Federal Funds to Train Clinical Psychologists for Work with Underserved Populations: The Bureau of Health Professions Graduate Psychology Education Grants Program |
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Authors: | Gerald Leventhal Jeff Baker Robert P. Archer Barbara A. Cubic Bradley O. Hudson |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey–New Jersey Medical School Department of Psychiatry, UMDNJ-University Behavioral HealthCare, Newark, New Jersey;(2) Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, Galveston, Texas;(3) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Virginia;(4) Childrens Hospital of Los Angeles, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California |
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Abstract: | This paper describes the Bureau of Health Professions (BHPr) Graduate Psychology Education program (GPE), which supports projects that train health service psychologists for work with underserved populations. BHPr history and funding criteria are discussed, as are those of BHPr's parent organization, the Health Resources Service Administration. BHPr objectives and methods for support of clinical psychology training parallel those that BHPr has used to support training in other heath professions. The paper also describes three psychology internship training programs in academic medical settings that competed successfully for BHPr GPE funding in 2002. The three training projects differ significantly in training rotation sites, target populations with which trainees work, and the other health care professions that partner with psychology in interdisciplinary training—but they are similar in that each project provides an example of a program that effectively satisfied BHPr criteria for expanding psychology's scope of practice with underserved populations. |
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Keywords: | graduate psychology education underserved populations Bureau of Health Professions |
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