Pamela S. Wiegartz, PhD
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
In addition to the highlighted books co-authored by Dr. Wiegartz (available at www.newharbinger.com, www.amazon.com, or your local bookstore), she has also published multiple scholarly articles focused on the improved understanding and treatment of anxiety disorders. Below is a sampling of her research:
Carmin, C.N., Ownby, R.L., Wiegartz, P.S., & Kondos, G.T. (2008). Women and non-cardiac chest pain: gender differences in symptom presentation. Archives of Womens Mental Health, 11, 287-293.
Wiegartz, P.S. & Rasminsky, S. (2005). Treating OCD in patients with psychiatric comorbidity. Current Psychiatry, 4(4), 57-68.
Calamari, J.E., Wiegartz, P.S., Riemann, B.C., Jones, R.M., Greer, A., Jacobi, D.M., Jahn, S.C., & Carmin, C.N. (2004). Obsessive compulsive disorder subtypes: An attempted replication and an extension of a symptom-based taxonomy. Behavior Research and Therapy, 42, 647-70.
Wiegartz, P.S. & Carmin, C. (2003). Hoarding and OCPD. Advances in Cognitive Therapy, 3, 4-5.
Miller, L.J. & Wiegartz, P.S. (2003). Post-traumatic stress disorder: How to meet women's specific needs. Current Psychiatry, 2(3), 25-39.
Wiegartz, P.S., Carmin, C.N., & Pollard, C.A. (2002). Cognition in severe and refractory OCD (pp. 361-369). In R.O. Frost & G. Steketee (Eds.), Cognitive Approaches to Obsessions and Compulsions: Theory, Assessment and Treatment. Oxford: Elsevier.
Carmin, C.N., Wiegartz, P.S., Yunus, U., & Gillock, K.L. (2002). Treatment of late-onset OCD following basal ganglia infarct. Depression and Anxiety, 15(2), 87-90.
Abramowitz, J.S., Moore, K.M., Carmin, C.N., Wiegartz, P.S., & Purdon, C. (2001). Acute onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder in males following childbirth. Psychosomatics, 42(5), 429-431.
Carmin, C.N., & Wiegartz, P.S. (2000). Successful and unsuccessful treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder in older adults. Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 30, 181-193.
Calamari, J.E., Wiegartz, P.S., & Janeck, A.S. (1999). Obsessive-compulsive disorder subgroups: A symptom-based clustering approach. Behavior Research and Therapy, 37(2), 113-125.