Clinical and Professional Advisory Board
Member Biographies

Maureen Underwood, LCSW, CGP
Maureen is a licensed clinical social worker and certified group psychotherapist with over 30 years of experience in mental health and crisis intervention. With a practice specialty in suicide, grief, trauma, and crisis resolution for children and families, she has developed numerous programs and published extensively on these and other related topics. From 1985 to 2000, she was the coordinator of the New Jersey Adolescent Suicide Prevention Project. In this role, she initiated collaborative relationships between mental health and educational systems statewide, providing in-service training, consultation on policy development, and assistance in the implementation of procedures for school-based crisis management. She has been providing clinical training in suicide assessment for emergency room mental health screeners for the past seven years and has coauthored a book chapter on the assessment of suicide risk in out-patient settings and the LIFELINES School-Based Youth Suicide Response Program. She is also the author of the National Association of Social Work's policy statement on adolescent suicide and serves on the New Jersey Governor's Council on Youth Suicide Prevention.
Barbara Barisonek
Barbara is the survivor of her son Duke's suicide and is the current
president of the New Jersey chapter of the American Foundation of
Suicide Prevention. She has been actively involved in suicide prevention
advocacy for the past 11 years. She is a presenter in crisis screener
suicide training sponsored by the University of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jersey and also trains medical students from Robert Wood Johnson
Medical School in suicide assessment. Barb was the 2006 recipient
of the Golden Bell Leadership Award from the Mental Health Association
of New Jersey for her work in suicide prevention.
Barry Feldman, Ph.D.
Barry N. Feldman, Ph.D. is Director of Psychiatry Services in Public Safety and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the UMass Medical School. He provides senior leadership to the UMass Memorial Medical Group and the Medical School to address strategic planning and the management of clinical services provided to individuals working in public safety (i.e., police, corrections, fire, EMS), and emergency medicine personnel. He is a clinician and consultant for On-Site Academy, a non-profit residential treatment and training center serving law enforcement and other public safety personnel. Previously, he served as the Primary Clinician for the Boston Police Stress Support Unit, and worked with the Boston Police Critical Incident Stress Debriefing Team.
Fred T. Fell, LPC
Fred is a licensed professional counselor and a certified high school psychologist in Morris County, New Jersey. His prior professional school psychology experiences involve working in specialized schools for students with significant physical and behavioral difficulties. He has also worked with children and adolescents in both clinical and educational settings where he has provided school-based consultation, counseling, and psychological testing. For many years, Fred has been involved in the development and dissemination of youth suicide prevention programs, and he has collaborated on materials developed by SPTS for school staff and educators.
Janet Grossman, Ph.D.
Dr. Grossman is certified in child psychiatry nursing and holds a doctorate in nursing research, with over 35 years practice experience. She is Associate Professor, Medical University of South Carolina College of Nursing, and Director, Center for Community Health partnerships. She has been involved in Suicidology through youth psychological autopsy studies, programs for children and family survivors, Ronald McDonald Children’s Charities school program in Chicago, and authorship of multiple publications on youth suicide, an exemplary intervention in means restriction and a nationally disseminated CD-ROM. Currently she is the co-investigator of a federally funded program to deliver mental health services to school based clinics and a trainer in the assessment and Management of suicide Risk for mental health professionals.
Michelle Scott, M.S.W., Ph.D.
Dr. Scott is an Assistant Professor at Monmouth University's School of Social Work and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Dr. Scott received her B.A. in psychology from Clark University in Worcester Mass, and her M.S.W. and Ph.D. in Social Welfare from the University of California, Berkeley. She has completed training programs in mental health services and financing, alcohol studies and child psychiatry. She has conducted research on the effects of behavioral managed care on juvenile justice involvement, and the referral and treatment of adolescent alcohol problems in a large managed care program. Her current research interests focus on adolescent suicide prevention including school-based screening and the role of alcohol on first-time suicide attempts. She is also interested in examining the preparedness of high-school seniors with mental health problems in transitioning to college life as it relates to crisis and service utilization on campus. In the past, she received funding from the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention to examine referral and service use after participating in school-based screening for suicide risk. Most recently, she published in the American Journal of Public Health examining the public health importance of school-based screening for suicide risk.
Nicci Spinazzola, ED.S, LMFT, LPC, BCETS
Nicci is a licensed marriage and family therapist, licensed
professional counselor, and board-certified expert in
traumatic stress. She maintains a private practice in
Morristown, New Jersey, specializing in adolescent and
family treatment related to trauma and loss. She is a
member of the New Jersey Governor's Council on Youth
Suicide Prevention. She is the Somerset County, New Jersey, traumatic
loss coordinator in charge of countywide crisis intervention,
crisis response, and training in the schools and community.
She is currently the clinical director of the Richard
Hall CMHC and the former director of the ALLIES Adolescent
and Family Service Department at the Richard Hall CMHC,
specializing in intensive out-patient treatment services for adolescents
and their families. She has designed and implemented
programs to meet the needs of families, schools, and community
organizations, speaking extensively on the topics of suicide,
managing sudden and traumatic loss in the schools, resiliency,
and other related topics. She provides training for local universities,
school systems and social service and public safety agencies.
She has overseen and delivered statewide training for
the certification and re-certification of psychiatric screeners.
Judith is a licensed psychologist who maintains a private practice in Morristown, New Jersey. She is currently the director of Springboard Training, a human relations consulting, training, and evaluation firm, as well as a faculty member at Rutgers University Graduate School of Professional and Applied Psychology. A former school psychologist, Judith has extensive experience with the design and implementation of a variety of resiliency-based programs for students. Her professional publications focus on school-based counseling, peer resources, and student-parent-teacher communication. She has been a consultant of the Society for the Prevention of Teen Suicide Speakers Bureau since 2006.
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