Randi Dublin is a clinician and research assistant at the Columbia University Clinic for Anxiety and Related Disorders. She received her B.S. in Human Development with Honors from Cornell University and continues to pursue her graduate education at Hofstra University, where she currently holds an M.A. in Clinical & School Psychology with Distinction, and is working towards her doctorate. She is an adjunct instructor of psychology at Hofstra University. She is also currently an extern at St. Barnabas Hospital in the Bronx, working with acute child, adolescent and adult psychiatric illness in the Emergency Department and on the Inpatient Units.
Ms. Dublin has received specialized training in adult cognitive behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), and school-based mental health interventions. She has extensive child, adolescent and adult psychological and psychoeducational assessment experience both in clinical and school settings. Ms. Dublin has trained at the Joan and Arnold Saltzman Community Services Center at Hofstra University, and she completed an internship in school psychology at Saddle Rock Elementary School in Great Neck, NY.
Randi Dublin’s research focuses on treatment techniques for anxiety disorders, specifically comparing the efficacy of traditional cognitive therapy techniques with more novel techniques. She has been involved in several large-scale NIMH-funded multi-site studies comparing psychological and psychopharmacological treatments for child and adolescent depression and anxiety (CAMS and TADS). She is a student member of several professional societies including the American Psychological Association, the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, Anxiety Disorders Association of America, and the National Association of School Psychologists.
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