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Prout Has a Productive Year of Research and Publications

Tracy ProutDr. Tracy Prout, assistant professor of psychology at Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, has had a productive year with her research and publications. On the research front, she and Dr. Katie Aafjes-van Doorn (assistant professor of clinical psychology at Ferkauf) were awarded a $15,000 grant from the Fund for Psychoanalytic Research of the American Psychoanalytic Association to examine the psychotherapy process in the randomized controlled trial Prout administers, titled Regulation Focused Psychotherapy for Children (RFP-C). This award builds on the $102,000 grant from The FAR Fund for support of this effort. (See stories on YU News about these efforts here and here.) On the publication front, she has a paper coming out later this year in the Journal of Child, Infant, and Adolescent Psychotherapy titled “Bridging the divide between psychodynamic and behavioral approaches for children with oppositional defiant disorder” about combining a psychodynamic approach to psychotherapy with a behavioral approach. The paper has several co-authors, including many Ferkauf students. Another paper was published in 2017 in the Journal of Psychotherapy Integration on the prototype for RFP-C. In addition, this past summer she presented papers on RFP-C at the Society for Psychotherapy Research (in Amsterdam) and the Society for the Exploration of Psychotherapy Integration (in New York City). She also gave a global webinar for the Association for X and Y Variations (AXYS) on emotional regulation in children titled “How to keep your cool around disruptive behaviors - Understanding and improving emotion regulation.” Two years ago, she co-authored, with Dr. Leon Hoffman (a child and adolescent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst) and Dr. Timothy Rice (assistant professor of psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City), Manual of regulation-focused psychotherapy for children (RFP-C) with externalizing behaviors: A psychodynamic approach. During that time, it has received positive reviews in The Psychoanalytic QuarterlyJournal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Journal of Infant, Child, and Adolescent Psychotherapy, Contemporary Psychoanalysis and International Journal of Integrative Psychotherapy. As if she were not busy enough with her research and publishing, she was appointed to be the co-chair of the Fellowship Committee of the American Psychoanalytic Association and co-chair of the Research Committee for the American Psychological Associations Division of Psychoanalysis. In addition, she will be the Associate Research Editor for the Journal of Child, Infant, and Adolescent Psychotherapy (JICP) even as she is currently guest-editing a special issue of JICAP on psychotherapy integration. She has also been asked to guest-edit a special issue of the Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy on self-regulation. Finally, she continues to conduct pro bono psychological assessments in her private practice for children and adults seeking asylum in the United States. These assessments are increasingly important as the current administration continues to limit the rights of survivors of torture and refugees.