Kelseanne Breder

Faculty

Kelseanne Breder Headshot

Kelseanne Breder

PhD PMHNP-BC

Clinical Assistant Professor

1 212 992 5751

433 FIRST AVENUE
NEW YORK, NY 10010
United States

Kelseanne Breder's additional information

A researcher, clinician, and educator, Kelsea Breder is passionate about understanding what makes human encounters immersive and therapeutic, especially in a competitive attention economy. Prof. Breder’s research and clinical work have focused on social presence, trust, and support in digital and in-person encounters across diverse social, educational, and clinical settings.

Breder’s work is currently funded by the GACA, a 4-year career award from HRSA to address older adults’ mental wellness in an aging society where older adult psychosocial development is influenced by omnipresent tech media and growing socioeconomic inequality. Using qualitative methods, Breder’s research has explored LGBT older adults’ maintenance of social support networks and chosen families across digital interfaces. Breder's work has also focused on low-income older adults’ experiences using telehealth to have sensitive conversations about illness. She has partnered with Center for Urban Community Services to explore factors associated with aging-in-place for older adults with lived experience of homelessness through secondary data analyses and workforce education.

Breder is currently a training candidate in psychoanalysis at New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute. This training informs her thinking about social presence in psychoanalytic contexts where the therapist’s attention is maximized but social elements are muted to create a therapeutic container where patients can develop trust and experience immersive healing.

As an educator, Breder uses film, theater, music, and history as frameworks to make subjective processes, like psychotherapy, more concrete and tangible to learners and future psychotherapeutic practitioners. Breder has taught graduate psychotherapy and case supervision, as well as undergraduate geriatrics, psychiatry, community health, and pharmacology courses. 

PhD in Nursing Informatics for Health Disparities, Columbia University
MSN, Columbia University
BS, Columbia University
BS, BA, University of Florida

Global
Community/population health
Mental health

American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
American Medical Informatics Association
American Nurses Association
American Psychiatric Nurses Association
American Psychological Association
Eastern Nursing Research Society
Sigma Theta Tau, Alpha Zeta Chapter
Sigma Theta Tau Honors Society, (Alpha Zeta Chapter)

Faculty Honors Awards

NYU Teaching Advancement Grant Awardee (2022)
Jonas Nursing Scholar (2020)
Sigma Theta Tau Alpha Zeta Chapter Research Grant Awardee (2020)
NIH T32 Predoctoral Trainee, Reducing Health Disparities through Nursing Informatics (2017-2020)
HRSA Geriatric Academic Career Awardee (2023 - 2027)

Publications

Dante Behind Bars: Incarcerated Men Reimagine the Divine Comedy at Yale Divinity School

Breder, K. (2016).

Ten-year retrospective study on the efficacy of a manual physical therapy to treat female infertility

Rice, A. D., Patterson, K., Wakefield, L. B., Reed, E. D., Breder, K., Wurn, B. F., King, C. R., & Wurn, L. J. (2015). (Vols. 21, Issues 3, pp. 36-44).
Abstract
Abstract
Background • Female infertility is a complex issue encompassing a wide variety of diagnoses, many of which are caused or affected by adhesions. Objectives • The study intended to examine the rates of successful treatment of infertile women using a protocol of manual physical therapy to address underlying adhesive disease leading to infertility. Methods • The research team designed a retrospective chart review. Setting • The study took place in a private physical therapy clinic. Participants • Participants were 1392 female patients who were treated at the clinic between the years of 2002 and 2011. They had varying diagnoses of infertility, including occluded fallopian tubes, hormonal dysfunction, and endometriosis, and some women were undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF). Intervention • All patients underwent whole-body, patientcentered treatments that used a protocol of manual physical therapy, which focused on restoring mobility and motility to structures affecting reproductive function. Outcome Measures • Improvements demonstrated in the condition(s) causing infertility were measured by improvements in tubal patency and/or improved hormone levels or by pregnancy. Results • The results included a 60.85% rate of clearing occluded fallopian tubes, with a 56.64% rate of pregnancy in those patients. Patients with endometriosis experienced a 42.81% pregnancy rate. The success rate was 49.18% for lowering elevated levels of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), with a 39.34% pregnancy rate in that group, and 53.57% of the women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) achieved pregnancy. The reported pregnancy rate for patients who underwent IVF after the therapy was 56.16%. The results also suggested that the treatment was effective for patients with premature ovarian failure (POF). Conclusion • The manual physical therapy represented an effective, conservative treatment for women diagnosed as infertile due to mechanical causes, independent of the specific etiology.

Uses of the Dramatic Arts to Teach Social Change: An Integrative Review.

Breder, K., & Moorley, C.
Abstract
Abstract
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When She Smiles with Humans in Harmony at Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Breder, K.

Calling for a trauma-aware culture in long-term care

Breder, K.

Love You Know

Breder, K.

On A Boat My Father Taught

Breder, K.

Reconsidering Empathy: An Interpersonal Approach and Participatry Arts in the Medical Humanities

Breder, K. Cao & Blinderman.

Scalpel, Sponge, Showtunes: When Doctors Moonlight as Actors

Breder, K.

UF Health Shands Arts in medicine Program helps patients forget about pain for a while

Breder, K.

Media