Doreen Granpeesheh

Doreen Granpeesheh
درّین گران‌پیشه
Born 1963
Tehran, Iran
Nationality Iran
Fields Clinical psychologist
Board certified behavior analyst
Institutions University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Alma mater UCLA
Thesis The effects of teaching common preschool games to autistic children on increasing peer interaction (1990)
Known for Applied behavior analysis
Lovaas technique
Center for Autism and Related Disorders (CARD)
ACT Today! (Autism Care and Treatment Today!)
Influences Ivar Lovaas
Notable awards American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists Winokur Award (2011)
Autism Society of America, Wendy F. Miller Professional of the Year Award (2007)
Parenting Arizona, Raising the Bar Award (2007)

Doreen Granpeesheh, PhD, BCBA-D, (born in 1963) is an Iranian-American clinical psychologist, behavior analyst, and producer of the independent award-winning documentary Recovered: Journeys Through the Autism Spectrum and Back, which depicts four children's learning achievements as their parents recount how they recovered from autism.[1] Granpeesheh obtained her psychology degree from the University of California at Los Angeles. Granpeesheh is the founder and president of ACT Today! (Autism Care and Treatment Today!), which provides financial assistance to families affected by autism to help them access validated treatment, critical safety equipment, and assistive technology.[2]

In 1990, Granpeesheh founded the Center for Autism and Related Disorders (CARD), a nationally recognized autism treatment provider that treats individuals affected by autism spectrum disorder using the principles and procedures of applied behavior analysis (ABA).[2] In 2010, she completed a study that found that 6 out of 14 autistic children who obtained treatment from CARD "had fully recovered."[3]

Granpeesheh co-created Skills—an online assessment and ABA treatment guide for children with autism spectrum disorders and attention deficit hyperactivity disorders.[4][5][6]

Early childhood and education

Granpeesheh was born in Tehran, Iran, and went to school in England and Switzerland. Her father served as an advisor to the minister of finance in Tehran. When it became unsafe to continue living in Iran as the Islamic Revolution began to arise, her parents sent her to Los Angeles, California, in the United States where she completed high school at the age of 15.[7]

When she was 16 years old in 1979, Granpeesheh attended the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) where she met Ivar Lovaas, a UCLA professor who was pioneering an early intervention to teach children with autism called discrete trial training (DTT), an intensive and structured modality derived from the science of applied behavior analysis (ABA).

Granpeesheh became Lovaas's senior supervisor at his clinic and was among the Lovaas graduate students who worked directly with the families in Lovaas's groundbreaking 1987 study. The study documented how 9 of 19 children with autism who obtained early, intensive ABA therapy acquired typical academic and language skills and were placed in regular classrooms.[7][8] A follow-up study in 1993 tracked these children as adolescents with 8 of the 9 best outcome children displaying "adaptive and social skills within the normal range" and were indistinguishable from other typically developing children their own age.[9] In 1999, the United States Surgeon General praised the study and remarked that three decades of research has shown early, intensive ABA interventions to be highly effective for treating youngsters with ASD.

In 2014, Dr. Granpeesheh published Evidence-Based Treatment for Children with Autism: The CARD Model[10] with co-editors Jonathan Tarbox, Ph.D., BCBA-D, Adel Najdowski, Ph.D.,BCBA-D, and Julie Kornack.

References

  1. "Recovered: Journeys Through the Autism Spectrum and Back - The Story". Center for Autism and Related Disorders, Inc. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  2. 1 2 "Our Founder". Center for Autism & Related Disorders. 2011. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  3. Mary Beth Faller (November 12, 2010). "Autism therapy group says it cured 6 kids". The Arizona Republic.
  4. "Meet Skills Founders & Leaders in ABA and Autism Therapy". Center for Autism and Related Disorders. 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  5. "About: Corporate Leadership". Center for Autism and Related Disorders. 2008–2012. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  6. "Skills Index". Center for Autism and Related Disorders. 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  7. 1 2 "Dr. Doreen Granpeesheh - About". Dr. Doreen Granpeesheh. 2010. Retrieved June 19, 2011.
  8. Lovaas, O. Ivar. Behavioral Treatment and Normal Educational and Intellectual Functioning in Young Autistic Children. ScienceDirect. 1987;55(1):3-9. doi:10.1037/0022-006x.55.1.3.
  9. McEachin, J. J., Smith, Tristram, and Lovaas, O. Ivar. Long-term outcome for children with autism who received early intensive behavioral treatment. American Journal on Mental Retardation. 1993;97(4):359-372. PMID 8427693.
  10. [Granpeesheh, D., Tarbox, J., Najdowski, A., & Kornack, J. (2014). Evidence-Based Autism Treatment for Children with Autism: The CARD Model. New York, NY: Elsevier.], additional text.

External links

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