D.
Professor, received his doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh. He is director
of the Family Violence Program (IVP), and co-editor of the Journal of Family Violence. He also has co-edited a number of books, including the Handbook of Family Violence, the Handbook of Psychological Approaches with Violent Offenders. Dr. Van Hasselt's clinical and research interests included domestic and other forms
of interpersonal violence, criminal offenders, police psychology, criminal investigative
analysis (psychological profiling) and apprehension; interviewing and interrogation
techniques, cognitive behavioral interventions with juvenile offenders, behavioral
criminology and PTSD and other stress-related disorders.
Lenore Walker, Ed.D., ABPP
Professor, received her doctorate from Rutgers University. She is director of the
Domestic Violence Institute, which provides education and training, research and public
policy initiatives around the world. She specializes in forensic psychology; expert
witness testimony; battered women syndrome; violence against women; family and interpersonal
violence; sexual harassment; impact of trauma; post-traumatic stress disorder; feminist
theory. Dr. Walker is author of The Battered Woman Syndrome, Abused Women and Survivor Therapy: A Practice Guide for
the Psychotherapist, Terrifying Love: Why Battered Women Kill and How Society Responds, and many other books and articles.