Margaret Martinez, PhD, ABPP
Assistant Professor
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
Psychiatry

Websites
favorite icon LinkedIn




Dr. Meg Martinez is an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry in the Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine and a staff psychologist at VA Boston. Her clinical responsibilities at VA Boston are split between the General Mental Health Clinic and Women’s Trauma Recovery Team at the Jamaica Plain campus. She is also the Assistant Training Director for VA Boston’s psychology internship and fellowship programs and one of two co-coordinators for the psychology mentorship programs at VA Boston.

Dr. Martinez completed her graduate, pre-doctoral internship, and post-doctoral fellowship at Emory University. Following completion of her training, she served as the Clinical Director for an inpatient/residential facility in Atlanta that served children, adolescents, and young adults with primary eating disorders for before joining the staff at the Atlanta VA in 2020. She joined the team at VA Boston in 2022. Here, Dr. Martinez provides individual and group psychotherapy to Veterans within GMH and WTRT. She is also involved in providing supervision to trainees in both clinics and participates in the development and administration of the training programs. Her clinical interests include the treatment of complex trauma, including disordered eating and personality disorders. She also has a strong interest in program evaluation and development, particularly as it pertains to the dissemination of episodes of evidence-based psychotherapies in high-volume, high-demand clinical settings like VA Boston.

Publications listed below are automatically derived from MEDLINE/PubMed and other sources, which might result in incorrect or missing publications. Faculty can login to make corrections and additions.

iCite Website       Copy PMIDs To Clipboard

  1. Martinez, M. A., & Craighead, L. W. Towards Person(ality)-Centered Treatment: How Consideration of Personality and Individual Differences in Anorexia Nervosa May Improve Treatment Outcome. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2015.

This graph shows the total number of publications by year, by first, middle/unknown, or last author.

Bar chart showing 1 publications over 1 distinct years, with a maximum of 1 publications in 2015

YearPublications
20151


2021 Atlanta VA Healthcare System: I-CARE Award
2017 Emory University: McLeod Award for Contributions to College Mental Health
2016 American Psychological Association: Dissertation Research Award
2016 Emory University: Integration Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Integration of Science and Clinical Practice
2012-2017 Emory University: Emory Graduate Diversity Fellowship
Contact for Mentoring:
Same Department