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Dr. Rosen is a professor of pediatrics in the division of pediatric pulmonary at Case University School of Medicine. She is board certified in Pediatrics, Pediatric Pulmonology, and Sleep Medicine. She is the medical director of pediatric sleep services and Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital and co-director of the Sleep Medicine Fellowship Training program at University Hospitals of Cleveland. Her research interests include diagnostic testing strategies for sleep disordered breathing in children and adults, pediatric insomnia, and the impact of pediatric sleep disorders on functional outcomes.
She attended medical school at the University of Illinois in Chicago, did pediatric residency training at Washington University (St. Louis Children’s Hospital) and Baylor College of Medicine (Texas Children’s Hospital) in Houston, Texas. She did pediatric pulmonary fellowship training at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston Texas and additional research training at Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. She has been a member of the pediatric pulmonary faculties at Baylor and Yale University.
1. Buysse DJ, Ancoli-Israel S, Edinger JD, Lichstein KL, Morin CM. Recommendations for a standard research assessment of insomnia. Sleep 2006;29(9):1155-73.
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Allison Harvey is a Professor of Clinical Psychology and Director of the Golden Bear Sleep and Mood Research Clinic at the University of California, Berkeley. Her clinical training and PhD were completed in Sydney, Australia. Dr. Harvey then moved to England as faculty in the Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford. She was also a Fellow of St. Anne’s College. In 2004 she moved to UC Berkeley.
Dr. Harvey’s research and clinical interests focus on chronic insomnia, on understanding the role of sleep disturbance across psychiatric disorders (particularly bipolar disorder) and on sleep across development (particularly during adolescence). A multi-systems and mechanisms-focused framework is used in which (a) cognitive, affective, biological, behavioral and developmental contributors to sleep disturbance are emphasized as the source for deriving novel interventions and (b) intervention research is used to develop hypotheses about and/or confirm mechanisms.
The editorial boards on which Dr. Harvey serves include the journal SLEEP, Behavioral Sleep Medicine and Behavior Research and Therapy. Dr. Harvey has been the recipient of numerous awards, including The Queen’s Trust Award, the Chaim Danielle Award for Traumatic Stress Studies, an award from the American Association for Behavior Therapy and from 2005-2006 she was a Scholar at the Beck Institute for Cognitive Therapy and Research. Dr. Harvey has received research funding from various sources including the Australian Research Council, Royal Society, Wellcome Trust, Jules Thorn Charitable Trust, Economic and Social Research Council and NARSAD. Currently her research is funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health.
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