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Dr Martyn Baker

Contact details

Position: Senior Lecturer

Location: AE.1.08, Stratford

Telephone: +44 (0)20 8223 4411

Contact address:

School of Psychology
The University of East London
Stratford Campus
Water Lane
London
E15 4LZ

Brief biography

Dr Martyn Baker is a senior lecturer in Clinical Psychology, and although he contributes to several programmes, he works principally within the team of staff running the Doctoral Degree in Clinical Psychology. He acts as Deputy Course Director for this programme, and additionally as its Admissions Convenor. Before working at UEL, he worked at the (then) Middlesex Hospital Medical School as research assistant in cigarette smoking research, and as lecturer to medical students. He has an on-going honorary contract with City and East London Mental Health NHS Trust, working as a Clinical Psychologist within the Newham Psychological Therapies Service. He has maintained a long interest in the Psychology of Personal Constructs, using its approaches and techniques in both clinical and research contexts. Currently, his main research interest is in integration of psychology and spirituality/religion, especially Christian spirituality and religion, and he is a member of the national Steering Group of the British Association of Christians in Psychology.

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Activities and responsibilities

  • Various administrative duties within Doctoral Degree in Clinical Psychology programme
  • Member, Applied and Professional Psychology Research Group

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Areas of Interest/Summary of Expertise

  • Integration of psychology and Christian spirituality/religion
  • Clinical Psychology
    • Diversity factors in UK recruitment
    • The feminisation of the profession

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Teaching: Programmes

  • BSc (Hons) Psychology
  • Counselling Psychology postgraduate programmes
  • Doctoral Degree in Clinical Psychology

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Current research and publications

Research Open Access Repository (ROAR@UEL)

A selected list of publications by Dr Martyn Baker is available from the institutional repository of the University of East London.

Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
  1. Baker, M. (2010). A UK perspective on how the views of their local faith community and those of their mental health staff team, are experienced by Christian service-users. Journal of Psychology and Christianity, 29(3), 240–251.
  2. Kumary, A., & Baker, M. (2008). Stresses reported by UK trainee counselling psychologists. Counselling Psychology Quarterly, 21(1), 19–28. doi:10.1080/09515070801895626
Non-peer-reviewed Journal Articles
  1. Baker, M., & Caswell, R. (2010). An exploration of the factors influencing the career choice of male trainee clinical psychologists: a Q-methodological study. Clinical Psychology Forum, 214, 22–25.

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Research archive

Peer-reviewed Journal Articles
  1. Meredith, E., & Baker, M. (2007). Factors associated with choosing a career in clinical psychology: Undergraduate minority ethnic perspectives. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 14(6), 475–487. doi:10.1002/cpp.547
  2. Corstorphine, E., Waller, G., Ohanian, V., & Baker, M. (2006). Changes in internal states across the binge–vomit cycle in bulimia nervosa. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 194(6), 446–449. doi:10.1097/01.nmd.0000221303.64098.23
  3. Baker, M., & Wang, M. (2004). Examining connections between values and practice in religiously committed UK clinical psychologists. Journal of Psychology and Theology, 32(2), 126–136.
  4. Hinsby, K., & Baker, M. (2004). Patient and nurse accounts of violent incidents. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 11, 341–347. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2850.2004.00736.x
  5. Jervis, N., & Baker, M. (2004). An investigation into theory of mind task performance in children and adults with nonspecific intellectual disabilities, and its association with social abilities. Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 17(1), 49–58. doi:10.1111/j.1468-3148.2004.00172.x
  6. Martinez, S., & Baker, M. (2000). Psychodynamic and religious? Religiously committed psychodynamic counsellors, in training and practice. Counselling Psychology Quarterly, 13(3), 259–264. doi:10.1080/09515070010027607
  7. Mitchell, J., & Baker, M. (2000). Religious commitment and the construal of sources of help for emotional problems. British Journal of Medical Psychology, 73(3), 289–301. doi:10.1348/000711200160471
  8. Sood, S.M., Baker, M., & Bledin, K. (1996). Social and living skills of new long-stay hospital patients and new long-term community patients. Psychiatric Services, 47(6), 619–622.
Non-peer-reviewed Journal Articles
  1. Caswell, R., & Baker, M. (2007). Choosing to join a minority: Male clinical psychology trainees talking. Clinical Psychology Forum, 180, 17–21.
  2. Wells, J., & Baker, M. (2007). Group backing. Young Minds, 86, 28–29.
  3. Marks, L., McConnell, J., & Baker, M. (2005). Addressing dilemmas posed by too narrow a focus on postnatal depression — and why we should not stop work in this area! Community Practitioner, 78(8), 280–282.
  4. McConnell, J., Baker, M., & Marks, L. (2005). Experiencing a dilemma — health visitors’ accounts of working with postnatal depression. Community Practitioner, 78(7), 251–254.
  5. Dunn, J., & Baker, M. (2002). Formulating faith? Changes in religious schema of returned disaster relief workers. Clinical Psychology, 9, 33–36.
  6. Petrak, J., Byrne, A., & Baker, M. (2000). The association between abuse in childhood and STD/HIV risk behaviours in female GU clinic attendees. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 76, 457–461. doi:10.1136/sti.76.6.457
  7. Mullick, Y., & Baker, M. (1998). Arranged marriage and own choice marriage: A rationale for both types amongst second-generation Asian women. Clinical Psychology Forum, 118, 33–36.
  8. Myers, J., & Baker, M. (1998). Religiously committed clinical psychologists, talking. Clinical Psychology Forum, 117, 30–32.
  9. Baker, M., North, D., & Smith, D.F. (1997). Burnout, sense of coherence and sources of saluogenesis in social workers. Psychology, A Journal of Human Behavior, 34(1), 22–26.
Book Chapters
  1. Granger, E., & Baker, M. (2003). The role and experience of interpreters. In R. Tribe & H. Raval (Eds.), Working with interpreters in mental health.

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Other scholarly activities

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