Dr Patricia Gerbarg

Dr Patricia Gerbarg

Dr. Patricia Gerbarg, assistant clinical professor in psychiatry at New York Medical College, graduated from Harvard Medical School, Beth Israel Hospital (Boston) psychiatric residency, and Boston Psychoanalytic Institute. She and her husband, Dr. Richard P. Brown, developed a neurophysiological theory about breathing practices that can influence the autonomic nervous system, critical brain structures, and neuronal networks to quickly reduce symptoms of stress, anxiety, insomnia, trauma, pain, and inflammation.

She and Dr. Brown created Breath-Body-Mind programs, starting with First Responders and others affected by the 2001 World Trade Center attacks, followed by other disaster survivors including the Gulf Horizon oil spill; Haiti earthquake; war, genocide, and trafficking in Africa; and Rohingya child refugees. Pro bono programs with translations, supported by the not-for-profit Breath-Body-Mind™ Foundation, are being given online for people affected by the Ukraine conflict, both inside Ukraine and in the surrounding countries. Through live online programs, BBM helps healthcare workers, social service agencies, teachers, non-profit organizations, and individuals cope with the COVID-19 crisis. Dr. Gerbarg trains BBM teachers and healthcare providers, develops methods to integrate BBM into psychotherapy, and conducts programs for children and adults. She has co-authored 50 scientific articles and book chapters on mind-body medicine with Dr. Brown. Their award-winning books include: The Healing Power of the Breath, Non-Drug Treatments for ADHD, and (with Dr. Phillip Muskin) How to Use Herbs, Nutrients, and Yoga in Mental Health and Complementary and Integrative Treatments in Psychiatric Practice (American Psychiatric Association Publishing).

Website

https://www.breath-body-mind.com/

 

Past and Current Confer Events

Traumatic Stress
Friday 20 May 2022

 

Yoga: A Key to Mental Health?
Psychological and physiological mechanisms for emotional regulation

Saturday 7 & Sunday 8 March 2015

Yoga & Mental Health
A 3-day conference-workshop exploring its role in emotional healing, affective regulation and neurobiology

2 – 4 November 20012

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