Dr. Rebecca Rampe

Recent Publications/Appearances:

Rampe, R. (2021). A Teal C.A.R.E. approach in social class supports. In Martin, G. & Ardoin, S. Social class supports: Examples of Programs and Practices to Serve Poor & Working Class Students in Higher Education. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing.

Rampe, R. (2022). Trauma-inclusive programming practices. In Douglass, L., Threlkeld, A. & Merriwether, L. Critical approaches to trauma in adult learning: Conversations and critical reflections. Adult Higher Education Alliance Series. Information Age Publishing.

Rampe, R. & Conklin, B., (2023, October) Healing Traumatic Grief. Mental Health Monday Workshop presented virtually with UAB Arts in Medicine.

Rampe, R. (2023). 5 considerations for managing grief around the holidays. UAB Medicine Wellness Take 5 Tuesday Feature.

Rampe, R. (2024). 5 things your psychologist wants you to know about Complex PTSD and Developmental Trauma Disorder. UAB Medicine Wellness Take 5 Tuesday Feature.

Rampe, R. (2024). 5 ways to provide comfort and support for people grieving. UAB Medicine Wellness Take 5 Tuesday Feature.

Rampe, R. (2024, June). Regulate, Relate, and Reason. The Good Good Life Podcast produced by Voice of America here.

Dr. Rampe is a Clinical Psychologist and Assistant Professor at UAB in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology. She is certified in Compassionate Bereavement Care with Advanced Training for traumatic grief from the Miss Foundation. She is Phase I and Phase II trainer certified for the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT™). She is the director/creator of the Developmental Trauma and Traumatic Grief Clinic and is director/creator of the Psychologist Resident Psychotherapy Clinic. In 2024, she created the Mindfulness, Meaning, and Self-Compassion Esketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy Clinic to offer patients an opportunity to utilize dosing experiences for healing and increase various skills. She became a psychologist due to her own experience of developmental trauma motivating her to create healing spaces for adults who have had difficult childhood experiences. Her approach to therapy is integrative pulling from various models including neuroscience, polyvagal informed therapy/body-based therapies, compassion-focused, emotion-focused, and mindfulness. She recently completed Level I of the Polyvagal Equine Institute Training and hopes to offer equine-assisted psychotherapy in the future. She consults with Flo Health and was an outreach/prevention director in university counseling centers for 12 years prior to joining UAB in 2021. She is a proud member of Zeta Tau Alpha Fraternity serving in various advisor and alumnae roles while being a member of the Delta Gamma Fraternity National Organizational Equity Commission. She offers speaking/consulting topics tailoring to the needs of the organization.