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Camille Welcome Chamberlain

Ms Camille Welcome Chamberlain

PhD Student

Pronouns

she/her

Biography

Camille Welcome Chamberlain joined King's in October 2024 as a 0+4 iCASE student, funded by the MRC and ieso Digital Health. Her research focuses on the prediction of depression and anxiety outcomes following typed cognitive behavioural therapy and the identification of patient characteristics and therapeutic elements associated with improvement. She is supervised by Dr Ewan Carr and Professor Thalia Eley.

Prior to this, she worked in the digital mental health industry for several years as a clinical researcher, demonstrating the clinical and cost effectiveness of a technology-enabled mental health platform. She is interested in bridging the gap between academia and industry and has research collaboration experience with several institutions including UCLA, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, and Georgetown University.

Camille completed a BSc in Psychology at McGill University (2015-2018) and an MSc in Health Psychology at the University of Aberdeen (2018-2019).

Research interests

  • Digital health
  • Psychological treatment outcomes
  • Prediction modelling

Research

EDIT Lab logo 3 v.2
The Emotional Development, Interventions and Treatment (EDIT) Lab

The EDIT lab is led by Prof Thalia Eley and consists of post doctoral researchers, PhD students, and both undergraduate and masters students. We study genetic and environmental influences on the development and treatment of anxiety and depression. We are based at the SGDP Centre at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London.

Research

EDIT Lab logo 3 v.2
The Emotional Development, Interventions and Treatment (EDIT) Lab

The EDIT lab is led by Prof Thalia Eley and consists of post doctoral researchers, PhD students, and both undergraduate and masters students. We study genetic and environmental influences on the development and treatment of anxiety and depression. We are based at the SGDP Centre at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London.