S. Megan Berthold, Ph.D., LCSW

Associate Professor and Director of Field Education University of Connecticut School of Social Work

  • Hartford CT

Prof. Berthold's clinical and research expertise is with refugee and asylum seeking survivors of torture and the Cambodian genocide.

Contact

University of Connecticut

View more experts managed by University of Connecticut

Biography

S. Megan Berthold has many years of experience conducting forensic evaluations, providing psychotherapy, and conducting research with diverse torture survivors. She has served as an expert witness in many of their asylum hearings and Co-Chairs the US National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs' Research and Data Project. Her research with Cambodian genocide survivors in the United States addresses health intervention and behavior change in a population with enormous health disparities and extremely high rates of comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, diabetes, hypertension, and history of stroke. It has implications for prevention of comorbid complex health problems in newer arriving refugee groups. She collaborates with an interdisciplinary team of researchers and community leaders and organizations to promote increased health and the management of chronic conditions. Team members come from the School of Social Work (Berthold), School of Pharmacy (Buckley), the UConn Health Center (Wagner), Khmer Health Advocates (a Connecticut community based non-profit serving Cambodian Americans for over 30 years and the leading agency of the National Cambodian American Health Initiative), and the Cambodian Diabetes Association (in Siem Reap, Cambodia).

Areas of Expertise

Trauma and Recovery
refugees and asylum seekers
vicarious trauma and resilience
human rights approach to social work
co-ocurring health and mental health conditions post torture and genocide

Education

University of California - Los Angeles

Ph.D.

Social Welfare

1988

University of Utah

M.S.W.

Clinical Social Work & Health and Mental Health

1988

Harvard-Radcliffe College

B.A.

Government

1984

Affiliations

  • Editorial Advisory Board, Torture Journal (2016-present)
  • Co-Chair Research & Data Project, National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs (2008-present)
  • Subject Matter Expert (appointed), International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT) Data and Research Methods Reference Group (2018-2021).

Accomplishments

2017 Light of Liberty Award

Awarded by the Pennsylvania Immigration Resource Center (PIRC) to the University of Connecticut Immigration Detention Service Project that I co-organized for outstanding pro bono service to immigrants in detention.

Media Appearances

UConn ‘angels’ bring legal, mental health aid to asylum-seekers.

UConn Today  

2019-07-24

An article about the June 2019 UConn detention center project that Dr. Berthold participated in. She was one of the organizers of this project that brought a team of social work and law faculty, law students, and alum to two detention centers in Pennsylvania to work with asylum seekers. Dr. Berthold conducted forensic evaluations in a detention center for families and in one for single adults.

View More

When It Comes To Trauma, Who Helps The Helpers?

WNPR  online

2018-09-25

We talk with Dr. Megan Berthold, professor of social work at UConn, about the often-unrecognized "secondary" trauma that first responders, journalists, and aid workers, among others, sometimes experience in working closely with victims of trauma...

View More

Fleeing violence, asylum-seekers rely on psychologists to back up their story

STAT  online

2017-01-25

“The judge was very interested in certain details of the experience, like exactly how many men raped her, and what color was the wall,” recalled Megan Berthold, who was then a clinical social worker at the Program for Torture Victims in Los Angeles...

View More

Show All +

Articles

Remote Peer Learning Between US and Cambodian Lay Health Workers to Improve Outcomes for Cambodians with Type 2 Diabetes: a Pilot Study

International Journal of Behavioral Medicine

2020

This paper reports a single-group, pre-post pilot of a peer-learning intervention between community health workers (CHWs) in the USA and Village Health Support Guides (Guides) in Cambodia to improve outcomes for Cambodians with type 2 diabetes (T2D).

View more

The complex care of a torture survivor in the United States

Journal on Rehabilitation of Torture Victims and Prevention of Torture

2020

Torture is an assault on the physical and mental health of an individual, impacting the lives of survivors and their families.The survivor’s interpersonal relationships, social life, and vocational functioning may be affected, and spiritual and other existential questions may intrude. Cultural and historical context will shape the meaning of torture experiences and the aftermath.

View more

Integrated health care and mHealth: A model of care for refugees with complex health conditions.

Social Work in Public Health

Loomis, A. M., Berthold, S. M., Buckley, T., Wagner, J., & Kuoch, T.

2019

High rates of comorbid physical and mental health conditions are documented among refugee populations. A dearth of evidence exists on the use of mHealth technologies to support integrated health care models, with interprofessional mental and physical healthcare teams, within the field of refugee health, despite the potential for mHealth technologies to reduce barriers to health care access for vulnerable populations. This conceptual article illustrates how mHealth can facilitate integrated health care models with refugees with comorbid conditions. Implications are made to support the application of mHealth technologies within integrated health care models serving at-risk refugee populations.

View more

Show All +