Dr. Bell is requesting renewal of his SRCS for an additional 5 years at which point Dr. Bell will have 47 years of VA service. During these 5 years he plans to continue to vigorously pursue his research, education, administrative and service mission. Dr. Bell has been involved in VA rehabilitation research for four decades. During that time he has helped shape the field of vocational rehabilitation and cognitive remediation, and many of his innovations have been adopted into clinical practice and have inspired new research by investigators nationally and internationally. His research has focused on 1) vocational rehabilitation, 2) neurocognitive and social cognitive deficits and their relationships to functional impairments, 3) development of assessment instruments, 4) cognitive remediation, and 5) substance abuse rehabilitation. He has a consistent record of successful research with funding from VA RR&D, NIMH, NIDA, DoD and NSF. Currently, he is principal investigator of a new VA RR&D MERIT grant, a new NSF grant, a NIMH research training grant, and a current DoD grant. Dr. Bell plans to continue to work on these currently funded grants during the period of this proposed renewal of his SRCS. He hopes that findings from his currently funded projects will serve as the foundation for future grant submissions. Dr. Bell also plans to continue his scientific contributions in terms of publications and presentations. During his current SRCS funding, he has published 44 peer reviewed articles, 5 book chapters, 1 new testing instrument (Social Attribution Test-Multiple Choice) and has given more than 40 scientific presentations. Two of Dr. Bell's contributions to assessment are used nationally and internationally in psychiatric clinical trials and are regarded as the ?gold standard? for measuring work performance and for measuring social cognition. One indication of his status as a leader in psychiatric rehabilitation is that he was recently selected by the World Health Organization to be one of three USA psychiatric rehabilitation experts for their 24-member international panel for the development of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF-11) and was then selected to be one of 4 team leaders on the project. Dr. Bell is an accomplished educator and mentor in his field with more than 48 mentees during his career, many of whom have gone on to independent research careers. Fourteen are currently working for the VA. In 2001, Dr. Bell was awarded a prestigious training grant (NIMH T32) to provide training to clinicians to do research in functional disability interventions. This award has been twice competitively renewed because of its significant impact on bringing young and promising investigators into the field of rehabilitation. He plans to continue these activities during the next period of his SRCS. Dr. Bell has provided significant administrative service to the VA by assuming the considerable responsibilities of being Chairman of the Human Studies Subcommitte.at VACHS. He also has served on 18 review panels for VA RR&D and NIMH during his current SRCS and plans to continue these efforts on behalf of the VA research mission. Finally, Dr. Bell continues to provide direct service to Veterans. During this current SRCS period, Dr. Bell began an outreach effort to college Veterans (Veteran Integration To Academic Leadership - VITAL) at VACHS and is providing direct clinical and psycho-educational assessment services with a small team that he manages. They are currently serving 7 area universities, and during the proposed renewal of his SRCS period, he plans to continue to expand this project.

Public Health Relevance

Dr. Bell is requesting renewal of his SRCS for an additional 5 years. During these 5 years he plans to continue to vigorously pursue his research, education, administrative and service mission. Dr. Bell has an international reputation in psychiatric rehabilitation and is currently funded by VA RR&D, DoD, NIMH, and NSF. Renewal will allow him to continue his research in 1) vocational rehabilitation, 2) neurocognitive and social cognitive deficits and their relationships to functional impairments, 3) development of assessment instruments, 4) cognitive remediation, and 5) substance abuse rehabilitation. These research activities meet priority healthcare needs for Veterans. Dr. Bell plans to continue his mentorship to train the next generation of clinical researchers, to continue to provide administrative support to the VA research mission by chairing the Human Studies Subcommittee and by serving on VA RR&D review groups, and to continue to directly serve Veterans as Director of an outreach program to Veterans on area college campuses.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Project #
5IK6RX002458-02
Application #
9397991
Study Section
Rehabilitation Engineering & Prosthetics/Orthotics (RRD7)
Project Start
2017-10-01
Project End
2024-09-30
Budget Start
2018-10-01
Budget End
2019-09-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
VA Connecticut Healthcare System
Department
Type
DUNS #
039624291
City
West Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
Wilkinson, Samuel T; Ballard, Elizabeth D; Bloch, Michael H et al. (2018) The Effect of a Single Dose of Intravenous Ketamine on Suicidal Ideation: A Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis. Am J Psychiatry 175:150-158
Davidson, Charlie A; Lesser, Rebecca; Parente, Lori T et al. (2018) Psychometrics of social cognitive measures for psychosis treatment research. Schizophr Res 193:51-57
Toprak, Mesut; Wilkinson, Samuel T; Ostroff, Robert B (2017) Successful Treatment With Electroconvulsive Therapy of a Patient With Bipolar Disorder and a 7-mm Cerebral Aneurysm. J ECT 33:e8
Wilkinson, Samuel T; Toprak, Mesut; Turner, Mason S et al. (2017) A Survey of the Clinical, Off-Label Use of Ketamine as a Treatment for Psychiatric Disorders. Am J Psychiatry 174:695-696
Wilkinson, Samuel T; Ostroff, Robert B; Sanacora, Gerard (2017) Computer-Assisted Cognitive Behavior Therapy to Prevent Relapse Following Electroconvulsive Therapy. J ECT 33:52-57
Gruner, Patricia; Pittenger, Christopher (2017) Cognitive inflexibility in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. Neuroscience 345:243-255
Laws, Holly B; Constantino, Michael J; Sayer, Aline G et al. (2017) Convergence in patient-therapist therapeutic alliance ratings and its relation to outcome in chronic depression treatment. Psychother Res 27:410-424
Moore, David T; Rosenheck, Robert A (2017) Comprehensive services delivery and emergency department use among chronically homeless adults. Psychol Serv 14:184-192
Wilkinson, Samuel T; Rosenheck, Robert A (2017) Electroconvulsive Therapy at a Veterans Health Administration Medical Center. J ECT 33:249-252
Adams, Thomas G; Bloch, Michael H; Pittenger, Christopher (2017) Intranasal Ketamine and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Treatment-Refractory Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. J Clin Psychopharmacol 37:269-271

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