Steve Martino, PhD
Professor of PsychiatryCards
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Psychology, VA CT Healthcare System
Contact Info
Psychiatry
VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue (116B)
West Haven, CT 06516
United States
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Psychology, VA CT Healthcare System
Contact Info
Psychiatry
VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue (116B)
West Haven, CT 06516
United States
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Psychology, VA CT Healthcare System
Contact Info
Psychiatry
VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue (116B)
West Haven, CT 06516
United States
About
Titles
Professor of Psychiatry
Chief of Psychology, VA CT Healthcare System
Biography
Dr. Martino specializes in the treatment of addictive disorders and of patients diagnosed with co-occurring psychiatric problems, with specific interests in motivational interviewing, group work, and brief interventions in medical settings. He has extensive experience conducting randomized controlled hybrid effectiveness-implementation multisite trials, feasibility and acceptability psychotherapy development studies, and mixed qualitative-quantitative formative evaluations. At VA Connecticut, he serves as the Chief of the Psychology Services, Director of the Implementation, Dissemination, and Education Core of the VA HSR&D Center of Innovation (COIN) Pain Research, Informatics, Multi-morbidities, and Education (PRIME) Center, and Co-Project Director of the Interpersonal Violence Center for Innovation and Research, Innovation and Implementation Core. His current research focuses on strategies for implementing treatments and brief interventions in community treatment programs and VA and non-VA medical settings.
Appointments
Psychiatry
ProfessorPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Adult Psychiatry
- Division of Addictions
- Division of Mental Health Services
- Division of Substance Abuse
- Pain Research, Informatics, Multimorbidities, and Education (PRIME) Center
- Psychiatry
- Psychology Section
- Psychotherapy Development Center
- Yale Ventures
- Yale-Drug use, Addiction, and HIV prevention Research Scholars (DAHRS)
- Yale-UPR Integrated HIV Basic and Clinical Sciences Initiative
Education & Training
- Post Doctoral
- Yale University School of Medicine (1991)
- PhD
- Depaul University (1990)
Research
Overview
The driving force behind my research and related scholarly activities has been my dedication to promoting the use of evidence-based psychosocial treatments in clinical settings. In the early 1990s, I began to apply motivational interviewing (MI) in the treatment of patients with severe mental illness and addictions. I engaged in a series of studies to develop this adaptation and empirically examined its treatment effects in a randomized clinical trial. At the time, few investigators had published about how to specifically apply MI to this dual diagnosis population and to test how well it worked. To my surprise, I found that MI was differentially effective with psychotically ill patients who abused cocaine, but not with those who abused marijuana. My work highlighted the complexities of enhancing motivation in patients with severe co-occurring mental illness and addiction. From these efforts to tailor MI, I became more interested in studying how to effectively train clinicians in evidence-based practices. I was impressed by the disciplined methods used to teach clinicians behavioral treatments in clinical trials (use of manuals, recording sessions, integrity rating, supervisory feedback and coaching, ongoing close monitoring of performance) and, ironically, how uncommon this careful training approach was employed in real world educational and practice settings. This simple observation led me to shift my research toward dissemination and implementation science, and I became increasingly involved in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network. Specifically, I assisted in the conduct of several national multi-site effectiveness trials involving MI. I had primary responsibility for serving as the local, and then national trainer, and developing an integrity rating scale and system to be used for supervision and independent observer treatment validation in the trials. I took the lead in psychometrically validating the scale and developing a NIDA-SAMHSA national dissemination product called Motivational Interviewing Assessment: Supervisory Tools for Enhancing Proficiency – a manual that details methods for supervising MI in community treatment programs. Subsequently, I became the national trainer-of-trainers for MIA: STEP and played a key role in its dissemination nationally and internationally, and the studied its in improving clinicians' MI adherence and competence and clients' clinical outcomes. In addition, I have published studies that have examined the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of a train-the-trainer and specialist vs. generalist approach for implementing motivational interviewing in community and medical settings. I also have piloted an innovative stepwise approach in which clinicians only receive more intensive treatment training if they fail to meet a criterion performance threshold. The study showed the promise of more adaptive training program designs and suggested that future training trials screen participants to exclude those who already have the targeted skills and little room for improvement. Currently, in two large national multisite hybrid trials I am examining the effectiveness of hub-and-spoke and implementation facilitation approaches to support the use of Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) for motivating Veterans with chronic pain and risky substance use to engage in VA multimodal nonpharmacological pain care. This work includes substantial formative evaluation to understand implementation barriers and facilitators, adapt interventions, and adjust implementation strategies as the work unfolds.
