past 5 years of media coverage
In May 2021, Dr. Kopelovich authored the nationally disseminated SAMHSA-issued Implementation Guide. The document was heralded as a “watershed moment” in mental health care for Americans with a serious mental illness. Access that full document here.
In October 2021, Dr. Kopelovich delivered Psychiatry Grand Rounds. Her objective was to synthesize the empirical support for incorporating CBTp into standard practice, highlight recent policy documents, and orient physicians to recent efforts to bring CBTp to scale in the USA by leveraging tech and implementation science.
In September 2024, Dr. Kopelovich led the content development of a CBT for psychosis flipbook. Access that document here.
In February 2023, Dr. Kopelovich joins the hosts of The Medical Mind. This show is co-presented by SMI Adviser, a Clinical Support System for Serious Mental Illness; and by NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness. SMI Adviser is funded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and administered by the American Psychiatric Association.
The hosts and Dr. Kopelovich discuss the science behind Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and interview an individual who has benefited greatly from Dr. Kopelovich’s program about his recovery journey. You can read and listen here.
In February of 2022, Dr. Kopelovich was interviewed by Discover Magazine. You can read that article here.
“Thought broadcasting is highly amenable to treatment, typically, consisting of a combination of cognitive behavioral therapy and medication,” Kopelovich says.
In November 2020, Dr. Kopelovich presented at the National Association for Mental Illness CBTp for families webinar where she unpacks the groundbreaking research from a significant study on XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX.
In October 2020, Dr. Kopelovich in interviewed on the “Inside Schizophrenia” Podcast. You can listen here.
In June 2019, The Daily, a University of Washington Publication wrote an article on Project REACH Psychosis. You can read that article here.
“Part of it also is to talk about the fact that schizophrenia is a treatable condition. Recovery from schizophrenia is the norm, and most family members don’t learn that. Most family members get the message that schizophrenia is essentially a terminal illness, that the person may never work again, that the person will be dependent on them.”