- ADHD
- Adults
- Alternative Medicine
- Alzheimers & Aging
- Animal-Assisted Therapy
- Autism
- Behavior Therapy
- Child & Adolescent
- Closeout
- Communication
- Couples-Family-Parenting
- Cultural Diversity
- Depression & Anxiety
- Domestic Violence
- Ethics & Risk Management
- Gender Identity
- HIV-AIDS
- Human Trafficking
- Laws & Rules
- Medical Errors
- Mindfulness & Yoga
- Miscellaneous
- National Psychologist
- Nutrition & Fitness
- Pain Management
- Psychotherapy
- Sexuality
- Substance Abuse
- Suicide
- Supervision
- Trauma & PTSD
Matthew Friedman, MD, PhD
About the Author
Matthew Friedman, MD, PhD, is Executive Director of the U. S. Department of Veterans Affairs National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Professor of Psychiatry and of Pharmacology at Dartmouth Medical School. He has worked with PTSD patients as a clinician and researcher for thirty years and has published extensively on stress and PTSD, biological psychiatry, psychopharmacology, and clinical outcome studies on depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and chemical dependency. He has written or co-edited fifteen books and monographs, 52 book chapters and 93 peer reviewed articles in scientific journals. Listed in The Best Doctors in America, he is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, past-president of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS), Chair of the scientific advisory board of the Anxiety Disorders Association of America and has served on many VA and NIMH research, education and policy committees. He has received many honors including the ISTSS Lifetime Achievement Award in 1999.