Jason DeViva, PhD
Associate Professor of PsychiatryCards
Appointments
Contact Info
Psychiatry
950 Campbell Ave., West Haven VA Medical Center
West Haven, CT 06516
United States
About
Titles
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
Biography
Jason DeViva is a clinical psychologist who currently works with the VA Connecticut Health Care System as part of the posttraumatic stress disorder and anxiety disorders treatment program. He serves as co-director of the PTSD Clinical Team and is a PTSD mentor for VA's New England region. He is the military sexual trauma coordinator for VA Connecticut and the VA military sexual trauma point of contact for the New England region. He is a national lead trainer for the VA's dissemination of cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia and a regional trainer and national consultant for the dissemination of cognitive processing therapy for PTSD. He has worked in the VA system for the past 19 years, treating veterans of all eras with posttraumatic stress disorder and anxiety disorders. He has published numerous papers on sleep in individuals with PTSD and on factors related to engagement with and completion of evidence-based psychotherapy for PTSD. He is co-author of an award-winning book for family and loved ones of individuals with posttraumatic stress.
Appointments
Psychiatry
Associate Professor on TermPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Postdoctoral Fellow
- Dartmouth Medical School (2003)
- Predoctoral Intern
- Battle Creek VA Medical Center (2001)
- PhD
- University of Hawaii (2001)
Research
Overview
The first research supporting the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy in the treatment of PTSD was published over 20 years ago. However, data indicate that veterans diagnosed with PTSD tend not to receive or engage in evidence-based psychotherapy. When they do engage, studies show that completion rates are lower than those typically seen in clinical trials. I have been interested in identifying treatment engagement and completion rates among veterans with PTSD and determining what factors might be associated with engagement and completion. I have also focused on methods for increasing engagement with and completion of PTSD treatment.
I am also interested in the relationship between trauma and sleep. Disturbed sleep appears to be associated with the development of PTSD as well as with other aspects of posttraumatic stress. Difficulties falling and staying asleep are among the most common posttraumatic symptoms, and evidence-based therapies for PTSD improve sleep only about half of the time. I have been interested in identifying the effects of treating PTSD on sleep difficulties, as well the effects of treating insomnia in individuals with otherwise untreated PTSD.
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Allison E. Gaffey, PhD
Anne Klee, PhD
Cynthia Brandt, MD, MPH
Eric D.A. Hermes, MD
Lori Bastian, MD, MPH
Maria Niculete, PhD
Publications
2024
Does format matter? A naturalistic study of digital and provider-led cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia implemented in a healthcare system
Reed A, Rogers D, Berlin G, Burrone L, Dante G, DeViva J, McCarthy E, Niculete M, Santoro G, Hermes E. Does format matter? A naturalistic study of digital and provider-led cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia implemented in a healthcare system. Behavioral Sleep Medicine 2024, 22: 883-893. PMID: 39140646, DOI: 10.1080/15402002.2024.2385822.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCognitive Behavioral Therapy for InsomniaVeterans Health AdministrationHealthcare settingsLevels of program engagementSelf-directed careEvidence-based treatmentsCognitive behavioral therapyProgram engagementHealth AdministrationProgram increased accessHealthcare systemTreatment engagementCoaching supportHealthcareBehavioral therapyInsomnia severityProvidersSymptom changeInsomniaClinical effectsInsomnia disorderSimilar outcomesImpairing disorderNaturalistic studyIndividualsElectronic Health Record Concordance with Survey-Reported Military Sexual Trauma Among Younger Veterans: Associations with Health Care Utilization and Mental Health Diagnoses
Gaffey A, Burg M, Skanderson M, Deviva J, Brandt C, Bastian L, Haskell S. Electronic Health Record Concordance with Survey-Reported Military Sexual Trauma Among Younger Veterans: Associations with Health Care Utilization and Mental Health Diagnoses. Journal Of Women's Health 2024 PMID: 38946553, DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2023.0993.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsElectronic health recordsHealth care utilizationAssociated with health care utilizationMilitary sexual traumaVeterans Health AdministrationCare utilizationPosttraumatic stress disorderVeteran health care utilizationMental health visitsPrimary care utilizationMental health diagnosesCross-sectional associationsService-related characteristicsPost-9/11 veteransSexual traumaLikelihood of posttraumatic stress disorderEHR screensPrimary careVHA careHealth visitsOlder veteransHealth recordsYounger veteransDepression diagnosisExperience MSTACTing Spiritually: Integrating Spiritual Care and Mental Health Care within a US Department of Veterans Affairs Inpatient Psychiatric Unit
Ford K, Van Denend J, DeViva J, Cooke J, Klee A. ACTing Spiritually: Integrating Spiritual Care and Mental Health Care within a US Department of Veterans Affairs Inpatient Psychiatric Unit. Journal Of Religion And Health 2024, 1-16. PMID: 38909328, DOI: 10.1007/s10943-024-02065-w.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInpatient psychiatric unitVeterans AffairsPsychiatric unitMental health careMental health treatmentACT groupInterprofessional fellowshipSpiritual carePsychosocial rehabilitationHealth careHealth treatmentClinical tensionsQualitative findingsCommitment therapyMedical CenterCareWest-HavenUS DepartmentClinical gainsNext stepsSpiritualityConcept of acceptabilityPotential feasibilityAcceptanceGroup protocolPosttraumatic stress disorder and insomnia in US military veterans: Prevalence, correlates, and psychiatric and functional burden
Georgescu M, Fischer I, Beydoun M, McCarthy E, DeViva J, Pietrzak R. Posttraumatic stress disorder and insomnia in US military veterans: Prevalence, correlates, and psychiatric and functional burden. Journal Of Sleep Research 2024, e14269. PMID: 38845413, DOI: 10.1111/jsr.14269.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsPosttraumatic stress disorderStress disorderMilitary veteransInsomnia groupCo-occurring posttraumatic stress disorderBurden of PTSDTreating posttraumatic stress disorderClinical management of insomniaRates of psychiatric conditionsGeneralized anxiety disorderCurrent suicidal ideationMitigate suicide riskUS veteransManagement of insomniaUS military veteransMental health burdenFunctional burdenAnxiety disordersDepressive disorderSuicidal ideationSuicide riskPsychiatric conditionsPsychosocial functioningSocial functioningInsomnia
News
News
Get In Touch
Contacts
Psychiatry
950 Campbell Ave., West Haven VA Medical Center
West Haven, CT 06516
United States