Medical Research Interests
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Research Interests
Charla Nich
Marc Rosen, MD
Samuel Ball, PhD
Carlos Grilo, PhD
Christina Lazar, MPH
Cynthia Brandt, MD, MPH
Motivational Interviewing
Psychotherapy
Implementation Science
Publications
2024
Mixed-methods formative evaluation of implementing an adapted suicide prevention treatment: Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Groups in the Veterans Health Administration
Decker S, Kroll-Desrosiers A, Mattocks K, Aunon F, Galliford E, Doran N, Baird S, Rielage J, Ridley J, Bannister J, Giovannelli T, Landes S, Goodman M, Walker L, DeRycke E, Shriver C, Spana E, Honsberger M, Brown H, Demirelli S, Shest E, Martino S. Mixed-methods formative evaluation of implementing an adapted suicide prevention treatment: Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Groups in the Veterans Health Administration. Frontiers In Psychiatry 2024, 15: 1495102. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1495102.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsDialectical Behaviour Therapy Skills GroupEmotion dysregulationSuicide attemptsVeterans Health AdministrationSkill groupsReducing emotion dysregulationSuicide prevention treatmentsReduce suicide attemptsImproving coping skillsSuicidal behaviorCoping skillsSuicide preventionLimited staffingHealth AdministrationSuicideVeterans Health Administration medical centersHybrid effectiveness-implementation trialVeteran suicideMixed-methods formative evaluationVeteransIntegrated Promoting ActionEffectiveness-implementation trialPrevent veteran suicideQualitative dataRandomized controlled trialsScreening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment for pain management for veterans separating from military service: study protocol of a hybrid type 2 study testing implementation facilitation versus training-as-usual
Sellinger J, Rosen M, Lazar C, Gilstad-Hayden K, Dziura J, Li F, Mattocks K, Weede A, Sullivan-Tibbs M, Rose L, Vassallo G, Manhapra A, Turner A, Vogt D, Woodward E, Hartmann C, Haskell S, Mohammad A, Martino S. Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment for pain management for veterans separating from military service: study protocol of a hybrid type 2 study testing implementation facilitation versus training-as-usual. Pain Medicine 2024, 25: s99-s106. PMID: 39514877, DOI: 10.1093/pm/pnae062.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsTraining-as-usualImplementation facilitatorsReferral to treatmentCase managementBrief interventionHybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation trialPain managementImplementation strategiesPrimary implementation outcomeSubstance misuseProportion of participantsPain careUsefulness of screeningVeteran engagementVA sitesImplementation outcomesPragmatic trialPain serviceVeteran participantsCase management systemPain intensityDischarged veteransStudy enrollmentVeteransChronic painPragmatic clinical trials as hybrid effectiveness-implementation studies to shrink the evidence-to-practice gap for chronic pain management
Midboe A, Seal K, Burgess D, Rosen M, Martino S. Pragmatic clinical trials as hybrid effectiveness-implementation studies to shrink the evidence-to-practice gap for chronic pain management. Pain Medicine 2024, 25: s77-s79. PMID: 39514879, PMCID: PMC11548854, DOI: 10.1093/pm/pnae067.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchImpact of the COVID-19 pandemic on participants in pragmatic clinical trials for chronic pain: implications for trial outcomes and beyond
Sellinger J, Gilstad-Hayden K, Lazar C, Seal K, Purcell N, Burgess D, Martino S, Heapy A, Higgins D, Rosen M. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on participants in pragmatic clinical trials for chronic pain: implications for trial outcomes and beyond. Pain Medicine 2024, 25: s17-s27. PMID: 39514885, PMCID: PMC11548862, DOI: 10.1093/pm/pnae060.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPragmatic clinical trialsHealth careSocial supportChronic painEmotional healthHigher levels of painPain Management CollaboratoryEffective pain managementClinical trialsLevel of painEffectiveness of treatment outcomesPandemic impactAlcohol use disorder screeningCOVID-19-related impactsCOVID-19 pandemicChronic pain treatmentMental healthPain managementDisorder screeningNonpharmacological treatmentsPain treatmentStudy enrollmentCOVID-19HealthCareThe Feasibility and Acceptability of a Clinical Pharmacist-delivered Intervention to Reduce Bothersome Health Symptoms from Polypharmacy and Alcohol Use and Communicate Risk among People with HIV: Pilot Study Protocol
