![]() ![]() At her APA-predoctoral internship at the University of Miami Medical Center, she worked primarily in pediatric oncology, as well as with substance-exposed infants and their mothers, adolescents with diabetes, and children suffering from trauma.ĭr. Seeking to pursue further study in clinical developmental psychology, she completed a master's in human development, certified as a school psychologist, and completed the doctorate at Bryn Mawr College’s Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. As a CPNP in the maternity ward of UC San Diego Medical Center, she provided newborn admission and discharge exams part-time while also working as a CPNP in well-baby and acute care clinics at the San Ysidro Community Health Center. After an additional year of special studies in psychology and Spanish at Stanford, she moved to San Diego with her husband. Escarce used the Brazelton Newborn Assessment to assess newborns in two hospitals in Kathmandu Nepal for her cross-cultural thesis comparing American and Nepalese “infants’ behaviors.” After graduation, she moved to Stanford University Medical Center to work as a pediatric gastroenterology clinical nurse specialist. Brazelton was studying what the infant brings to the parent-infant interaction, by studying the baby’s behavior at birth and in the first month of life. Berry Brazelton’s Child Development Unit at Boston Children’s Hospital. While at Yale, she trained in newborn assessment (BNBAS) in Dr. On returning to the USA she continued work in pediatric ICU and completed a master's degree in pediatric nursing/PNP at Yale University. At Auckland’s Greenlane Hospital she completed a year-long training in pediatric and adult cardiothoracic and vascular surgical/intensive care led by Sir Brian Barratt Boyes (who was knighted for developing the technique to make open-heart surgical repairs for infants under 10 kg possible). Inspired to combine work with travel while on a college public health nursing rotation in London, home visiting new moms and babies, she traveled to New Zealand and worked as a “sister” in neuro ICU and cardiac ICU. Escarce began her work with children as a nurse in pediatric oncology and pediatric ICU at KU Medical Center. Eileen Escarce Ph.D., M.A., M.S.N., is a licensed clinical developmental psychologist, school psychologist and pediatric nurse practitioner.ĭr. ![]()
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