Brazelton Institute staff
J. Kevin Nugent, PhD
Founder and Director Emeritus, Brazelton Institute; NBAS and NBO Master Trainer
Dr. Nugent is a Developmental Psychologist and has spent more than 40 years teaching and conducting research on newborn behavior and early parent-infant relations at Boston Children’s Hospital. Working along with T. Berry Brazelton, he has also taught and conducted research in different settings around the world. He is co-author with Dr. Brazelton of the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS) and first author of the Newborn Behavior Observations (NBO) system Handbook with Constance Keefer, Susan Minear, Lise Johnson, and Yvette Blanchard. He is Professor Emeritus at University of Massachusetts Amherst and has been a Lecturer in Psychology at Harvard Medical School since 1981.
Lise Johnson, MD
Director, Brazelton Institute; NBO Master Trainer
Dr. Johnson is a co-author of the NBO Handbook. A general pediatrician by training, she devoted the first decade of her career to pediatric primary care. For the past 20 years she has worked as a newborn hospitalist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, where she was medical director of Well Newborn Care from 2001 through 2018. Dr. Johnson is principal investigator for the Health Resources and Services Administration-funded BabyAMOR study, a randomized controlled trial examining the impact of an NBO-based intervention to support mothers and their preterm newborns. She also chairs the board of directors for Healthy Learners, a non-governmental organization partnered with the Zambian government to implement a unique model of school-based healthcare. Dr. Johnson is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.
Beril Bayrak Bulucu, MD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Bayrak Bulucu is a pediatrician specializing in community pediatrics and parent-infant mental health. She is founder of the former Gentle Connections Clinic at Lowell Community Health Center and is the infant mental health consultant at New Beginnings NGO, a nonprofit serving traumatized children in Istanbul, Turkey.
Yvette Blanchard, ScD, PT
NBO and NBAS Master Trainer
Dr. Blanchard is a pediatric physical therapist and a co-author of the NBO Handbook. She has worked extensively with high-risk infants and children with disabilities in different clinical settings and has published numerous articles and book chapters relating to the field of pediatric physical therapy and early intervention with high-risk infants. Dr. Blanchard is Professor of Physical Therapy at Sacred Heart University.
Jessica Boyatt, PsyD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Boyatt is a Boston based clinical psychologist and neuropsychologist who also holds degrees in Latin American Studies and Photography. She is an endorsed Infant Mental Health Mentor and co-taught the psychological development course at the Infant Parent Training Institute (IPTI) for eleven years. Dr. Boyatt is part of the first cohort of NBO trainers to offer trainings in Spanish. She is also part of an NBO team working with Bridges to Moms to provide NBOs in Spanish to unhoused mothers in the first six weeks post-partum. Dr. Boyatt is the founder of Quetzalli Zephyr, a benefit company committed to equitable collaboration to create effective early relational supports. CoMadres Quetzalli, a virtual group co-created with low-income mothers in Oaxaca, Mexico, launched in January of 2024.
Claudia M. Gold, MD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Gold is a pediatrician and infant-family specialist on the faculty of the University of Massachusetts Boston Infant-Parent Mental Health Program. She is the author of four books on child development, written for both general and professional audiences.
Alexandra Harrison, MD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Harrison is Assistant Professor, part-time, in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School at the Cambridge Health Alliance. She is a training analyst in child, adolescent, and adult analysis at Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute, and chief executive of the nonprofit Supporting Child Caregivers, which provides training and mentoring for parents and other child caregivers in the U.S. and in low- to middle-income countries.
Joanna Hawthorne Amick, PhD
NBO and NBAS Master Trainer
Dr. Hawthorne Amick is a developmental psychologist. She co-founded the U.K. Brazelton Centre, where she served as Director from 1997 to 2017. She was trained in the NBAS in 1976, in the NBO in 2009 and the Brazelton Touchpoints Model in 1998 and 2014. She received an Infant Specialist certificate from the Erikson Institute, Chicago, in 1994. She has lived in the USA and UK using the NBAS and NBO with families. From 1995-2004, she was a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Family Research at the University of Cambridge, involved in studies on maternal anxiety and ultrasound scanning. She was a committee member of WAIMH UK and she is a Council Member of the Maternity and Newborn Forum, Royal Society of Medicine, London and a member of the Chicago Lying-In Hospital Board of Directors.
Constance H. Keefer, MD
NBAS and NBO Master Trainer
Dr. Keefer is a co-author of the NBO Handbook. Her career as a general pediatrician has included experience in both pediatric primary care and newborn hospital medicine. She is currently a consultant pediatrician at Boston Children’s Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital and holds the appointment of assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.
