David H. Rosmarin is an American psychologist who specializes in anxiety. He is an associate professor at
Harvard Medical School and the founder of Center for Anxiety, which he directs.[1] Rosmarin is also an author, and has worked as
McLean Hospital's director of spirituality and mental health.[2]
In 2011, Rosmarin led a study that found a correlation between spirituality and a person's anxiety-level and tolerance of uncertainty.[3]
Select academic works
Handbook of spirituality/religion and mental health, 2nd edition. New York: Elsevier Press.[4]
Spiritual psychotherapy for inpatient, residential, and intensive treatment (SPIRIT).[5]
Religious vs. conventional cognitive-behavioral therapy for major depression in persons with chronic medical illness.[6]
Interest in spiritually-integrated psychotherapy among acute psychiatric patients.[7]
Spiritual struggle and affective symptoms among geriatric mood disordered patients.[8]
Do religious patients need religious psychotherapists?[9]
David H. Rosmarin is an American psychologist who specializes in anxiety. He is an associate professor at
Harvard Medical School and the founder of Center for Anxiety, which he directs.[1] Rosmarin is also an author, and has worked as
McLean Hospital's director of spirituality and mental health.[2]
In 2011, Rosmarin led a study that found a correlation between spirituality and a person's anxiety-level and tolerance of uncertainty.[3]
Select academic works
Handbook of spirituality/religion and mental health, 2nd edition. New York: Elsevier Press.[4]
Spiritual psychotherapy for inpatient, residential, and intensive treatment (SPIRIT).[5]
Religious vs. conventional cognitive-behavioral therapy for major depression in persons with chronic medical illness.[6]
Interest in spiritually-integrated psychotherapy among acute psychiatric patients.[7]
Spiritual struggle and affective symptoms among geriatric mood disordered patients.[8]
Do religious patients need religious psychotherapists?[9]