Beatrix Roemheld-Hamm MD, PhD
Professor, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health and Department of Psychiatry, Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New JerseyBeatrix Roemheld-Hamm is a Professor at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, with academic appointment in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, the Department of Psychiatry at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and the UMDNJ Institute of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (ICAM). For many years, Dr. Hamm was medical director of the department’s clinical site, guiding a number of innovations in clinical health delivery, including the transition to electronic health records. She completed a health services research fellowship, and was involved in many research projects with foci on mental health and primary care integration, primary care delivery, physician errors and integrative medicine. Presently, Dr. Hamm serves as Associate Director of the RWJUH Family Medicine residency program. She guides residents’ scholarly efforts during their residency, and teaches mental health, health behaviors and integrative medicine to students, residents and faculty. She serves as PI on a study on integration of behavioral health into the Family Medicine teaching site, and co-mentors psychology graduate students in this area, and as co-investigator of projects involving nonpharmacologic approaches to medical problems. As Director of Integrative Medicine at the department of Family Medicine and Community Health, she represents ICAM and UMDNJ at the clinical workgroup of CAHCIM, the US Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine.
Recent Contributions to PracticeUpdate:
- The Persistence of Adolescent Binge Drinking Into Adulthood: Findings From a 15-Year Prospective Cohort Study
- Co-Occurring Physical Fighting and Suicide Attempts Among U.S. High School Students: Examining Patterns of Early Alcohol Use Initiation and Current Binge Drinking
- Lithium in the Prevention of Suicide in Mood Disorders: Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Bipolar Disorder Strongly Tied to Premature Death