Assistant Professor,
Dept.
of Psychiatry & Human Behavior
Brown Medical School
Staff Psychologist,
The Miriam Hospital
Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine
Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center
196 Richmond Street
Providence, RI 02903
Phone: (401) 793-8150
Email: Erichardson@Lifespan.org
Fax: (401) 793-8056
Elizabeth Lloyd-Richardson, PhD, is an assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown Medical School and The Miriam Hospital. She is a clinical psychologist, specializing in child and adolescent psychopathology, particularly as it relates to medical conditions and health behaviors. Her research focuses primarily on prevention and early intervention of health risk behaviors among adolescents and young adults, with a particular emphasis on smoking cessation and weight management treatments.
In 1999, Lloyd-Richardson was awarded a Research Mentorship Award from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Faculty Scholars Program for her research on tobacco-related issues pertaining to youth.
Tobacco Etiology Research Network, University Project (UPTERN)
Elizabeth Lloyd-Richardson, Ph.D. (PI)
The UPTERN project intends to investigate the role of various
individual-level and contextual-level variables on the smoking uptake
and trajectories of students during their freshman year in college.
UPTERN targets a sample of freshmen attending Purdue University,
assessing a variety of health behaviors, including smoking, alcohol,
sleep, and exercise habits. Using data obtained weekly via the internet,
the aim is to describe the pattern of early cigarette use and smoking
trajectories during a time of tremendous change in young adult lives.
TTURC: NEFS Pilot Project II - Early Intervention in a Technical
School and Colege Population (Paths to Health)
Elizabeth Lloyd-Richardson, Ph.D. (PI)
This project is a treatment outcome study evaluating the
combination of cognitive-behavioral/motivational group therapy plus
nicotine replacement therapy for enhancing the achievement and
maintenance of smoking cessation in a sample of young adults attending
technical school. The goal of this study is to further delineate
elements of an effective treatment protocol that is highly tailored to
the needs of young adults who may be less motivated to quit smoking.
Guertin, T., Lloyd-Richardson, E. E., Spirito, A., Donaldson, D., & Boergers, J. (2001). Self-mutilative behavior in adolescents who attempt suicide by overdose. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 40, 1062-1069.
Kahler, C. W., Brown, R. A., Strong, D. R., Lloyd-Richardson, E. E., &Niaura, R. S. (in press). History of major depressive disorder among smokers in cessation treatment: Associations with dysfunctional attitudes and coping. Addictive Behaviors.
King, T. K., Lloyd-Richardson, E. E., & Clark, M. M. (2001). Lifestyle obesity management: Behavioral strategies for enhancing weight loss and maintenance. In J. M. Rippe (Ed.), Lifestyle obesity management. Malden, MA: Blackwell Science, Inc.
Lloyd-Richardson, E. E., Papandonatos, G. D., Kazura, A.,
Stanton, C., & Niaura, R. S.(2002). Differentiating
stages of smoking intensity among adolescents: Stage-specific
psychological, social, and contextual influences. Journal of
Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 70, 998-1009.
Niaura, R. S., Bock, B. C., Lloyd, E. E., Brown, R., Lipsitt, L.
P., & Buka, S. (2001). Maternal transmission of nicotine
dependence: Psychiatric, neurocognitive, and prenatal factors. American
Journal on Addictions, 10, 16-29.
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