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Alain Brunet

Academic title(s): 

Professor

 Alain Brunet
Contact Information
Email address: 
alain.brunet [at] mcgill.ca
Phone: 
514 761 6131 ext. 4348
Fax number: 
514 762 3049
Address: 

Douglas Mental Health University Institute Research Centre
6875 LaSalle Blvd
Perry Pavillon (E-4129)
Montreal, Quebec
H4H 1R3

Degree(s): 

Ph.D.

Areas of expertise: 

Post-traumatic stress disorder, internet and mental health, pandemics

Biography: 

As a clinical psychologist and Full Professor of Psychiatry at ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ, Dr. Brunet has been investigating the impact of trauma exposure on individuals for over 20 years, with a special focus on characterizing the risk factors and developing effective treatments for PTSD. Prof. Brunet has developed a novel treatment called reconsolidation therapy which has been used with victims of terrorism in the Bataclan (Paris, France). This treatment made the top ten discoveries list for 2008 in the magazine Québec Science. In 2001, Dr. Brunet developed the Peritraumatic Distress Inventory, or PDI, the first instrument to assess the recalled amount of distress experienced at the time of a traumatic event. The PDI is now utilized by more than 40 teams across the world and has been translated into 12 languages. Dr. Brunet is a past co-editor of the Journal of Traumatic Stress, the premier specialty journal in the field of traumatic stress. Dr. Brunet is a co-recipient of several grants from the CIHR, the IRSST, and the U.S. Army to pursue work on Reconsolidation Therapy for PTSD. In 2006, he was listed on MacLean’s annual honor roll as one of 39 Canadians who make the world a better place to live and was named "Personality of the Week" by the Montreal newspaper La Presse. In 2015 he was listed by GEO Magazine among the people who are changing our world for the better. Dr. Brunet has been a member of the CAHS (Canadian Academy of Health Sciences) since 2021. in 2016 he won the ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ Principal’s Prize for Public Outreach. 2022 he won the career award of the Canadian Psychological Association – Traumatic Stress Section. In 2023 he won the Leo-Pariseau Award. 

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