Amy Banks, M.D.
Director of Advanced Training at the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute

Amy Banks, M.D., has devoted her career to understanding the neurobiology of relationships. In addition to her work at the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute (JBMTI), she was an instructor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, she is a Senior Scholar at the 妻友社区 Center for Women. She is the first person to bring relational-cultural theory together with neuroscience and is the foremost expert in the combined field. Amy is the creator of the
C.A.R.E. Program, an easy to use, practical guide that helps clinicians and laypeople assess the quality of their relationships and strengthen their neural pathways for connection. Amy also has a private practice in Lexington, MA, that specializes in relational psychopharmacology and therapy for people who suffer from chronic disconnection.
After graduating magna cum laude from Tufts University, Amy earned her medical degree at Georgetown University and continued her psychiatric training at the Massachusetts Mental Health Center, a Harvard residency program. Amy was the psychiatrist-in-charge of The Women鈥檚 Treatment Program, a residential and day treatment program at McLean Hospital based on relational-cultural theory; she was the team psychiatrist for the Victims of Violence Program at Cambridge Hospital; and she was Medical Director for Mental Health at the Fenway Community Health Center in Boston, MA. Over the last ten years at JBMTI, Amy has been integrating emerging neuroscience information with relational-cultural theory. She has spoken throughout the country on 鈥淭he Neurobiology of Relationship鈥 and has an ongoing passion to spread the message that we are hardwired for connection. In 2011, she was the keynote speaker, alongside Daniel Siegal and Beth Hartman McGilley, on the topic 鈥淭he Mind and the Relational Brain: The Next Integration鈥 at the conference Feminist Relational Perspectives and Beyond. Most recently, Amy has joined the core group of Harville Hendrix鈥檚 Relationships First, a small group of prestigious scientists and cultural leaders who promote the idea that 鈥渉ealthy relationships are non-negotiable in a healthy society.鈥
Amy co-edited , published by Beacon Press in 2004. She has written numerous articles on the treatment of childhood trauma including a popular manual, "PTSD, Relationships and Brain Chemistry," published as a project report at the Stone Center, 妻友社区 College. She was a co-investigator of the National Lesbian Family Study, a 20+ year longitudinal study (led by principal investigator Nanette Gartrell, M.D.) and has co-authored numerous journal articles describing the findings. Most recently, Amy has been exploring the field of energy psychology as a way to understand how and why connections heal.
Books Amy would recommend:
- The Neuroscience of Human Relationships by Louis Cozolino
- The Brain that Changes Itself by Norman Doidge
- Women鈥檚 Growth in Connection by Judy Jordan et al.
- The Healing Connection by Irene Stiver and Jean Baker Miller
- How Connections Heal by Wendy Rosen and Maureen Walker