ELIZABETH KATHLEEN
HOLMES
Ph.D., ABPP
Doctor Holmes was born in the
U.S Navy Hospital, Chelsea, Massachusetts, and spent her childhood
as part of a Navy family. Community minded at an early age she was
a founder of the Franklin, Massachusetts, Youth Council and was a
volunteer for five years at Wrentham State School for the Mentally
Retarded.
She received a Bachelor of
Science degree in Psychology with a minor in Urban/Suburban studies
from the University of Bridgeport. During her undergraduate years
she was a student resident advisor and worked for the City of
Bridgeport as a deputy probation officer. She completed
post-graduate studies in the University of Bridgeport's College of
Education earning a Master of Science degree in School Psychology
and performing her internship at local public elementary and high
schools and at a private school for autistic children.
Dr. Holmes matriculated to the
California School of Professional Psychology in San Diego. She was
accepted into the United States Navy Health Professions Scholarship
Program and was commissioned a Lieutenant Junior Grade, Medical
Service Corps. Her doctoral dissertation was "Individual Learning
Styles and the Marital Interactive Process."
After receiving her doctoral
degree, Dr. Holmes performed an internship in Clinical Psychology at
the National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, MD. She was
subsequently assigned duties as Chairman of the Department of
Behavioral Psychology at the National Naval Dental Center where she
became widely published and nationally known for her research in
Temperomandibular Joint Pain. She also accepted an appointment as
an adjunct faculty member at the University of Georgetown School of
Dentistry.
Dr. Holmes was then assigned
to the National Naval Medical Center. During her assignment she
became a Navy pioneer in Health Psychology.
She developed health promotion
programs in smoking cessation, weight control, stress management,
and cardiac rehabilitation and authored the Navy Surgeon General's
Manual for Stress Control provided to flag officers. She supervised
the mental health care of casualties from Beirut and Grenada and
published research in the area of Combat Psychology.
As a consultant to the
National Science Foundation, Dr. Holmes screened personnel
volunteering to winter-over in isolated stations in Antarctica. She
became the first female military psychologist to travel to the South
Pole to debrief personnel at the end of their winter isolation.
During her stay in the Antarctic she was asked to consult with the
"Footsteps of Scott" expedition on team selection before the
ultimate success of that expedition. She was awarded the Antarctica
Service Medal and invited to become a member of the Society of Woman
Geographers.
Dr. Holmes was selected to
become the Head of the Mental Health Division of the Navy's first
HIV program. During her tenure over 600 patients were treated in
what ultimately became a prototype program. She helped author and
narrated the Navy's film on the HIV program. She was also invited
to become a reviewer for the National Register of Health Care
Providers in Psychology.
Dr. Holmes entered private
practice in the Tidewater, Virginia, area and continued Naval
service as a reservist becoming the Commanding Officer of a medical detachment. Continuing in her commitment to community service
she was elected a trustee of the AIDS Foundation, Inc., in the
commonwealth of Virginia. She made guest appearances on several
local and national television shows discussing different areas of
applied psychology.
Dr. Holmes was examined and
certified as a Diplomate in Clinical Psychology by the American
Board of Professional Psychology becoming one of only a few military
psychologists to become board certified. She also became a
Diplomate of the American Board of Medical Psychotherapists.
Dr. Holmes was asked to return
to active duty to head a suicide research project with the Marine
Corps, the largest such study ever undertaken in the military.
During this tour she was appointed by the Commanding General, U.S.
Marine Corps Bases, Pacific, as the officer-in-charge of a special
team sent to Camp Pendleton, California, to intervene after a
cluster of several suicides there in early 1993. Dr. Holmes was
also officer-in-charge of a medical team sent to the Soloman Islands
with 7 Medal Of honor recipients during the 50th
Anniversary remembrance of the Battle of Guadalcanal.
Dr. Holmes was Head of the
Psychology Section, and served as Chairman of the Department of
Leadership, Ethics and Law at the United States Naval Academy. She
also headed the highly visible Eating Disorders Program. In 1996,
she became the first woman Naval officer to attain the academic rank
of full Professor at the Naval Academy.
She served an overseas tour at
the Naval Hospital, Rota, Spain, and returned to the Naval Academy
where she was Deputy Director of the Character Development Division
and was selected to be a Fellow at the Center for the Study of
Professional Military Ethics. She retired from Naval service and is
currently heading research into assessment of individual ethical
development and developing a model for ethical decision making at
the James B. Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership. Dr. Holmes recently completed the
traditional El Camino de Santiago pilgrimage across Northern Spain.