Bruce D. Perry, M.D., Ph.D. is the Senior Fellow of
The ChildTrauma Academy, a not-for-profit
organization based in Houston that promotes innovations
in service, research and education in child maltreatment
and childhood trauma (www.ChildTrauma.org).
Dr. Perry is the co-author of
The Boy Who Was Raised As A Dog: What Traumatized
Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love and Healing,
a
popular book based on his work with children, published
by Basic Books.
Over the last fifteen years, Dr. Perry has been an
active teacher, clinician and researcher in children’s
mental health and the neurosciences holding a variety of
academic positions.
Dr. Perry was on the faculty of the Departments of
Pharmacology and Psychiatry at the University Of Chicago
School Of Medicine from 1988 to 1991. From 1992 to 2001,
Dr. Perry served as the Trammell Research Professor of
Child Psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine in
Houston, Texas. During this time, Dr. Perry also was
Chief of Psychiatry for Texas Children's Hospital and
Vice-Chairman for Research within the Department of
Psychiatry. From 2001 to 2003, Dr. Perry served as the
Medical Director for Provincial Programs in Children's
Mental Health for the Alberta Mental Health Board. He
continues to serve as a Senior Consultant to the
Ministry of Children’s Services in Alberta, Canada.
Dr. Perry has conducted both basic neuroscience and
clinical research. His neuroscience research has
examined the effects of prenatal drug exposure on brain
development, the neurobiology of human neuropsychiatric
disorders, the neurophysiology of traumatic life events
and basic mechanisms related to the development of
neurotransmitter receptors in the brain. His clinical
research and practice has focused on high-risk children
- examining long-term cognitive, behavioral, emotional,
social, and physiological effects of neglect and trauma
in children, adolescents and adults. This work has been
instrumental in describing how childhood experiences,
including neglect and traumatic stress, change the
biology of the brain – and, thereby, the health of the
child.
A focus of his clinical research over the last ten years
has been focused on integrating concepts of
developmental neuroscience and child development into
clinical practices. This work has resulted in the
development of innovative clinical practices and
programs working with maltreated and traumatized
children. The ChildTrauma Academy’s programs are
in partnership with multiple sectors of the community
and in context of public-private partnerships with the
goal of promoting positive change within the primary
institutions that work with high risk children such as
child protective services, mental health, public
education and juvenile justice.
His experience as a clinician and a researcher with
traumatized children has led many community and
governmental agencies to consult Dr. Perry following
high-profile incidents involving traumatized children.
These include the Branch Davidian siege, the Oklahoma
City bombing, the Columbine school shootings, the
September 11th terrorist attacks and the
Katrina and Rita hurricanes.
Dr. Perry is the author of over 300 journal articles,
book chapters and scientific proceedings and is the
recipient of numerous professional awards and honors,
including the T. Berry Brazelton Infant Mental Health
Advocacy Award, the Award for Leadership in Public Child
Welfare and the Alberta Centennial Medal.
He has presented about child maltreatment, children's
mental health, neurodevelopment and youth violence in a
variety of venues including policy-making bodies such as
the White House Summit on Violence, the California
Assembly and U.S. House Committee on Education. Dr.
Perry has been featured in a wide range of media
including National Public Radio, The Today Show, Good
Morning America, Nightline, CNN, MSNBC, NBC, ABC and CBS
News and the Oprah Winfrey Show. His work has been
featured in documentaries produced by Dateline NBC,
20/20, the BBC, Nightline, CBC, PBS, as well as dozen
international documentaries. Many print media have
highlighted the clinical and research activities of Dr.
Perry including a Pulitzer-prize winning series in the
Chicago Tribune, US News and World Report, Time,
Newsweek, Forbes ASAP, Washington Post, the New York
Times and Rolling Stone.
Dr. Perry, a native of Bismarck, North Dakota, was an
undergraduate at Stanford University and Amherst
College. He attended medical and graduate school at
Northwestern University, receiving both M.D. and Ph.D.
degrees. Dr. Perry completed a residency in general
psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine and a
fellowship in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at The
University of Chicago.