Leah Koretz, LMHC, CEIS, IMH-E
NBO Trainer
Leah is an Infant and Family Mental Health Counselor and an Infant Mental Health Clinical Mentor. She is a Certified Early Intervention Specialist and the Program Manager of Boston Children’s Hospital Early Intervention, where she has worked for the past 17 years. Leah received her Bachelor’s in Psychology from University of Rochester, and her Master’s in Mental Health Counseling from University of Massachusetts Boston. She completed a post-Master’s certificate in Infant/Parent Mental Health, also from UMass Boston. Leah is a certified NBO Specialist and served as a research therapist in the Baby AMOR study under PI Dr. Lise Johnson. Leah has always been passionate about infants, starting her career in daycare and finding an interest in early intervention working with children who have disabilities, and families with a complex range of needs. She has experience working with children 0-5 who have experienced trauma and is trained in Parent/Child Psychotherapy.
Emily Lyman, PhD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Lyman is a clinical psychologist with experience with individuals and families across the lifespan in hospital and community-based settings. She is an NBO trainer in both English and Spanish. In collaboration with the Brazelton Institute, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and the Bridges to Moms program, she provides NBO hospital and home visits to birthing persons experiencing homelessness over the first several weeks of life. Dr. Lyman is also a Touchpoints National Facilitator and trainer, with a focus on infant and early childhood mental health.
Beth McManus, PT, MPH, ScD
NBO Master Trainer
Dr. McManus is a pediatric physical therapist with deep experience in early intervention and NICU settings. She is currently a pediatric physical therapist in the NICU at Children’s Hospital Colorado. Dr. McManus is an Associate Professor at Colorado School of Public Health. As a pediatric physical therapist with doctoral training in developmental epidemiology, Dr. McManus’s research focuses on population-based health interventions for young children with developmental delays and disabilities.
Susan Minear, MD
NBO Master Trainer
Dr Minear is a co-author of the NBO Handbook. She is a newborn hospitalist at Boston Medical Center and the medical director of both the newborn nursery and of Baby Steps, an outpatient clinic for high-risk infants. Dr. Minear is a Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Boston University/Boston Medical Center.
Catalina Morales, MD
NBO Trainer
I am a colombian pediatrician graduated from the Javerian University in Bogotá, Colombia in 1994, year in which I got certified in NBAS. I’ve been working in general pediatrics for over 30 years, with special interest in growth, development and parenting. I have a project called Conosertubebe that started when I got my NBO certification in 2020, where I use the NBO to show parents their baby’s needs, strengths and challenges through home visits and online one-on-one meetings.
Carmen Rosa Noroña, LICSW, MSW, MS. Ed., IECMH-E®
NBO Trainer
Ms. Noroña is one of the developers of the Harris Professional Development Network Diversity Informed Tenets for Work with Infants Children and Families Initiative (https://diversityinformedtenets.org) and of the Boston Medical Center Family Preparedness Plan for Immigrant Families. For more than 25 years, her work has focused on areas related to the impact of trauma on IECMH; the intersection of culture, immigration, and trauma; diversity-informed reflective supervision and consultation; and on the implementation and sustainability of evidence-based practice in real world settings. She is a co-leader of the Department of Pediatrics’ Council of Social Justice, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at Boston Medical Center. She also serves as core faculty of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network’s Being Anti-Racist is Central to Trauma-Informed Care Initiative and as a member of the NCTSN Steering Committee. Ms. Noroña has adapted and translated materials for Spanish-speaking families affected by trauma and has also contributed to the literature in infant and early childhood mental health, diversity, and immigration.
Jayne Singer, PhD
NBO Trainer
Dr. Singer is an infant and early childhood mental health mentor-clinical. She is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Singer was the Founding President of the Massachusetts Association for Infant Mental Health (MassAIMH), and she is involved in advocacy work in infant and early childhood mental health in Massachusetts.
Aditi Subramaniam, LMHC, R-DMT, CEIS, IECMH-M
NBO Trainer
Ms. Subramaniam is an infant and early childhood mental health mentor-clinical. She is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Certified Early Intervention Specialist, and Registered Dance Movement Psychotherapist. She is also a Newborn Behavior Specialist in the BabyAMOR Study. As the infant and early childhood mental health partnership manager for the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (MSPCC), she leads a partnership between the MSPCC and the Massachusetts Association for Infant Mental Health (MassAIMH) focused on enhancing and supporting the infant mental health workforce with the goal of improving access to services for children age birth to 5 and their families.