John
O'Neil, Ph.D.
Licensed Psychologist
Clinical and Health Psychology
Curriculum Vitae
Contact
Dr. O'Neil
Dr. O’Neil graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in
Psychology from the University of Minnesota. He received his
Master’s and Doctoral degrees in Clinical Psychology from The
Ohio State University. After finishing a pre-doctoral internship
in Clinical Health Psychology at the University of Florida
Health Science Center, Dr. O’Neil returned to Ohio State to
complete a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Cardiopulmonary Behavioral
Medicine. He has extensive clinical experience providing
consultation to physicians and other health care professionals
regarding psychological assessment and treatment of adults with
obesity, and cardiac and pulmonary disease (e.g., pre-surgical
and pre-transplant evaluations, pain and stress management,
coping skills training, patient and family support). Dr.
O’Neil’s research has focused on psychosocial risk factors in
cardiovascular disease, with particular emphases on hostility
and social support. He is the co-author of the chapter,
Behavioral Medicine and Heart Disease, in the Textbook of
Cardiovascular Medicine-2nd Edition.
Curriculum
Vitae
PRIVATE
PRACTICE
Licensed
Psychologist, May
2007-present.
Gary Fischler and Associates, P.A.
604 Parkside Professional Center
825 South Eighth Street
Minneapolis, MN 55404
Office: (612) 455-6167
Fax: (612) 333-6740
Minnesota Psychology License #LP4307
Licensed
Psychologist, August
2001-April 2007.
Family Psychological Services
750 South Plaza Drive, Suite 104
Mendota Heights, MN 55120
EDUCATION
The Ohio
State University,
Columbus, Ohio, August 1999-June 2001.
Postdoctoral Fellowship in
Cardiopulmonary Behavioral Medicine, Supervisor: Charles Emery, Ph.D.
The Ohio
State University,
Columbus, Ohio, December 1999.
Doctor of
Philosophy in Clinical Psychology.
Dissertation Topic: The
association of family history of coronary heart disease, sex,
psychosocial vulnerability, and hostility among college students.
Chairperson: Charles Emery, Ph.D.
Candidacy Examination Paper Topic:
Hostility and coronary heart disease: A quantitative review of
the psychosocial vulnerability model. Chairperson: Charles Emery,
Ph.D.
University
of Florida Health Science Center,
Gainesville, Florida, July 1998-June 1999.
Clinical Psychology Predoctoral
Internship program (full
APA accreditation), Specialty Track: Health
Psychology. Training Director:
Michael Perri, Ph.D.
The Ohio
State University,
Columbus, Ohio, March 1996. Master of Arts
in Psychology. Chairperson:
Andrew Schwebel, Ph.D.
University
of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minnesota, June 1993.
Bachelor of Arts in Psychology, summa cum laude.
Chairperson: William Grove,
Ph.D.
HONORS AND
AWARDS
Phi Beta Kappa,
1993
Psi Chi, 1992
University of
Minnesota Waller Scholarship, 1991-1993
University of
Minnesota Honors Program, 1990-1993
SUPERVISED
CLINICAL EXPERIENCE
Postdoctoral
Fellow in Cardiopulmonary Behavioral Medicine, The Ohio
State University, Columbus, Ohio, August 1999-June 2001.
Duties:
Performing consultation-liaison duties with physicians and other
health care professionals regarding assessment and treatment of
adults with cardiac and pulmonary disease, and obesity (e.g.,
pre-surgical and pre-transplant evaluations, pain and stress
management, coping skills training, medical noncompliance,
patient and family support); conducting assessment and
psychotherapy (including marital therapy) with adults presenting
with a variety of psychological disorders; conducting corporate
seminars on stress management; conducting empirical research
exploring psychosocial risk factors in cardiac and pulmonary
disease; supervision and teaching of clinical psychology
graduate students. Supervisor: Charles Emery, Ph.D.
Predoctoral
Intern, University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville,
Florida, July 1998-June 1999.
Health
Psychology Specialty Rotations:
Adult
Health Psychology.
