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An
Interesting Career in Psychology:
Psychology
Emerges in a Multimedia World
Simon
H. Budman, President and CEO of Inflexxion, Inc.
From
the time I was a sophomore at Queens College in the 1960s I knew
that I wanted to be a psychologist. What I didn’t know at
that time was that I could have multiple careers within that career.
My areas of interest in psychology have gone through many evolutions,
each bringing me the opportunity to learn new skills and apply
old ones in different ways.
I have always looked for new directions in my
work that would enliven what I was doing and challenge me to get
out of my “comfort zone.” While still in clinical
psychology graduate school at the University of Pittsburgh, I
became interested in really combining being a practitioner with
research. Although the scientist-practitioner (so-called Boulder)
model was then in vogue, most of my classmates were most interested
in getting a PhD so that they could be clinicians…and never
do research again.
In both my internship and post-doctoral work my
interest in research and clinical work remained strong. This combined
interest has been pivotal throughout my career, first at Harvard
Community Health Plan as the Director of Mental Health Training
and Mental Health Research and then when I formed my own company,
now called Inflexxion.
Inflexxion initially began as a behavioral health
consultation and training company, called Innovative Training
Systems, and then in the early 1990s became a healthcare product
development company. Much of our initial support in the product
development area came from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) program. Although SBIR
is a very competitive program, Inflexxion has had an outstanding
record of being able to propose and receive grants to develop
products that are based on good science, tested in rigorous clinical
trials and impact the health of large populations. These products
are also creative, engaging and have excellent commercial potential.
Indeed, several of the products that we have developed
with SBIR support are having substantial impact in various aspects
of healthcare. For example, our multimedia, CD-ROM version of
a widely used structured interview for substance abusers, the
Addiction Severity Index Multimedia Version (ASI-MV), is being
used at hundreds of substance abuse facilities by tens of thousands
of substance abusers around the country. Another online product,
www.MystudentBody.Com, is a comprehensive health site for college
students, which has been demonstrated in a large clinical trial
to significantly reduce binge drinking. MystudentBody has been
gaining wide national acceptance. Inflexxion also works with pharmaceutical
companies around issues such as coordination of care for children
with ADHD; pain management and screening; cancer care, genetic
testing and so on.
As the President, CEO and Founder of Inflexxion,
a company that now employs over 60 full and part-time staff (8
of whom are doctoral-level health psychologists), I have had to
learn many things that I had no idea about ten years ago. Had
I been asked at that time about the development of multimedia,
what a programmer does, what a SQL server is, how one markets
a good product and gets others to use it and pay for it, I would
have been totally in the dark.
The terrific thing about my work at Inflexxion
is that there is always a new challenge. Every day is different
and the issues being addressed are constantly changing. Sometimes
I need to wear my scientist hat and help a work team think about
issues that are raised by particular research problems. At other
times there are usability questions that arise in regard to one
of our multimedia programs or websites. Later on in the same day,
I may need to think with the marketing or sales team about the
best ways to reach the widest audiences possible with our products.
In almost every function I have within the company, my psychological
training helps to inform what I do and how I do it.
In addition to my work at Inflexxion, I still
maintain a small private clinical practice. Although the amount
of direct clinical work I do has been getting smaller over the
years, it is hard to give that up completely. Private practice
remains as interesting as ever.
Being in my 50s, I hear friends talking about
retirement and waiting eagerly to complete their working years.
I can’t imagine retirement -- at any point. I’m having
too much fun and learning too many new things. People retire so
that they can enjoy themselves and stop doing something that they
feel they have done for too long. I enjoy myself tremendously
in what I do now. •
(Originally
published in the Summer 2003
issue of Psychological
Science Agenda,
the newsletter of the APA Science Directorate.)
More Interesting
Careers in Psychology....
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