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Roger D. Fallot, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist and Director of Research and Evaluation at Community Connections, a private, not-for-profit agency providing a full range of human services in metropolitan Washington, D.C. A graduate of Yale University (B.A., M.S., and Ph.D.), his professional areas of specialization include the development and evaluation of services for trauma survivors and the role of spirituality in recovery. The author of numerous clinical and research articles, he is a contributing author and co-editor (with Maxine Harris) of Using Trauma Theory to Design Service Systems (Jossey-Bass, 2001). A founding Board Member of the National Trauma Consortium, Dr. Fallot was Principal Investigator on the District of Columbia Trauma Collaboration Study, a federally-funded research project examining the effectiveness of integrated services for women trauma survivors with mental health and substance abuse problems (1998-2004). He and a group of clinicians at Community Connections have developed a men’s version of the Trauma Recovery and Empowerment Model (TREM), a manualized group intervention for working with survivors of physical and sexual abuse. The effectiveness of TREM is currently being examined in an NIMH-funded randomized controlled trial for which Dr. Fallot is Co-Principal Investigator. Dr. Fallot is also interested in the relationships between spirituality and well-being. A member of the adjunct faculty in Pastoral Counseling at Loyola College in Maryland, he edited and contributed chapters to Spirituality and Religion in Recovery from Mental Illness (Jossey-Bass, 1998).
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