Duties:
Performing consultation-liaison duties with physicians and other
health care professionals regarding assessment and treatment of
adults with medical conditions (e.g., pre-transplant
evaluations, pain and stress management, coping skills training,
medical noncompliance, patient and family support).
Supervisors:
Michael Robinson, Ph.D., James Rodrigue, Ph.D., Susmita
Kashikar-Zuck, Ph.D., Cynthia Belar, Ph.D., Michael Perri,
Ph.D., and Robert Glueckauf, Ph.D.
Pediatric Psychology
Hospital Consultation Service.
Duties: Performing consultation-liaison duties with physicians
and other health care professionals regarding assessment and
treatment of children and adolescents with medical conditions
(e.g., pre-transplant evaluations, pain management, medical
noncompliance, patient and family support).
Supervisors: Stephen Boggs, Ph.D., and James Rodrigue,
Ph.D.
General Rotations
Health Science Center Outpatient
Psychology Clinic.
Duties: Conducting assessment and
psychotherapy with adults and adolescents presenting with a variety
of psychological disorders. Receiving extensive training in
intellectual, achievement, developmental, behavioral, and objective
and projective personality assessment of children, adolescents, and
adults. Supervisors: Michael Robinson,
Ph.D., James Rodriguez, Ph.D., Stephen Boggs,
Ph.D., James Johnson, Ph.D., Cynthia Belar, Ph.D., and Samuel Sears, Ph.D.
Adult/Pediatric Neuropsychology.
Duties: Conducting evaluations of patients with neurological
impairment, pre- and post-surgical evaluations of epilepsy
patients, and learning disability evaluations. Supervisors:
Russell Bauer, Ph.D., Duane Dede, Ph.D., and
Eileen Fennell, Ph.D.
Psychology Assistant, Twin Valley Psychiatric
System (TVPS, formerly Central Ohio Psychiatric
Hospital), paid position contracted through the Ohio
Department of Mental Health (ODMH), Columbus, Ohio, August 1997-May
1998.
Duties: Worked with
multidisciplinary treatment teams to demonstrate and teach staff on
computerized treatment plan applications for specific inpatients;
consulting with TVPS Clinical Administration and ODMH Computer
Information Services/Automated Treatment Plan Committees to
integrate newly-developed technology. Supervisor: James Raia, Ph.D.
RESEARCH
EXPERIENCE
Dissertation, The
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, completed, September 1999.Dissertation
Topic: The association of family
history of coronary heart disease, sex,
psychosocial vulnerability, and hostility among college students.
Duties:
Conducting empirical research exploring the relationship between
hostility and social support among college students whose
parents have a history of coronary heart disease. In addition to
illuminating the contributions of heredity and environment to
cognitive, affective, and behavioral dimensions of hostility,
research findings are expected to have implications for the
prevention and treatment of coronary heart disease.
Chairperson: Charles Emery, Ph.D.
Doctoral
Candidacy Examination, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio,
completed, June 1997. Examination Paper Topic:
Hostility and
coronary heart disease: A quantitative review of the psychosocial
vulnerability model.
Duties:
Conducted a meta-analysis to explicate the psychosocial
vulnerability model of the relationship between hostility and
coronary heart disease. By examining empirical research on the
psychosocial vulnerability model (with the construct of
psychosocial vulnerability operationalized as a deficient
quantity and quality of social support), the meta-analysis
addressed two main questions: (1) Is hostility associated with
greater psychosocial vulnerability? and (2) Is there a
relationship between psychosocial vulnerability and coronary
heart disease?
Research
Associate, The Ohio State University and Children's Hospital,
Columbus, Ohio, April 1994-August 1995. Research Area: Prevention and treatment of
child sexual abuse.
Duties: Assisted in three research
projects investigating child sexual abuse. Research findings are
expected to have implications for offender and victim treatment, as
well as prevention initiatives. These projects included:
1.
Preventing child
sexual abuse: Offenders’ modus operandi. Funded by a federal grant from the National
Institute of Mental Health, this study investigated child sexual
abuse perpetrators’ (adults’) modus operandi from the perspective of
victims, and incarcerated and non-incarcerated offenders in
Minnesota, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, and Washington
State.
2.
Examining the relationship
between child/adolescent abductions and adolescent sexual offending.
