Robert Wicks, PsyD

Dr. Robert Wicks has spoken on his major areas of expertise—resilience, self-care, and the prevention of secondary stress (the pressures encountered in reaching out to others)—on Capitol Hill to Members of Congress and their Chiefs of Staff, led a course in resilience in Beirut for relief workers brought there from Aleppo, Syria, spoken at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, the U.S. Air Force Academy, the Mayo Clinic, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the U.S. Army Medical Command, as well as at Boston’s Children’s Hospital, Harvard Divinity School, Yale School of Nursing, Princeton Theological Seminary, and to members of the NATO Intelligence Fusion Center in England. He has also spoken at the Boston Public Library’s commemoration of the Boston Marathon bombing, addressed 10,000 educators in the Air Canada Arena in Toronto, spoken to the U.S. Army Medical Command, was the opening keynote speaker to 1,500 physicians for the American Medical Directors Association, spoken at the FBI and New York City Police and Correctional Academies, and addressed care givers in 20 different countries including: China, Vietnam, India, Thailand, Philippines, Haiti, Northern Ireland, Hungary, Guatemala, Malta, New Zealand, Australia, France, England, and South Africa.

For over 45 years, he has been called upon to speak calm into chaos by individuals and groups experiencing great stress, anxiety and confusion. Dr. Wicks received his doctorate in Psychology from Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital, is Professor Emeritus at Loyola University Maryland, and has taught in universities and professional schools of psychology, medicine, nursing, theology, education, and social work. In 2003 he was the Commencement Speaker for Wright State School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio and in 2005 was both Visiting Scholar and the Commencement Speaker at Stritch School of Medicine in Chicago. He was also closing speaker for the American Medical Association Alliance and Commencement Speaker at, and the recipient of honorary doctorates from, Georgian Court, Caldwell, and Marywood Universities.

In 1994, he was responsible for the psychological debriefing of NGOs/relief workers evacuated from Rwanda during their genocide. In 1993, and again in 2001, he worked in Cambodia with professionals from the English-speaking community who were present to help the Khmer people rebuild their nation following years of terror and torture. In 2006, he also delivered presentations on self-care at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda Maryland and Walter Reed Army Hospital to those health care professionals responsible for Iraq and Afghan war veterans. More recently he addressed U.S. Army health care professionals returning from Africa where they were assisting during the Ebola crisis.

Dr. Wicks has published over 60 books for both professionals and the general public including the bestselling Riding the Dragon (20th Anniversary Edition). His latest books with Oxford University Press include: The Simple Care of a Hopeful Heart: Mentoring Yourself in Difficult Times; Night Call: Embracing Compassion and Hope in a Troubled World; Perspective: The Calm within the Storm and Bounce: Living the Resilient Life (second edition). His books for professionals include: Overcoming Secondary Stress in Medical and Nursing Practice (second edition with Gloria Donnelly); The Resilient Clinician (second edition with Mary Beth Werdel); and The Inner Life of the Counselor. He is also Senior Co-Editor of Clinician’s Guide to Self-Renewal with Elizabeth Maynard. Dr. Wicks has received the first annual Alumni Award for Excellence in Professional Psychology from Widener University and is the recipient of the Humanitarian of the Year Award and from the American Counseling Association’s Division on Spirituality, Ethics and Religious Values. He also served as an Officer in the U.S. Marine Corps.

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