Publications by National Center for Telehealth & Technology Scientists
In Press
Problem Solving for Service Members with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
Journal of Neurotrauma.
A Virtual Hope Box Smartphone App for Emotional Regulation and Coping with Distress: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Psychiatric Services.
Technology-based interventions for co-occurring substance use and trauma symptoms: A systematic review.
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare.
Anger Intensification with Combat-Related PTSD and Depression Co-Morbidity.
Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
Telemental health for children and adolescents: An overview of legal, regulatory, and risk management issues.
Journal of child and adolescent psychopharmacology.
Clinician perceptions of using a smartphone app with prolonged exposure therapy.
Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services.
Caring letters for military suicide prevention.
In Sullivan, James, & Bongar (Eds.)
The Oxford Handbook of Suicide in Military and Veteran Populations.
New York: Oxford University Press.
A Practitioner's Guide to Telemental Health.
American Psychological Association Books.
An evaluation of the feasibility and safety of a home-based telemental health treatment for post-traumatic stress in the US military.
Telemedicine and eHealth.
Development and dissemination of virtual reality exposure therapy for combat related PTSD.
In M. P. Safir, H. S. Wallach, & A. A. Rizzo (Eds.).
Future Directions in Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Springer.
What's changed? A comparison of army suicide surveillance data to cases from 1975-1982.
Suicide and Life-Threatening.
Virtual reality as a tool for delivering PTSD exposure therapy.
In R. M. Scurfield & K. T. Platoni (Eds.).
War Trauma and Its Wake: Expanding the Circle of Healing.
Taylor & Francis.
Positive and Negative Aspects of Facebook Use by Service Members during Deployment to Afghanistan: Associations with Perceived Social Support.
Psychology of Popular Media Culture.
A comparison of suicide attempters and decedents in the US Army: A latent class analysis. Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior.
Analysis of Distance Collaboration Modalities: Alternatives to Meeting Face-to-Face.
International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction.
31, 901-910
2015
Military Kids Connect: Prevention services for military children.
Psychological Services. 12(30), 261-266.
A Virtual Hope Box Smartphone App as an Accessory to Therapy: Proof of Concept in a Clinical Sample of Veterans.
Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 45,1
DOI: 10.1111/sltb.12103
Personal Technology Use by US Military Service Members and Veterans: An Update.
Telemed J E Health,
21. (4) 245-258, doi: 10.1089/tmj.2014.0100.
Patient Perceptions of Telemental Health: Systematic Review of Direct Comparisons to In-Person Psychotherapeutic Treatments.
Telemedicine and eHealth,
21,8. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2014.0165.
Suicide Risk among 1.3 Million Veterans Who Were on Active Duty During the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars.
Annals of Epidemiology, 25(2),
96-100. doi: 10.1016.
Legal, Regulatory, and Risk Management Issues in the Use of Technology to Deliver Mental Health Care.
Cognitive and Behavior Practice, 22 (3), 258-268,
doi:10.1016/j.cbpra.2014.04.008.
Suicide Circumstances among active duty US Army personnel versus US civilians: A matched case analysis.
Journal of Life-Threatening Behavior, 45,
65-77.
Clinical Assessment in Clinical Videoconferencing.
In P. Tuerk & P. Shore (Eds).
Behavioral Telehealth Series Volume 1- Clinical Video Conferencing: Program Development and Practice (203-220).
Springer International.
Gender differences in suicide and suicide attempts among US Army Soldiers.
Psychiatry Research,225, 545-549.
Comparison of prolonged exposure (PE) coach to treatment as usual: A case series with two active duty soldiers.
Military Psychology.
27, 287-296.