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Philip G. Ney, M.D., M.A., FRCP(C), FRANZCP, RPsych,
was raised in Canada , graduated in medicine from
The University of British Columbia and trained as a child psychiatrist
and child psychologist at McGill University , University of
London and the University of Illinois . He taught in five universities
in four countries and has been hospital and university department
chairman
As an academic and clinician of more than thirty five years,
he has done research into child abuse for more than thirty years
and has authored or co-authored 66 scientific papers and 7 books.
In his early research retired Professor Ney became increasingly
aware of the reciprocal connection between child abuse and abortion.
More recently he has studied children who are the survivors
of abortion. He is conducting therapeutic groups for men and
women abused as children in private practice in Victoria BC.
From that experience, a book, "Ending the Cycle of
Abuse: The Stories of Women Abused as Children and the Group
Therapy Techniques that Helped Them Heal" has been
published by Brunner/Mazel (Taylor & Francis), New York.
As a semi-retired professor, Philip Ney is currently researching
the effects of various kinds of pregnancy losses on women's
physical and mental health. With wife Dr. Marie Peeters-Ney,
Philip conducts training sessions world-wide. He teaches the
Hope Alive group counselling method at Mt Joy College and caters
to scientific and lay audiences in many countries. This counselling
process is specifically designed to reach adults who suffer
from the combined deeply damaging effects of childhood mistreatment
and pregnancy losses. A book describing the theory of the Hope
Alive method, Deeply Damaged, was recently released
by Pioneer Publishing, Victoria. An online
course based on his research articles and his book Deeply
Damaged is now available.
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