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Meet our talented Faculty! 

...Stay tuned for more!

 
Daniel Mullin, PsyD, MPH  

Daniel Mullin, PsyD, MPH, is the Director of the Center for Integrated Primary Care and a Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School.

Dr. Mullin is a clinician, educator, and researcher focused on the integration of behavioral health and primary care services. He maintains a clinical practice embedded in the Barre Family Health Center, a rural family medicine residency practice in Massachusetts. Dr. Mullin is a member of the Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers and provides training in Motivational Interviewing to healthcare providers. He is a developer of the Practice Integration Profile, a measure of the integration of behavioral and primary care services.

     
Amber Cahill, PsyD
  Amber Cahill, PsyD, is the Associate Director of the UMass Chan Center for Integrated Primary Care. She is passionate about primary care and its foundational role in caring for the health of communities; she’s provided clinical care in primary care settings since 2013. Dr. Cahill is also the Director of Behavioral Science for the Fitchburg Family Medicine Residency, where she develops and implements a behavioral science curriculum that educates resident physicians in addressing mental health, substance use, and health behavior change in primary care. Dr. Cahill completed internship training at the Battle Creek VA Medical Center in the primary care/health psychology track and went on to complete a 2-year postdoctoral fellowship at the UMass Chan Medical School in primary care, health psychology, and medical education. She earned her doctorate in clinical psychology from Adler University with a concentration in primary care and behavioral medicine.
     
 

Rachel Davis-Martin, PhD, is a clinical health psychologist providing direct patient care at Hahnemann Family Health Center. Her primary faculty appointment at UMass Chan is in the Department of Emergency Medicine and the Center for Accelerating Practices to End Suicide (CAPES), where she conducts research focused on enhancing detection of suicidality, using innovative technology to increase access to evidence-based treatments for suicide risk, and improving care transitions throughout the healthcare system. Additionally, Dr. Davis-Martin is a certified trainer in several evidence-based suicide prevention approaches, including the Stanley Brown Safety Planning Intervention and the Assessment and Management of Suicide Risk in Outpatient settings, and conducts trainings on suicide prevention across Massachusetts and nationally.

   

 

 

Dr. Deepu George, PhD, is a primary care behavioral health clinician by trade, with a passion for designing initiatives that focus on compassionately improving individual and system efficacy to deliver whole-person-centered care. Dr. Deepu is scientifically rooted in the contextual behavioral science tradition, with training in family systems and the science of community engagement and capacity building. Dr. Deepu enjoys developing strategic visions and plans that are biased toward belonging, the dignity of individuals and groups, and matters of justice. Dr. Deepu’s focus on being in the right relationships with people around him that are deep, trusting, and nourishing as that brings out the best in him, and Dr. Deepu believes in others. In all this, Dr. Deepu also nurtures a spiritual calling rooted in a faith that prioritizes loving response to the widow, the orphan, the despised, the marginalized and the foreigner. In this calling, Dr. Deepu is seeking theological training and ordination within the Episcopal church, with a strong commitment to integrate a value of being wholehearted and being a servant of love to all aspects of his work and life.

   

 

 

Shannon McCleery, PsyD, is the current Behavioral Health Postdoctoral Fellow and an Instructor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School. She will also start as the new Behavioral Science Director for the Lowell Community Health Center Family Medicine Residency in July 2026. Dr. McCleery is a clinician and educator focused on integrated behavioral health and chronic disease management. She maintains a clinical practice embedded in the Fitchburg Family Health Center, an urban family medicine residency practice in Massachusetts.

   

 

 

Dr. Serrano, PsyD, is the Chief Executive Officer of the Collaborative Family Healthcare Association, a national not-for-profit organization dedicated to promoting integrated care as the standard of care for all. He has devoted his career to working with healthcare entities to develop integrated care services through his consultation work, trainings, coaching and site leadership. Dr. Serrano's clinical and research interests center around leveraging integrated care to create access and equity for underserved populations. Among many of his media creations, in 2014 Dr. Serrano edited an e-book titled, “The Implementer’s Guide To Primary Care Behavioral Health,” a practice management handbook, which was updated with a second edition on 2024. One of Dr. Serrano's most outstanding contributions to the field of psychology has been his passion to teach and train the future Primary Care Behavioral Health (PCBH) workforce. In over 25 years of practice as a clinical psychologist he has trained hundreds of students and professionals in the practice of behavioral health consultation in primary care. Dr. Serrano is the father of three children, Emma, Sophia, & Caleb and the husband of Karen an Emergency Medicine physician. Dr. Serrano also holds an Adjunct Instructor appointment at the University of North Carolina Department of Family Medicine where he practices in the PCBH model.

 

   

 

   

Lauren Eidt Pearson, MSW, LICSW, is an Instructor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at UMass Chan Medical School and a Behavioral Health Clinician at the Barre Family Health Center. Her clinical interests include integrated behavioral health, disaster mental health, geriatric mental health, grief, and Palliative/Hospice care. Lauren received her undergraduate degree from Syracuse University and her graduate degree from Adelphi University. Outside of work, she enjoys gardening, reading, and being a therapy dog handler.

   

 

   

Tope Oluwa, MSW, LICSW, is a Behavioral Health Consultant at the Hahnemann Family Health Center, where she engages patients/families with the goal of improving their emotional well-being.  Her past/present efforts include community engagements that promote self-worth, dignity, and respect.  Tope earned both her undergraduate and graduate degrees from Springfield College in Springfield, Massachusetts.  She enjoys time with family and reading.

   

 

   

Stacy Potts, MD, MEd, is Senior Associate Dean of Graduate Medical Education and Clinical Affairs at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School and Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. She completed her undergraduate and medical degrees at the University of Vermont. She completed her Family Medicine Residency and Faculty Development Fellowship at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School. She received her Masters of Education from the University of Cincinnati. Her passion for graduate medical education has led her to multiple roles, including previous roles as Chair of the ACGME Residency Review Committee for Family Medicine and as the Writing Group Chair for the FM residency requirement revisions. She currently serves as the Vice Chair of the ACGME-International Medical Specialties Review Committee. She is a member of the AFMRD National Institute of Program Director Development Academic Council and the Director of the AAFP Chief Resident Leadership Development Program. She continues to practice full-spectrum family medicine and is a proud mother of many, enjoys quilting, and running marathons.