Community Academic Profiles
View Larger

Key Documents

Bruce Arnow, Ph.D.

Academic Appointments

Contact Information

  • Clinical Offices
    Psychiatry Department 401 Quarry Rd MC 5722 Stanford, CA 94305
    Tel Work (650) 498-9111
  • Academic Offices
    Personal Information
    Email
    Not for medical emergencies or patient use

Professional Snapshot

Clinical Focus

  • Depression, Unipolar
  • Psychology
  • Evidence-Based Psychotherapy

Administrative Appointments

  • Director, Behavioral Medicine Clinic, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (1985 - present)
  • Chief, Adult Outpatient Clinics, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (2000 - 2006)
  • Chief, Psychology Service, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (1992 - present)
  • Director of Psychology Training, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (1992 - present)
  • Co-Director of Clinical Training, PGSP/Stanford Psy.D. Consortium, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (2006 - present)
  • View All 6administrative appointments of Bruce Arnow

Professional Education

Board Certification: Psychology, (1986)
Fellowship: Stanford University School of Medicine, CA (1985)
PhD Training: Stanford University School of Medicine, CA (1984)
Ph.D: Stanford University, Counseling Psychology (1984)

Industry Relationships

Stanford is committed to ethical and transparent interactions with our industry partners. It is our policy to disclose payments of $5,000 or more, equity valued at $5,000 or more in a publicly traded company, or any equity in a privately held company, to physicians and scientists employed by Stanford University from companies or other commercial entities with which they interact as part of their professional activities. View Full Information

Consulting:Furtado, Jaspovice & Simons--Hayward, CA

Scientific Focus

Research Interests

Current research interests include treatment outcome for major depression, particularly chronic forms of major depression, as well as mediators and moderators of outcome; the epidemiology of chronic pain and depression; relationships between child maltreatment and adult sequelae, including psychiatric, medical and health care utilization; and the relationship between brain activation and sexual response in men and women.

Stanford Medicine Resources:

Footer Links: