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Acknowledgements
Introduction: Defining the Role of Mental Health Professionals in Reproductive Medicine
Appendix A: Sample of Religious Approaches to Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART)
Appendix B: Sample of International Approaches to Assisted Reproductive Technologies
References
Index
About the Authors
Judith E. Horowitz, PhD, is a licensed psychologist in
private practice in Broward County, Florida. After graduating Phi
Beta Kappa from the University of Florida, Gainesville, she
received her doctoral degree from the University of Florida as
well.
Dr. Horowitz is a member of the American Society for Reproductive
Medicine and is a certified sexual therapist and diplomate of the
American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors, and Therapists.
She is also a diplomate of the American Board of Medical
Psychotherapists and Psychodiagnosticians.
As an active member of the American Society for Reproductive
Medicine (ASRM) since 994, Dr. Horowitz was instrumental in
establishing and developing the Mentoring Task Force of the Mental
Health Professional Group (MHPG) and serves as its chair. She also
served on the MHPG Membership Committee as well as on the ASRM
Membership Committee and recently was appointed to the Steering
Committee for Funding Development of the ASRM. In addition, she is
chair of the Electronic (E)-Communications Committee of the
MHPG.
Dr. Horowitz is a member of the American Psychological Association,
the Florida Psychological Association, and the Broward County
Psychological Association. She is also a member of the American
Fertility Association and Fertile Hope.
Dr. Horowitz is a contributing author for the Parklander Magazine
and writes a monthly column. She has published numerous articles on
the psychological impact of infertility and has lectured
nationally.
Joann Paley Galst, PhD, is a psychologist in private
practice in New York City specializing in reproductive health
issues. She is a past chair of the Mental Health Professional Group
of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. She was a
founding member of the American Fertility Association (AFA) and
received an AFA Family Building Award in 2 2. She currently serves
as the chair of the Mental Health Advisory Council and cochair of
Support Services for the AFA.
She is also a member of the Advisory Board of the Pregnancy Loss
Support Program of the National Council of Jewish Women amp ndash
New York Section. Her other professional affiliations include the
American Psychological Association, the New York State
Psychological Association, and the Association for Behavioral and
Cognitive Therapies.
Dr. Galst graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Wisconsin
and received her doctoral degree from Columbia University, Teachers
College, in New York City. She has written and spoken extensively
on numerous topics regarding fertility, pregnancy loss, third-party
reproduction, disclosure and parenting issues in third-party
reproduction, and ethical issues in fertility counseling.
She wrote an amp quot Ask the Expert amp quot mental health column
for RESOLVE during 997 amp ndash 998 as well as a similar monthly
column in the AFA National Newsletter during 2 amp ndash 2 3. She
is coauthor of two chapters ( amp quot Women Treating Women:
Behaviorists View the Case amp quot and amp quot Women Treating
Men: Behaviorists View the Case amp quot with E. T. Klass) in Women
as Therapists: A Multi-Theoretical Casebook.
Nanette Elster, JD, MPH, is a visiting professor at DePaul
University College of Law and the Health Law Institute at the
College of Law in Chicago, where she teaches courses such as
Genetics and the Law, Public Health Law, and Assisted Reproduction
and the Law. She is also vice president of Spence amp amp Elster,
PA, a Chicago-area law firm working in the area of fertility law.
She holds an adjunct faculty appointment at the University of
Illinois at the Chicago School of Public Health.
Ms. Elster is an affiliate scholar at the Institute for
Biotechnology and the Human Future. She holds a bachelor of arts
degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana amp ndash
Champaign, a law degree from Loyola University School of Law in
Chicago, and a master of public health degree from Boston
University School of Public Health.
Ms. Elster currently serves on the Board of Directors of the
Chicago Center for Jewish Genetic Disorders, as a member of the
University of Illinois at Chicago Embryo Stem Cell Research
Oversight Committee, and as a member of the American Bar
Association Coordinating Group on Bioethics and the Law.
She has spoken nationally and internationally and is the author of
numerous articles on genetic and reproductive health with a
particular focus on the legal and ethical implications.
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