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Substance Abuse: Research and Treatment

Synopsis: An open access, peer reviewed electronic journal that covers all aspects of human substance abuse research and treatment.


Indexing: 7 major databases. Pubmed indexing for NIH-funded research.

Processing time: Decision in 2 weeks for 90% of papers.

Visibility: Most popular article read 900+ times.


Latest news:

Thousands of article downloads per month. 

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Journal: 46949
Most read article: 1995
Editor in chief:
Gregory Stuart
ISSN: 1178-2218


 
 
 

Editor in Chief: Gregory Stuart

Gregory Stuart joined the Department of Psychology at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville in 2008. He completed his B.A. at the University of Michigan (in 1990) and received his Ph.D. (in 1998) from Indiana University while working under the supervision of Professor Amy Holtzworth-Munroe. He completed a one year clinical internship at the Brown University Clinical Psychology Training Consortium and a two year postdoctoral fellowship at the Brown University Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies.

From 2000-2008, he worked in the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at the Alpert Medical School of Brown University. He maintains an affiliation there, and he is the Director of Family Violence Research at Butler Hospital. He serves as an adjunct faculty member at the Brown University Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies. For six years he was the Director of the Adult Psychopathology Track of the Brown University Clinical Psychology Training Consortium. He served a two-year term as co-president of the Couples Research and Therapy Special Interest Group at the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies.

Dr. Stuart’s program of research has a particular emphasis on the role of substance use and abuse in intimate partner violence perpetration and victimization. His work addresses a broad spectrum of factors that are relevant to the etiology, classification, assessment, prevention, maintenance, and treatment of intimate partner violence. His research has shown that intimate partner violence perpetration and victimization are overrepresented in populations of individuals in treatment for substance abuse, and that substance abuse is overrepresented in men and women court mandated to attend batterer intervention programs. His work examines the impact of substance abuse treatment on the prevalence and frequency of intimate partner violence and psychological aggression, as well as the effects of substance abuse treatment on other domains of relationship and family functioning. Dr. Stuart’s work also examines whether incorporating substance use treatments into batterer intervention programs improves outcomes for men and women arrested for domestic violence. Dr. Stuart is interested in conducting treatment outcome research in general, and specifically for family violence and substance misuse. His work focuses on family violence throughout the lifespan, including child abuse, dating aggression, intimate partner violence, and elder abuse and mistreatment.

Dr. Stuart’s work includes over 120 publications, 3 National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism-funded grants in which he is the principal investigator, and an additional 10 grants in which he has served as a coinvestigator or consultant. He has reviewed research grants for the NIAAA Clinical and Treatment subcommittee, the Centers for Disease Control, the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. He is a standing member of the Clinical and Pediatric Extramural Loan Repayment Program grant review committee at NIAAA.

Dr. Stuart actively participates in teaching and mentoring. He supervises graduate students at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and postdoctoral research fellows at Brown University. For years, he was actively involved in training psychology interns, postdoctoral fellows, and psychiatry residents. He also serves as a mentor on 3 T32 postdoctoral training grants funded by NIAAA, NIDA, and NIMH, as well as on individual F31 and F32 grants, and a fellowship grant funded by the Canadian Institute of Health Research. In 2007, he was the recipient of the National Center of Excellence in Women’s Health Outstanding Faculty Mentoring Award, as well as the Outstanding Teaching Award in Psychology from Brown University. In 2008, he became a Fellow in Division 50 (Addictions) in the American Psychological Association. He currently serves as an ad hoc reviewer for 30 scientific journals and on the editorial boards of Journal of Interpersonal Violence, International Journal of Women’s Health, Violence Against Women, and Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.

Read about the new Editor in Chief and Associate Editor here and read an interview with the Editor in Chief here.

>> Dr Stuart's latest call for papers