
Martin Douglas Ris
Child & Adolescent Psychology
Professor and Head, Section of Psychology, Dept. of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine; Chief of the Psychology Service, Texas Children's Hospital
Join to View Full Profile
6701 Fannin Street, CC1630Texas Children's HospitalHouston, TX 77030
Phone+1 832-822-3730
Martin Douglas Ris is on Doximity
As a Doximity member you'll join over two million verified healthcare professionals in a private, secure network.
- Gain access to free telehealth tools, such as our “call shielding” and one-way patient texting.
- Connect with colleagues in the same hospital or clinic.
- Read the latest clinical news, personalized to your specialty.
Publications & Presentations
PubMed
- 15 citationsAdaptive functioning in pediatric brain tumor survivors: An examination of ethnicity and socioeconomic status.Kimberly P. Raghubar, Jessica Orobio, M. Douglas Ris, Andrew M. Heitzer, Alexandra K. Roth
Pediatric Blood & Cancer. 2019-09-01 - 11 citationsDose–volume metrics and their relation to memory performance in pediatric brain tumor patients: A preliminary studyKimberly P. Raghubar, Michael Lamba, Kim M. Cecil, Keith Owen Yeates, E. Mark Mahone
Pediatric Blood & Cancer. 2018-09-01 - 22 citationsPredictors of adaptive functioning and psychosocial adjustment in children with pediatric brain tumor: a report from the Brain Radiation Investigative Study Consortium.Kristen E. Robinson, Kelly R. Wolfe, Keith Owen Yeates, E. Mark Mahone, Kim M. Cecil
Pediatric Blood & Cancer. 2015-03-01
Journal Articles
- Dose–Volume Metrics and Their Relation to Memory Performance in Pediatric Brain Tumor Patients: A Preliminary StudyKimberly P Raghubar, M Douglas Ris, Christina Limke, David Grosshans, E Mark Mahone, Pediatric Blood & Cancer
Grant Support
- Adult Neurobehavioral LATE Effects Of Pediatric Low Grade Brain TumorsNational Cancer Institute2009–2011
- Neurobehavioral Late-Effects In Pediatric Brain TumorsNational Cancer Institute2009–2010
- Neurobehavioral Late-Effects In Pediatric Brain TumorsNational Cancer Institute2005–2008
- Early Exposure To LEAD And Adult Antisocial OutcomeNational Institute Of Environmental Health Sciences2001–2002
Viewing the full profile is available to verified healthcare professionals only.
Find your profile and take control of your online presence: