Faculty
Elizabeth Dykhouse, PhD Dr. Dykhouse directs the fellowship in Primary Care Psychology and Medical Education. She has worked with fellows since joining the department in 2017. Dr. Dykhouse provides weekly supervision to the fellows and mentors their development as junior faculty members. She assists fellows in setting their own learning goals and directs the evaluation of fellow’s work. In addition to directing the fellowship, Dr. Dykhouse is the Associate Program Director and the Director of Behavioral Science for the Worcester Family Medicine Residency at UMass Chan Medical School. She provides patient care at the Barre Family Health Center, a rural primary care practice in central Massachusetts. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School. Her background is in primary care psychology and health psychology. Dr. Dykhouse is particularly interested in the provision of culturally and linguistically appropriate care and has experience working with interpreters as well as practicing directly in Spanish. Dr. Dykhouse received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Seattle Pacific University. She completed her internship in Rural and Primary Care Psychology at I Ola Lahui Rural Behavioral Health with placements in Honolulu and Hilo, Hawaii and her fellowship in Primary Care Psychology with Salud Family Health Centers in Denver, Colorado. She also completed the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine’s Behavioral Science/Family Systems Educator Fellowship. |
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Amber Cahill, PsyD Dr. Cahill is an Assistant Professor and the Director of Behavioral Science for the Fitchburg Family Medicine Residency (FFMR), where she develops and implements a behavioral science curriculum that educates resident physicians in addressing mental health, substance use, and health behavior change in primary care. Her role in the fellowship is a supervisor in the FFMR focused on training and mentoring fellows in becoming medical educators. Dr. Cahill is also the Associate Director of the Center for Integrated Primary Care (CIPC) and often engages fellows in contributing to curriculum and content development through the CIPC. She is also currently a Bloomberg Fellow in the Addiction & Overdose track at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Dr. Cahill is passionate about primary care and its foundational role in caring for the health of communities; she’s provided clinical care in primary care settings since 2013. Her clinical and academic interests include integrated primary care, training primary care clinicians and teams in comprehensive mental health care, expanding treatment of SUD in primary care, enhancing SUD training in medical education, harm reduction-informed care, providing inclusive, comprehensive care for transgender and gender diverse patients in primary care, and the intersection of hormones and mental health including perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, PMDD, and perimenopause/menopause related mental health. Dr. Cahill completed internship training at the Battle Creek VA Medical Center in the primary care/health psychology track and went on to complete a 2-year postdoctoral fellowship at the UMass Chan Medical School in primary care, health psychology, and medical education. She earned her doctorate in clinical psychology from Adler University in 2014 with a concentration in primary care and behavioral medicine. |
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Shahida Fareed, PsyD Dr. Fareed is the site supervisor for the fellow’s patient care at the Fitchburg Family Practice. She is a Clinical Psychologist and the Director of Behavioral Health for the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School. She is a behavioral health clinician providing direct patient care in Fitchburg and a faculty member in the Fitchburg Family Medicine Residency. She earned her Doctorate in Psychology from Adler University, Chicago and completed her internship at the University of Rochester Medical Center in primary care, ambulatory outpatient clinics, and at a state inpatient psychiatric facility. She completed her postdoctoral fellowship at Geisinger Medical Center in Internal Medicine and has been working as primary care psychologist for past few years. Along with treating individuals with depression, anxiety and other mental health disorders, her clinical interests include working with individuals living with chronic illnesses, sleep disorders, psychosomatic illnesses, health behavior change, and provider wellness. |
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Jenna Mullarkey, PsyD Dr. Mullarkey is the site supervisor for the fellow’s patient care at Hahnemann Family Health Center. She provides weekly clinical supervision and oversees the fellow’s activities in the health center and on the Family Medicine Inpatient Service. She is a behavioral health clinician providing direct patient care at Hahnemann and is a faculty member in the Worcester Family Medicine Residency, teaching residents at both Hahnemann Family Health Center and on the Family Medicine Inpatient Service. Her clinical interests include evidence-based interventions in integrated primary care, pediatric behavioral health, health behavior change, and motivational interviewing. Dr. Mullarkey received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Florida Institute of Technology and her Masters in Applied Developmental and Educational Psychology from Boston College. She completed her predoctoral internship with the Munroe-Meyer Institute at University of Nebraska Medical Center with a focus on Behavioral Pediatrics and Integrated Care. She is a graduate of the Postdoctoral Fellowship in Primary Care Psychology and Medical Education at UMass Chan Medical School in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. |
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Rachel Davis-Martin, PhD Her primary faculty appointment at UMass Chan is in the Department of Emergency Medicine, where she conducts research focused on enhancing detection of suicidality, using innovative technology to increase access to evidence-based treatments for suicide risk, and improving care transitions throughout the healthcare system. Additionally, Dr. Davis-Martin is a certified trainer in several evidence-based suicide prevention approaches, including the Stanley Brown Safety Planning Intervention, the Assessment and Management of Suicide Risk in Outpatient settings, and the Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality (CAMS). Dr. Davis-Martin received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS. She completed her pre-doctoral internship at the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio in San Antonio, TX where she focused on health psychology in integrated primary care and specialty care clinics. She completed an Integrated Behavioral Health and Implementation Science post-doctoral fellowship at UMass Chan Medical School in the Department of Emergency Medicine. |
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Brian Stran-Joy, PhD Dr. Stran-Joy is a secondary site supervisor for fellows at Hahnemann Family Health Center. He is a behavioral health clinician providing direct patient care at Hahnemann and is a faculty member in the Worcester Family Medicine Residency. Dr. Stran-Joy also serves as a site supervisor for the Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner Fellowship. His clinical interests include evidence-based practice within a primary care setting, geriatric behavioral health, and supporting normative lifespan development. Dr. Stran-Joy received his doctorate in counseling psychology from Western Michigan University and his master’s in clinical psychology from Washburn University. He completed his predoctoral internship with the Dwight D. Eisenhower Department of Veteran Affairs Medical Center and postdoctoral fellowship in primary care behavioral health with Swedish Medical Group. |
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Sarah Pearson, PsyD |
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Daniel Mullin, PsyD, MPH Dr. Mullin is the Director of the Center for Integrated Primary Care and a Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School. Dr. Mullin is a secondary site supervisor and supports the fellow’s learning and teaching related to Motivational Interviewing. He directed the fellowship from 2019 to 2024. Dr. Mullin is a clinician, educator, researcher, and consultant specializing in the integration of behavioral health and primary care services. He maintains a clinical practice embedded in the Barre Family Health Center, a rural family medicine residency practice in Massachusetts. Dr. Mullin is a member of the Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers and provides training in Motivational Interviewing to healthcare providers. He is a developer of the Practice Integration Profile, a measure of the integration of behavioral and primary care services. Dr. Mullin completed his doctorate in Clinical Psychology at Spalding University in Louisville, Kentucky and received his Masters in Public Health from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He completed his internship in Primary Care Psychology in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his fellowship in Primary Care Family Psychology in the Departments of Medicine, Psychiatry, and Family Medicine at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. |
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