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Kevin
J. Flannelly, Ph.D. has been
the
associate director of research
at HealthCare Chaplaincy
in New York City since 2001.
He received a B.A. in Psychology
from Jersey City State College,
an M.S. in Biopsychology from
Rutgers University, and a Ph.D.
in Physiological Psychology
from the University of Hawaii
at Manoa. Kevin has published
more than 130 scientific and
professional articles in such
diverse fields as developmental,
physiological and cognitive
psychology, program evaluation,
psychopharmacology, gerontology,
palliative care and religion
and health. He has published
over 60 articles on various
topics related to religion,
spirituality, and health since
he began working in this area
in 1996. Kevin’s current
research includes studies on
the spiritual needs of patients,
the spiritual care practices
of chaplains, the effectiveness
of pastoral care and pastoral
care education, and the influence
of religious beliefs and practices
on physical and mental health.
Kathleen Galek, Ph.D. received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Columbia University, her M.A. in Research Psychology from New York University, and her undergraduate degree from Reed College in Portland, Oregon. For her religious training in Zen Buddhism, Kathleen lived in the Buddhist Fire Lotus Temple for two years as part of a structured residency that combined daily meditation with sutra study. She initially joined HealthCare Chaplaincy as a two-year post-doctoral fellow and has since accepted a staff position as our Research Associate and Post-Doctoral Coordinator. Kathleen’s research background has included work on spiritual development and the spiritual needs of patients, and her clinical work has involved patients with a variety of medical conditions, such as HIV/AIDS, Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s. In her current private practice in New York City she works mainly with clients confronting addictions, such as compulsive shopping and addictive eating.
Jackson Kytle, Ph.D. is vice
president for academic affairs
at the Chaplaincy's . Formerly,
he was the deputy provost
of New School University,
president of Goddard College,
and provost at Antioch University.
After his B.A. in English
at Middlebury College, he
received a Ph.D. in Social
Psychology from Columbia
University where his interests
in learning and motivation,
evaluation research, and
organizational change began.
For three years he worked
as a survey analyst with
the Midtown Restudy where
he used multivariate statistics
to study the predictors of
mental health status. His
doctoral research using the
General Social Survey focused
on predictors of anomia,
asking what protected individuals
from experiencing rapid social
change. Subsequently, Jackson
and his students at Antioch
used surveys to study life
satisfaction in Columbia,
Maryland and the predictors
of consumer choice in the
Columbia Mall. After Goddard,
he taught at the Harvard
Graduate School of Education
where research for his 2004
book, To Want to Learn, started.
His current research interests
are program evaluation for
non-profit organizations
and the developmental challenges
faced by young adults after
college.
Matthew Porter, Ph.D. is the current Templeton Postdoctoral Fellow at HealthCare Chaplaincy. He received his B.A. in French at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, an M.A. in General Psychology and a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the New School for Social Research. He recently completed an N.I.H. funded postdoctoral fellowship in biobehavioral cancer research at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. For the last ten years he has also been a dedicated student of meditation and yoga. After working as a United Nations Peacekeeper in the former Yugoslavia, he became interested in the theme of psychological resilience, a focus of much of his past research and publication. Matt is excited about the prospect of synthesizing these interests at HealthCare Chaplaincy, where he will be focusing on the spiritual aspects of resilience, including spiritual maturation across the lifespan.
Sarah L. Weinberger-Litman received a Ph.D. in Experimental Health Psychology from the City University of New York, where she studied religious and sociocultural influences on disordered eating and body dissatisfaction among Jewish women. She recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Behavioral Medicine at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, where she studied coping and psychological adjustment in cancer survivors. She is the associate producer of "Hungry to Be Heard," a film exploring eating disorders in the Orthodox Jewish community.
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