Lisa A. Roth, M.D.
- Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Phone
Location
- Downtown Psychiatry 291 Broadway New York, NY 10007
Professional Interests
Lisa Roth, MD is a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center. Dr. Roth attended medical school at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, completed internship in pediatrics at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, completed residency in psychiatry at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, and completed fellowship in child and adolescent psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center. She is also a child and adolescent psychoanalytic candidate at the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. She is part of the core psychodynamic faculty at the Montefiore/Einstein Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship, where she teaches an introduction to psychodynamic principles and a case conference in psychodynamic psychotherapy and supervises fellows. She is in private practice in lower Manhattan.
Selected Publications
Roth LA. “Coronavirus has infected the internet!” The American Psychoanalyst 55 (2021): 8.
Slomiak S, Matalon D, Roth LA. “Very early-onset schizophrenia in a six-year-old boy.” American Journal of Psychiatry Residents Journal 12 (2017): 9-11.
Riley CS, Roth LA, Sampson JB, Radhakrishnan J, Herlitz LC, Blitz AM, Moazami G. “A 31-year-old man with a ring-enhancing brain lesion.” Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology 37 (2017):172-175.
Roth LA, Marra JD, LaMarca NH, Sproule DM. “Measuring disease progression in Giant Axonal Neuropathy: Implications for clinical trial design.” Journal of Child Neurology 30 (2015): 741-748.
Roth LA, Johnson-Kerner BL, Marra JD, LaMarca NH, Sproule DM. “The absence of curly hair is associated with a milder phenotype in Giant Axonal Neuropathy.” Neuromuscular Disorders 24 (2015): 48-55.
Johnson-Kerner BL, Roth LA, Greene JP, Wichterle H, Sproule DM. “Giant Axonal Neuropathy: An updated perspective on its pathology and pathogenesis.” Muscle and Nerve 50 (2014): 467-476.
Louis ED, Horn S, and Roth LA. “The Neurological Content of S. Weir Mitchell’s Fiction.” Neurology 66 (2006): 403-407.