Womack J, Leblanc M, Sager A, Zaets L, Maisto S, Garcia A, Aoun-Barakat L, Brown S, Edelman E, Fiellin D, Fisher J, Fraenkel L, Kidwai-Khan F, Marconi V, Martino S, Pulk R, Satre D, Virata M, Justice A, Hsieh E. The Feasibility and Acceptability of a Clinical Pharmacist-delivered Intervention to Reduce Bothersome Health Symptoms from Polypharmacy and Alcohol Use and Communicate Risk among People with HIV: Pilot Study Protocol. AIDS And Behavior 2024, 1-15. PMID: 39465468, DOI: 10.1007/s10461-024-04533-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsUnhealthy alcohol useAlcohol usePharmacist-delivered interventionVeterans Aging Cohort StudyPilot study protocolStudy protocolElectronic health recordsSupport behavior changePre-test/post-test designAging Cohort StudySelf-administered surveyAlcohol use disorderAlcohol Research CenterBothersome symptomsPre-test/post-testCommunicating riskHealth recordsLong-term medicationHealth symptomsCounseling interventionCounseling sessionsSessions 2 weeksQualitative interviewsAlcohol consumptionUse disorderExploring the Experience of Pain and Pain Management for Pregnant and Postpartum Veterans With Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain
Kroll-Desrosiers A, Wallace K, Higgins D, Martino S, Marteeny V, Walker L, Mattocks K. Exploring the Experience of Pain and Pain Management for Pregnant and Postpartum Veterans With Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain. Women's Health Issues 2024 PMID: 39242321, DOI: 10.1016/j.whi.2024.07.004.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsVeterans Health AdministrationExperience of painPain carePain managementPerinatal periodVeterans Health Administration providersImprove pain careHigh-quality careChronic musculoskeletal painImprove pain managementBarriers to treatmentPostpartum veteransPregnant veteransMusculoskeletal conditionsMusculoskeletal painBack painFramework approachHealth coverageHealth AdministrationPain diagnosisVeterans' experiencesIdentified veteransQualitative studyUnique needsCareMotivational Interviewing
Pilkey D, Britt E, Martino S. Motivational Interviewing. 2024, 3759-3774. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-51366-5_68.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsImplementation and Impact of Intimate Partner Violence Screening Expansion in the Veterans Health Administration: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Evaluation
Portnoy G, Relyea M, Dichter M, Iverson K, Presseau C, Brandt C, Skanderson M, Bruce L, Martino S. Implementation and Impact of Intimate Partner Violence Screening Expansion in the Veterans Health Administration: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Evaluation. JMIR Research Protocols 2024, 13: e59918. PMID: 39194059, PMCID: PMC11391160, DOI: 10.2196/59918.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsVeterans Health AdministrationImpact of screeningINTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIERHealth care systemIntimate partner violenceIPV screeningQualitative interviewsCare systemHealth AdministrationConsolidated Framework for Implementation ResearchVeterans Health Administration facilitiesElectronic health record dataIntimate partner violence screeningMixed methods evaluationHealth record dataNational health care systemLongitudinal observational designPotential implementation barriersSignificant public health problemMen's health careClinical practice implicationsPatient populationMethod evaluationRE-AIMPublic health problemM41 Do People With Substance Misuse (SM) Use Distinct Pain Treatment Modalities?
Rosen M, Gilstad-Hayden K, Sellinger J, Lazar C, Martino S. M41 Do People With Substance Misuse (SM) Use Distinct Pain Treatment Modalities? Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2024, 260: 110321. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.110321.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchGroup-Based Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy (MERITg) and Its Relationship to Recovery-Oriented Beliefs in Serious Mental Illness
Musket C, Bullock J, Fiszdon J, Stacy M, Martino S, James A, Lysaker P, Martin A. Group-Based Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy (MERITg) and Its Relationship to Recovery-Oriented Beliefs in Serious Mental Illness. Behavioral Sciences 2024, 14: 520. PMID: 39062343, PMCID: PMC11273885, DOI: 10.3390/bs14070520.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSerious mental illnessMental illnessMaryland Assessment of RecoveryRecovery-oriented interventionsInsight TherapyThirty-one participantsAssessment of recoveryGroup participantsShort formEvidence-basedInpatient groupTreatment settingsMetacognitive reflectionTreatment programsParticipantsIllnessTherapeutic interactionSMIThirty-oneBeliefsAdjunctive treatmentInterventionGroupMarylandTherapy
Clinical Trials
Current Trials
Engaging Veterans Seeking Service-Connection Payments in Pain Treatment (PragmaticSBIRT)
HIC ID2000022664RoleSub InvestigatorPrimary Completion Date09/30/2023Recruiting ParticipantsGenderBothAge18 years - 100 years
News
News
- December 02, 2024
Pain Management Collaboratory Coordinating Center Receives Grant to Continue Research
- October 04, 2024Source: Behavioral Sciences
Group-Based Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy and Its Relationship to Recovery-Oriented Beliefs in Serious Mental Illness
- July 01, 2024
Sellinger, Pietrzak Honored by VA Connecticut Healthcare System
- November 17, 2023
Yale Psychiatry Researchers Awarded Grant to Establish PRISM Initiative
Get In Touch
Contacts
Psychiatry
VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue (116B)
West Haven, CT 06516
United States