Dr. Gilliam received her Ph.D. from the
University of Missouri-St. Louis. She completed her predoctoral internship at
the Greater Hartford Consortium at the VA Connecticut Healthcare System and
UCONN Health Center before joining the Anxiety Disorders Center in 2006. Her
research interests include the role that cognitive processes play in the
development, maintenance, and treatment of depression and anxiety disorders as
well as examining the efficacy of novel cognitive behavioral treatments for
anxiety disorders. Currently, Dr. Gilliam is the co-investigator for two
treatment studies, “Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy for Combat-Related
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring
Freedom Veterans” and “D-Cycloserine-Augmented CBT for Prior Treatment
Nonresponders with OCD.” She is also the project manager for the NIMH funded
study “Stepped-Care for OCD.”
Representative Publications:
Diefenbach, G.J., Tolin, D.F., Gilliam, C.M.,
&
Meunier, S.A. (in press).
Extending cognitive-behavioral therapy for late-life anxiety to home care: program
development and case examples. Behavior Modification.
Gilliam,
C.M., & Steffen, A.M. (2006).The Relationship between Caregiving
Self-Efficacy and Depressed Mood in Dementia Family Caregivers. Mental
Health and Aging,10, 79-86.
Gilliam,
C.M., & Cottone, R.R. (2005).Couple or Individual Therapy for the
Treatment of Depression?: An Update of the Empirical Literature. American
Journal of Family Therapy,33, 265-272.
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