The TAG Center provides evidence-based assessment and treatment for children and adolescents, ages 0 to 21, who have experienced any form of trauma and/or the death of a loved one.
Using state-of-the-art screening tools, the TAG Center ensures that youth receive the most appropriate and effective treatments.
We spend time continuously learning about the individual child, their circumstances, and their progress throughout treatment.
Each child or teen receives thorough, evidence-based treatment that is appropriately and effectively tailored to their specific needs and strengths.
We offer training and workshops in a variety of trauma and grief-related topics for different audiences.
Julie Kaplow, PhD, ABPP, is a licensed clinical psychologist, board certified
in Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology. Dr. Kaplow serves as Executive
Director of the Trauma and Grief Centers at the Children’s Hospital
New Orleans and The Hackett Center for Mental Health in Houston. She is
also Professor of Psychiatry at Tulane University School of Medicine.
In these roles, she oversees the development and evaluation of novel treatments
for traumatized and bereaved youth and disseminates trauma- and bereavement-informed
“best practices” to community providers nationwide. Following
Hurricane Harvey, Dr. Kaplow and her team provided evidence-based risk
screening and interventions to children and families adversely affected
by Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath. She also helped to establish the
Santa Fe Resiliency Center following the Santa Fe High School shooting
in Texas, where her clinicians have provided evidence-based assessment
and treatment to families impacted by the shooting. A strong proponent
of a scientist-practitioner approach, Dr. Kaplow’s primary research
interests focus on the behavioral and psychological consequences of childhood
trauma and bereavement, with an emphasis on therapeutically modifiable
factors that can be used to inform interventions. She has published widely
on the topics of childhood trauma and grief, with over 85 peer-reviewed
publications and book chapters. She is lead author of Multidimensional
Grief Therapy, co-author of Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents,
and co-author of Collaborative Treatment of Traumatized Children and Teens:
The Trauma Systems Therapy Approach. Dr. Kaplow has served as a consultant
to the DSM-5 Sub-Work Groups on Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder
and Prolonged Grief Disorder, the ICD-11 Work Group on Disorders Associated
with Stress (PTSD and Prolonged Grief), the National Academy of Medicine
(Scientific Advisory Council on Child Death), and the Mass Violence and
Children Working Group of the FBI. Prior to joining CHNOLA, Dr. Kaplow
served as Chief of Psychology and Vice Chair for Behavioral Health in
the Department of Pediatrics at Texas Children’s Hospital/Baylor
College of Medicine. Dr. Kaplow received her BA in Psychology from the
University of Michigan and her PhD in Clinical Psychology from Duke University.
She completed her internship at Boston Children’s Hospital/Harvard
Medical School followed by postdoctoral training at the Center for Medical
and Refugee Trauma at Boston Medical Center.
Click here for a resource on how to help children understand and cope with mass casualty events. Our TAG Center is ready to step in and assist children and families who have lost loved ones or are experiencing acute trauma/PTSD.