Funded by a federal grant from the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention, this study examined adolescent sexual
offenders’ modus operandi in a six-state sample of incarcerated and
non-incarcerated offenders.
3. TQM sex offender treatment
evaluation. Funded by a grant from the State of Ohio, Governor’s Office
of Criminal Justice Services, this project was designed to
facilitate the development of a comprehensive adolescent sexual
offender assessment/treatment continuum for use by the State of
Ohio, Department of Youth Services.
Supervisor:
Keith Kaufman, Ph.D.
TEACHING
EXPERIENCE
Psychology
Graduate Course Instructor, The Ohio State University, Columbus,
Ohio, March 2000-June 2000.
Duties: Shared full responsibility
(including creating the syllabus, teaching the course, reviewing reports, and
grading) for the graduate course Appraisal: Practicum in Clinical
Assessment, Psychology 864.01. Supervisor: Charles Emery, Ph.D.
Psychology
Graduate Course Lecturer, The Ohio State University, Columbus,
Ohio, February 2000.
Duties: Presented lecture on chronic and
terminal illness for the graduate course Health Psychology 695.01. Supervisors: Barbara Andersen,
Ph.D., Charles Emery, Ph.D., Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, Ph.D.,
and Catherine Stoney, Ph.D.
Psychology
Undergraduate Course Instructor, The Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio, June 1996-June 1998.
Duties: Full responsibility (including
creating the syllabus, teaching the course, writing tests, and grading)
for the undergraduate course Introductory Psychology 100. Supervisor: Alexis Collier, Ph.D.
PROFESSIONAL
AFFILIATIONS
American
Psychological Association
Minnesota
Psychological Association
EDITORIAL
ACTIVITIES
Ad
Hoc Editorial Consultant, Health Psychology, 2001.
Ad Hoc
Editorial Consultant, Division 38, American Psychological
Association Convention, 2000.
Ad Hoc Editorial Consultant, Medicine
and Science in Sports and Exercise, 2000.
Ad Hoc Editorial Consultant,
International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 2000.
Ad Hoc
Editorial Consultant, European Respiratory Journal, 2000.
Ad Hoc
Editorial Consultant, Psychosomatic Medicine, 1999.
Ad Hoc
Editorial Consultant, Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 1999.
O’Neil, J. N.,
& Emery, C. F. (1998). Review of Allan, R. and Scheidt, S. (Eds.),
Heart
and mind: The practice of cardiac
psychology. Journal of Cardiopulmonary
Rehabilitation, 18, 158-159.
PUBLICATIONS
O’Neil, J. N.,
& Emery, C. F. (2002). Psychosocial vulnerability, hostility, and
family history of coronary heart disease
among male and female college students. International Journal of
Behavioral Medicine, 9, 17-36.
Emery, C. F., &
O’Neil, J. N. (2002). Behavioral medicine and heart disease. In E.
J. Topol (Ed.), Textbook of
Cardiovascular Medicine-2nd Edition. Philadelphia:
J. B. Lippincott.
Daleiden, E.,
Kaufman, K. L., Hilliker, D. R., & O’Neil, J. N. (1998). The sexual histories and fantasies of youthful
males: A comparison of sexual offending, nonsexual offending, and
nonoffending groups. Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and
Treatment, 10, 195-209.
PAPERS
PRESENTED
O’Neil, J. N.,
& Emery, C. F. (2000, April). The association of family history
of coronary heart disease, sex,
psychosocial vulnerability, and hostility among college students.
Paper presented at the twenty-first annual conference of the Society
of Behavioral Medicine, Nashville, TN.
Sullivan, B.
F., Marietta, L. H., O'Neil, J. N., & Fain-Leslie, A. (1999, April).
The
relationship of impression
management and self-deception to birth order position
and gender. Poster presented at the 1999 meeting of the
Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, IL.
Daleiden, E.,
Kaufman, K. L., Hilliker, D. R., & O’Neil, J. N. (1995, October.
The sexual histories and fantasies of
adolescents: A multi-sample comparison.
Poster presented at the fourteenth annual
conference of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers,
New Orleans, LA.
REFERENCES
AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
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