Wendy Hadley, PhD, received her degree in
pediatric psychology from the University of Memphis in 2003.
Not exact matches
Based on the research questions at hand, the Center draws
from CHOP and University of Pennsylvania - based expertise in emergency medicine;
pediatric trauma; surgery; nursing; social work;
pediatric and adolescent medicine; epidemiology and biostatistics; bioengineering; computational engineering;
psychology; behavioral science; communications; and health education.
With scholars and clinicians spanning disciplines that include child development, neuroscience, education, child
psychology, public health, and
pediatric psychology and medicine, the content covers nearly every angle of how children learn,
from the social - emotional perspective to the biological changes that happen in the brain as children age.
Family - based interventions for
pediatric obesity: methodological and conceptual challenges
from family
psychology
Methods As part of a larger survey of
pediatric psychologists
from the Society of
Pediatric Psychology e-mail listserv (American Psychological Association, APA, Division 54), 37 measures were selected for this psychometric review.
She earned her doctoral degree in child clinical
psychology from Arizona State University and completed her predoctoral clinical internship in child clinical /
pediatric psychology at Geisinger Medical Center.
SPR presents important conceptual developments and empirical findings
from a wide range of disciplines (e.g., educational, child clinical,
pediatric, community, and family
psychology, as well as education and special education) and communicates advances
from within school
psychology to the broader educational and psychological communities.
Their individual clinical and research areas broadly represent the field of
pediatric psychology and they were drawn
from across the nation with two international representatives.
Results
from the Division 54 [Society of
Pediatric Psychology (SPP)-RSB- listserv survey, described in detail in the Introduction section to this series (Cohen et al., 2008), our own experience, and a brief review of relevant literature (e.g., papers published in the Journal of Pediatric Psychology) were used to identify family measures in use in the field of pediatric p
Psychology (SPP)-RSB- listserv survey, described in detail in the Introduction section to this series (Cohen et al., 2008), our own experience, and a brief review of relevant literature (e.g., papers published in the Journal of
Pediatric Psychology) were used to identify family measures in use in the field of pediatric p
Psychology) were used to identify family measures in use in the field of
pediatric psychologypsychology.