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Dr. Julia Doss is the owner and director of Doss Clinic of Health Psychology. The clinic is focused on providing care for patients with Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures (PNES) and other forms of Functional Neurological Disorder (FND). She is a clinical psychologist with a pediatric specialization. In practice she has focused the majority of her 20 year career on assisting in diagnosis and treatment of patients and their families struggling with PNES. She has published her research in scientific journals, she has authored professional book chapters, and presents in meetings across the US and abroad. She has been a chair of the Pediatric Non-epileptic Seizure SIG at the American Epilepsy Society. She is currently a steward for the NINDS/NIH task force for comorbidities in epilepsy for the past 5 years, from which recommendations were presented to congress to assist in determining funding for research in this area. She was involved in the first pediatric multisite study of youth with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures. She has co-authored two books, one in 2017 “Pediatric Psychogenic NonEpileptic Seizures: A Guide” and more recently “The Psychogenic Non-epileptic Seizure Pocketbook” in 2023 with co-author Dr. Lorna Myers.
Dr Doss has been a training director of psychology fellows while practicing at the Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota. She is experienced in pediatric hypnosis and uses a variety of modalities when approaching the treatment of PNES.
Dr Doss has trained a number of post-graduate clinicians in the treatment of PNES/Functional Disorders and enjoys disseminating information to clinicians. She and Dr. Myers have recently launched an online training program aimed at teaching clinicians methods for managing PNES in youth and adults.
We discussed her pathway into FND, her views about FND subtypes, similarities and divergences between adults and pediatric. FND, the role of the family in pediatric FND, her views on terminology, and the role of psychological service access and treatment models and structures, and how that can be best approached and considered by treating clinicians. It was a very enjoyable conversation with such a skilled and seasoned FND clinician.
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By FND Society5
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Dr. Julia Doss is the owner and director of Doss Clinic of Health Psychology. The clinic is focused on providing care for patients with Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures (PNES) and other forms of Functional Neurological Disorder (FND). She is a clinical psychologist with a pediatric specialization. In practice she has focused the majority of her 20 year career on assisting in diagnosis and treatment of patients and their families struggling with PNES. She has published her research in scientific journals, she has authored professional book chapters, and presents in meetings across the US and abroad. She has been a chair of the Pediatric Non-epileptic Seizure SIG at the American Epilepsy Society. She is currently a steward for the NINDS/NIH task force for comorbidities in epilepsy for the past 5 years, from which recommendations were presented to congress to assist in determining funding for research in this area. She was involved in the first pediatric multisite study of youth with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures. She has co-authored two books, one in 2017 “Pediatric Psychogenic NonEpileptic Seizures: A Guide” and more recently “The Psychogenic Non-epileptic Seizure Pocketbook” in 2023 with co-author Dr. Lorna Myers.
Dr Doss has been a training director of psychology fellows while practicing at the Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota. She is experienced in pediatric hypnosis and uses a variety of modalities when approaching the treatment of PNES.
Dr Doss has trained a number of post-graduate clinicians in the treatment of PNES/Functional Disorders and enjoys disseminating information to clinicians. She and Dr. Myers have recently launched an online training program aimed at teaching clinicians methods for managing PNES in youth and adults.
We discussed her pathway into FND, her views about FND subtypes, similarities and divergences between adults and pediatric. FND, the role of the family in pediatric FND, her views on terminology, and the role of psychological service access and treatment models and structures, and how that can be best approached and considered by treating clinicians. It was a very enjoyable conversation with such a skilled and seasoned FND clinician.
Support the show

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