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Volume 36, No. 5 May 2005

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Candidates for APA president

Candidates Answer Questions:
June
July/August
September

Table of Contents

Dr. Stephen A. Ragusea

 

Dr. Stephen A. Ragusea
Print version: page 82

Of his life, Dr. Ragusea states: "My father, Tony, was Italian, as was my mother, Marie, and my 16 aunts and uncles. From all their happy unions came my 22 cousins, and everybody lived on Randall Avenue in the Bronx, where I was born, March 26, 1947. I've lived in New York, Ohio, Iowa, Texas, Pennsylvania and Florida while working as a professional waiter, cook, actor, director, teacher and, for a quarter century, as a psychologist. Being a father and husband are the most important elements of my existence. I am incredibly proud of my two talented sons and I've loved my wonderful wife for 35 years. But, being a psychologist is the focus of my life."

Education: Stephen A. Ragusea, PsyD, ABPP, received his doctorate from the APA-approved program in clinical psychology at Baylor University.

Practice: Ragusea operates a private practice in Key West, Fla., and worked for 25 years in a large group practice at the Child, Adult and Family Psychological Center in State College, Pa. He also works at the Key West AIDS clinic and has worked in mental health centers, state and community hospitals, and as founding CEO and clinical director of a 92-bed private psychiatric hospital.

Research: Ragusea served from 1995 to 2004 as founding chair of Pennsylvania's Practice-Research Network, an effective model uniting practitioners and research psychologists to conduct clinically relevant and scientifically rigorous psychological research. See: Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice (Vol. 8, No. 2, pages 155–167).

Public Service: Pennsylvania Board of Psychology 2001–2004. Presently, Helpline Board of Directors, Key West.

Teaching: Ragusea taught at Penn State University and Harvard Medical School and presented workshops across North America on topics such as family therapy, forensic psychology, medical psychology, the need for prison reform and the importance of developing practice-research networks.

Publications: Published more than 45 articles and book chapters related to professional psychology. Serves on the editorial board of Professional Psychology: Research and Practice.

Broadcasting: Ragusea has appeared as a psychologist on television and radio shows broadcast throughout the Northeast.

Pennsylvania Psychological Association: Ragusea is a fellow of PPA, served as PPA's president, Clinical Division president, Hospital Practice chair, PennPsyPAC board member, and founding chair of PPA's Practice-Research Network. He served on numerous PPA task forces and working groups.

American Psychological Association: Ragusea is a fellow of APA and served on the Council of Representatives for six years where he also functioned as chair of the State and Provincial Caucus. He has also served on numerous APA task forces and working groups, including the presidential task force on Envisioning and Accessing New Professional Roles. See: Professional Psychology: Research and Practice (Vol. 32, No. 1, pages 79–87).

Florida Psychological Association: Ragusea is a new member of FPA.

Certifications: ABPP Diplomate in Family Psychology, ABPN Diplomate in Neuropsychology, ACFP Certificate in Forensic Psychology, American Red Cross Certificate in Disaster Mental Health Services.

Honors: PPA Award for Distinguished Service to Psychology, APA Karl F. Heiser Presidential Award for Advocacy, PPA Presidential Award for Outstanding Contributions to Psychology.

Ragusea's candidate statement

This is the fourth time I have been nominated for the APA presidency, and it's always an honor! Whenever asked to serve psychology, I feel compelled to do so because of all psychology has given to our world and me.

In these statements, I enjoy reminding people that psychology is changing human existence. For most of human history, folks didn't think about personal and interpersonal issues in psychological terms as we do today. Psychological dysfunction went essentially unaltered throughout the millennia, and that's different now. Things are changing because psychology is making it happen. Psychologists--clinicians and the researchers who guide clinical judgment--are changing the course of human history. This grandiose yet accurate perception is important because psychologists must learn to utilize psychology's power more effectively and more wisely.

We must build upon the strengths of our existing science while expanding into a rapidly arriving future full of social and technological change. Increasing specialization, online therapy and psychopharmacology are just the start of big change in our profession. The psychological impact of genetic engineering and the decision-making process involved in genome manipulation are nearly upon us. National health insurance is coming as certainly as is overpopulation. Psychologists must be ready to meet these challenges.

Psychotherapy is ultimately too confining. We must broaden our vision and expand the scope of our practice past the narrow view of the consulting room. The front page of any newspaper provides a quick glimpse of the ways in which society needs doctors of behavior. It is our profession's destiny to respond to these pressing human needs.

I want to help psychology move into the future. During this campaign, I will share my ideas about how, if elected president of the American Psychological Association, I hope to lead psychology into the challenge of tomorrow.

 

 
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