
Jesse B. Milby, Ph.D., Director and Founder, CSART,
and Professor of Psychology. As Director and Founder of this
program, Dr. Jesse B. Milby has received national and
international recognition for several components of these
programs including serving as the model for the care of the
homeless in Houston, Texas. Jesse B. Milby, Ph.D., ABPP., is
Professor and Director of the Medical Psychology Doctoral
Program in Psychology. He is also Professor in Medicine,
Division of Preventive Medicine, and School of Public
Health, Department of Health Behavior. He has expertise in
developing and evaluating empirically supported substance
abuse treatment programs, especially those in community
settings, and with colleagues, is interested in brain
mechanisms involved in addictive behavior and initiating and
sustaining abstinence. With UAB colleagues, Dr. Milby has
developed one of the first effective substance abuse
interventions for cocaine dependence and replicated its
effectiveness in a homeless, non-psychotically mentally ill,
homeless cohort treated in a community treatment program.
Also, he has a long history of successfully recruiting and
mentoring faculty and training students, many of whom have
become faculty at UAB and other universities and medical
centers.
Stephen Kertesz, M.D., M.S. , Division of
Preventive Medicine. Stephan Kertesz, M.D., MPH is an
Assistant Professor in Medicine, Division of Preventive
Medicine. He has special expertise in medical care and
health systems which serve homeless populations, especially
substance abusing homeless. He also has a long time interest
in health care policy, and policy relevant research,
especially as it impacts under-served populations,
particularly homeless persons. Dr. Kertesz currently has a
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) career development
award for which Dr. Milby serves as mentor.
Foster Cook, M.A., Department of Psychiatry.
Foster Cook, M.A. is Assistant Professor in the Department
of Psychiatry. He has expertise in the structure,
administration and public funding of substance abusers,
including those involved in Alabama’s criminal justice
systems. He has special expertise in outreach services to
sub-populations of under-served substance abusers.
Max Michael, M.D., Dean of the School of
Public Health. Max Michael has been the Medical Director of
Birmingham Health Care for more than 20 years and was part
of the original coalition that created
the program. He has maintained a strong interest in
the problems of substance abuse among homeless persons
during this time, working closely with UAB researchers to
facilitate a strong community-university partnership.
Joseph Schumacher, Ph.D., Division of
Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine
Joseph E. Schumacher, Ph.D. is Professor in Medicine,
Division of Preventive Medicine and Public Health,
Department of Health Behavior. Dr. Schumacher has been
Co-Principal Investigator in the UAB General Endowment Fund
supported Consortium. He is a former student of Dr. Milby
and collaborator in opioid dependence treatment and the
treatment of cocaine dependence over the last 16 years. With
Foster Cook he has developed extensive empirically based
substance abuse treatment programs and services in the
Department of Psychiatry’s Substance Abuse Treatment
Program. He has special expertise in empirically supported
substance abuse treatment services evaluation and the
development and assessment of the effectiveness of
innovative treatments. Dr. Schumacher has been continuously
and entirely research grant supported since his initial
faculty appointment at UAB.
Jalie A. Tucker, Ph.D., Department of Health
Behavior, School of Public Health.
Jalie A. Tucker, Ph.D., M.P.H., is a Professor in the
Department of Health Behavior in the School of Public
Health. Dr. Tucker has published numerous journal articles
and book chapters in the area of substance abuse and
addiction, particularly in the areas of help-seeking for and
natural recovery from alcohol problems. She is
Past-President of the American Psychological Association
Division 50 (Addictions) and currently is Chair of APA’s
Board of Professional Affairs. Her research program has been
continuously funded by NIAAA since 1992.
Rudy E. Vuchinich, Ph.D., Department of
Psychology
Rudy E. Vuchinich, Ph.D., is an Associate Director of the
Medical Psychology Doctoral Program and Professor in the
Department of Psychology in the School of Social and
Behavioral Sciences. Dr. Vuchinich has published numerous
journal articles and book chapters in the area of substance
abuse and addiction, particularly in the area of behavioral
economics and other extensions of basic behavioral science
to applied problems. He is Past-President of the American
Psychological Association Division 50 (Addictions). His
research program currently is funded by NIDA.
Michael Windle, Ph.D., Department of
Psychology
Michael Windle Ph.D. is Professor in the Departments of
Psychology and Pediatrics. He is Director of the UAB Center
for the Advancement of Youth Health and the UAB
Comprehensive Youth Violence Center. He is a well-known
researcher in child development and has published widely in
the areas of alcohol and drug abuse, delinquency, and other
child health research. |
In his
new book Choice, Behavioural
Economics and Addiction, Professor
Rudy Vuchinich (Psychology),
associate director of the medical
psychology department, presents
information by psychologists across
the country about behavioral
economics and addiction.
Click to Read More...
University of Alabama at Birmingham
(UAB) Psychology Professor Jesse B.
Milby, Ph.D., ABPP, has received two
grants totaling $8.5 million from
the National Institute of Drug Abuse
for two studies involving
experimental, intensive
day-treatment and training for
homeless abusers of drugs and
alcohol.
Click to Read More... |