Mentor - Kathleen Pike, PhD
Thematic Area: Mental Health
Biography
Kathleen M. Pike, PhD is Professor of Psychology at CUIMC. She serves as Chair of the Faculty Steering Committee for the Global Mental Health Programs, Director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Capacity Building and Training in Global Mental Health at Columbia University, and Deputy Director of the Health and Aging Policy Fellows Program. She is also Senior Supervising Psychologist in the Center for Eating Disorders at CUIMC.
Dr. Pike has been involved with global initiatives focused on mental health, education, and women's health throughout her career. She has held academic and administrative university appointments in Japan where she served as Professor of Psychology and Associate Dean for Research at Temple University Japan and Visiting Professor at Keio University. She received a Faculty Fulbright Award for research on eating disorders, an area of expertise where Dr. Pike has led pioneering work on risk factors, treatment development and implementation. She developed an internationally-disseminated and evidence-based relapse prevention treatment program of cognitive behavioral therapy for anorexia nervosa, and she conducts clinical training and education globally across the range of mental disorders to expand clinical and research capacity for treatment in low-resource communities and promote mental health literacy and advocacy for individuals with mental illness. Dr. Pike has also directed several programs that engage the arts to advance understanding and increase access to mental health services, including the Tohoku Theater Project in Japan, and the National Endowment for the Arts Artist in Residency Program hosted at Columbia University.
A long-time advocate for increasing access to care, Dr. Pike has provided consultation on mental health policy to Japanese parliamentary representatives and to United States mental health policy organizations. She is also committed to supporting corporations in their efforts to address mental health in the workplace. As such, she consults to global corporations with the aim of integrating best practices to reduce the burden of mental illness and enhance mental health and wellbeing in today’s rapidly changing workplace.
Dr. Pike has maintained an ongoing research program supported by grants and awards from the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH), Fulbright Foundation, Takeda Foundation, Japan National Institute of Health, Keio University, Columbia University, Temple University, the Japan Foundation, and private philanthropic funding. She has published over 100 articles and book chapters on eating disorders, culture and psychopathology, global mental health, and mental health in the workplace and has authored and presented more than 200 workshops, invited lectures, papers, and poster presentations.
She serves as Vice Chair of the Advisory Board for the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and is a Trustee of the Jewish Board (the largest non-profit mental health and social service provider in New York State) and the International Rescue Committee.
Mentored Summer Research Project in 2023
Mapping Relationships Among Organizations Offering Intimate Partner Violence Services in a Kenyan Informal Settlement: A Social Network Analysis
Student: Armine Kalbakian (MSPH)
Mentored Summer Research Project in 2022
How Can Oral Health Professionals Aid Eating Disorders?
Student: Michael Prado (CDM)
Mentored Summer Research Projects in 2020
Scoping Review of Non-Clinical, Proximal Factors Associated with Depression, Anxiety, or Mood Changes for Adolescent Women
Student: Sam Kokoska (VP&S)
Mental Health in the Workplace: Return to Work Scoping Review
Student: Adam Rosenfeld (MSPH)
Mentored Summer Research Project in 2019
Strategies for improving the mental health diagnostic process: a global systematic review, Norwich, United Kingdom
Student: Kelsey Clayman - VP&S, Class of 2022