TAP News

TAP presents at the Collaborative Perspectives on Addiction Meeting in Atlanta

February 28-March 1, 2014

Denise Hein, PhD, presented findings from a recently completed randomied clinical trial on the efficacy of a combined medication and psychotherapy treatment approach for co-occuring alcohol use disorder (AUD) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).  Panelists discussed promising findings from post-treatment and six month follow-up that highlight the benefits of integrative approaches to co-occuring AUD and PTSD. Lesia Ruglass, PhD, looked at racial differences in treatment adherence and outcomes, while Laura Eidlitz, EdM, and Annelisa Pederesen, MPhil, examined the social characteristics of the sample. Patricia Yoon, MA, presented a clinical case.  

NIH Awards CCNY $1.5 Million to Train Addiction Researchers

September 11, 2013

Aiming to increase the number of scientists from underrepresented minority groups conducting addiction research, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has awarded $1.5 million to support a new training program at The City College of New York.

The program has been named TRACC (Translational Research Training in Addictions for Racial/Ethnic Minorities at City College of New York (CCNY) and Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC). TRACC will capitalize on CCNY's exceptional pool of diverse students, its renowned multidisciplinary faculty and a novel collaboration with substance use researchers at CUMC.

"We want to make City College known as a place for developing top-tier addictions researchers," said Dr. Denise Hien, CCNY and Graduate Center, CUNY professor of psychology and principal investigator on the R25 grant that will fund TRACC. "Students in the program will get the kind of training in translational addiction studies that will prepare them for future research careers in behavioral and biomedical sciences."

TRACC will train 20 researchers over the next five years. Trainees will be selected from a pool of faculty-nominated CCNY graduate psychology students plus students in the Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education's BS/MD program. An initial cohort of four is slated to begin training in the spring of 2014.

In addition to mentoring, TRACC participants will receive intensive training in interdisciplinary research skills including grant writing, neuroscience and MRI-imaging. They will also organize an annual research conference, participate in bi-monthly seminars and attend a two-week summer intensive institute.

TRACC will underwrite trainees' travel costs to professional conferences and make available research funding through a grant application process. In addition, trainees will have access to a rich set of research tools such as databases of successful grant applications, statistical software and data and journal articles.

Serving as TRACC mentors will be an interdisciplinary mix of CCNY faculty including Drs. Lice Ghilardi, Robert Melara, John Martin, Jon Horvitz, Lesia Ruglass and Andre Ragnauth. Mentors from Columbia University Medical Center include premier researchers such as Drs. Suzette Evans, Frances Levin, Edward Nunes, Deborah Hasin and Yuval Neria. Dr. Maurizio Trevisan, provost of City College and dean of the Sophie Davis School, will serve on the TRACC executive committee.

According to a 2011 article in Science, a low percentage of minority scientists achieve success in research award funding despite years of field-wide diversification efforts. Additionally, as the field of translational neuroscience continues to expand, the numbers of qualified minority scientists with interdisciplinary training lags behind. TRACC addresses these gaps by reaching earlier into the career development pipeline to identify and actively facilitate the professional success of the most talented minority students.

For more information about the TRACC application process please email tracc.ccny@gmail.com .
 

TAP Team at 2013 APA Convention

August 2, 2013 - Honolulu, Hawaii

TAP members (left to right): Lesia M. Ruglass, PhD (Associate Professor of Psychology, City College of New York, CUNY), Teresa Lopez-Castro, PhD (Graduate Center, CUNY Clinical Psychology Ph.D. Alumna, 2012); Santiago Papini, M.A.; Amber Kraft Nemeth, M.Phl. (Graduate Center, CUNY Clinical Psychology Ph.D. student); Denise Hien, PhD (Professor of Psychology, Graduate Center and City College of New York, CUNY); Jed McGiffin, B.A.

 

Several members of TAP presented work at the annual APA convention, including:

SYMPOSIA

Perspectives on the Intergenerational Impact of Trauma---Parenting Practices and Child Maladjustment (Hien, Nemeth, Fava, & Ruglass)

State of the Art---Treating Comorbid PTSD and Substance Use Disorders (Hien, Lopez-Castro, Mills, & Simpson)

Translational Findings in Mental Health and Addictions and Implications for Treatment (Hien, Ruglass, & Melara)
 

POSTERS

Trajectories of Posttreatment Substance Use: A Secondary Analysis of the CTN Women and Trauma Study (Lopez-Castro)

Effects of Dissociation on Inhibitory Control in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (McGiffin)

Fear Appraisal Latency and Inhibitory Control in PTSD (Papini)

 

Last Updated: 07/03/2015 13:39