Catherine Ayoub, EdD, MN, RN

Nurse Practitioner; Attending Psychologist, Developmental Medicine Center
Associate Professor of Psychology, Harvard Medical School
Image
Catherine Ayoub, EdD, MN, RN

Catherine Ayoub, EdD, MN, RN

Nurse Practitioner; Attending Psychologist, Developmental Medicine Center
Associate Professor of Psychology, Harvard Medical School

Medical Services

Languages
English
Spanish

Publications

Postoperative Rehabilitation of Multidirectional Instability Surgery: A Systematic Review. View Abstract
Associations between child physical abuse potential, observed maternal parenting, and young children's emotion regulation: Is participation in Early Head Start protective? View Abstract
BUILDING EVALUATION PARTNERSHIPS WITH TRIBAL COMMUNITIES FOR HOME VISITING. View Abstract
Maltreated Children Use More Grammatical Negations. View Abstract
Parenting Supports for Early Vocabulary Development: Specific Effects of Sensitivity and Stimulation through Infancy. View Abstract
The effect of Early Head Start on child welfare system involvement: A first look at longitudinal child maltreatment outcomes. View Abstract
Developmental pathways to integrated social skills: the roles of parenting and early intervention. View Abstract
Use Your Words: The Role of Language in the Development of Toddlers' Self-Regulation. View Abstract
Family Connections: an approach for strengthening early care systems in facing depression and adversity. View Abstract
Symbols Build Communication and Thought: The Role of Gestures and Words in the Development of Engagement Skills and Social-Emotional Concepts during Toddlerhood. View Abstract
Correlates and consequences of spanking and verbal punishment for low-income white, african american, and mexican american toddlers. View Abstract
Further thoughts on "Beyond Munchausen by proxy: identification and treatment of child abuse in a medical setting". View Abstract
It takes time: Impacts of Early Head Start that lead to reductions in maternal depression two years later. View Abstract
Cognitive and emotional differences in young maltreated children: a translational application of dynamic skill theory. View Abstract
Analyzing development of working models for disrupted attachments: the case of hidden family violence. View Abstract
Position paper: definitional issues in Munchausen by proxy. View Abstract
Considering suffocatory abuse and Munchausen by proxy in the evaluation of children experiencing apparent life-threatening events and sudden infant death syndrome. View Abstract
Munchausen by proxy: presentations in special education. View Abstract
Casebook companion to the definitional issues in Munchausen by proxy position paper. View Abstract
Psychopathology as adaptive development along distinctive pathways. View Abstract
Maternal and child posttraumatic stress disorder in cases of child maltreatment. View Abstract
In the eyes of the beholder: family and maternal influences on perceptions of adjustment of children with a chronic illness. View Abstract
Families at risk of child maltreatment: entry-level characteristics and growth in family functioning during treatment. View Abstract
Using growth modeling to examine systematic differences in growth: an example of change in the functioning of families at risk of maladaptive parenting, child abuse, or neglect. View Abstract
Failure to thrive: parental indicators, types, and outcomes. View Abstract
Predictive validity of the child abuse potential inventory. View Abstract
Assessment of a program's effectiveness in selecting individuals "at risk" for problems in parenting. View Abstract
Families at risk of poor parenting: a model for service delivery, assessment, and intervention. View Abstract
Families at risk of poor parenting: a descriptive study of sixty at risk families in a model prevention program. View Abstract
Evaluation of "at risk" parents using the Child Abuse Potential Inventory. View Abstract
Burns as a manifestation of child abuse and neglect. View Abstract
An approach to primary prevention: the "at-risk" program. View Abstract
An approach to the prophylaxis of child abuse and neglect. View Abstract