

Dale Peeples, MD

Sameera Azeem, MD, MPH

Richard Camino, MD

Dennis Dorf, DO
Dennis Dorf, DO, MPH is a board-certified psychiatrist and pediatrician, specializing in child and adolescent psychiatry. Dr. Dorf completed both his general psychiatry residency and child and adolescent psychiatry fellowship at the Medical College of Georgia (MCG) via the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology (ABPN)’s Post Pediatric Portal Psychiatry Pathway, serving as Chief Portal Resident and Chief Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Fellow in his final year.
Prior to his psychiatry training, Dr. Dorf completed a pediatrics residency at the Children's Hospital at Downstate-University Hospital at Brooklyn, where he developed a focus for developmental and behavioral pediatrics, community adolescent mental health, and child advocacy. He earned his medical degree from the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine and holds a Master of Public Health with an Advanced Graduate Certificate in Health Communications from Stony Brook University's School of Medicine and the Center for Communicating Science.
Dr. Dorf’s clinical experience includes serving as Director and Division Chief of the Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry at NYC Health + Hospitals, where he established a coordinated, comprehensive collaborative emergency psychiatric care program (mini-CPEP) integrating the Pediatric Emergency Room, Pediatric Outpatient Clinic, and Behavioral Health Clinic. In this role, he provided consult and liaison psychiatric emergency services for complex pediatric patients. He has also been recognized for outstanding patient care by both NYC Health + Hospitals and the Kaiser Permanente Executive Leadership Offices during his tenure as a pediatrician.
Dr. Dorf’s scholarly work includes publications on media effects on psychogenic illness, a featured book review in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, and quality improvement initiatives focused on judicious use of antipsychotics, and care for youth with autism and developmental delays. His professional interests include medical education and expanding psychiatric access to rural communities in Georgia. Dr. Dorf is a recipient of the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and has been recognized for his commitment to community service. He is a member of AACAP and the AOA.
In addition to psychiatric outpatient treatment, Dr. Dorf is delighted to be working with the Emergency Psychiatry Service as an on-site consultant for children, adolescents, and young adults in need of behavioral health crisis interventions and stabilization.

Christopher F. Drescher, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Health Behavior and a licensed psychologist in the state of Georgia. He completed his predoctoral internship and postdoctoral fellowship through the Department of Psychiatry and Health Behavior at Âé¶ą´«Ă˝Ół». He received his PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Mississippi and his BA in psychology from West Virginia University. Clinically, Dr. Drescher specializes in psychotherapy with children, adolescents, and young adults.
He directs the Dialectical Behavior Therapy Adolescent Skills Group, and frequently implements Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for mood and anxiety disorders. He also serves as a mental health consultant for the Medical College of Georgia Cystic Fibrosis Center. He is a regular volunteer at the Equality Clinic of Âé¶ą´«Ă˝Ół». He is a member of the American Psychological Association and the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science. He teaches the Essential of Clinical Medicine Problem-Based Learning seminar for second year medical students.
His publications span a range of topics; current research interests include positive youth development, clinician burnout, LGBT health, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, and the effects of fitness/exercise on mental health and cognition.


Dr. Eric Lewkowiez is an assistant professor in the Division of Child, Adolescent and Family Psychiatry. He received his MD degree from the University of South Carolina and an MS in Microbiology and Immunology from the Medical University of South Carolina. He completed a General Psychiatry Residency and Child and Adolescent Fellowship at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.
Dr. Lewkowiez came to MCG in 2003, after 3 years of private practice in Columbia, S.C. He is certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc., in both adult and child and adolescent psychiatry. Dr. Lewkowiez was recently appointed Associate Dean in the Office of Student and Multicultural Affairs. He functions primarily as the rotation director of the Community Psychiatry Rotation in the second year. His teaching areas include Basic Pediatric Psychopharmacology, Advanced Pediatric Psychopathology, Development, and ADHD.
Dr. Lewkowiez's clinical areas of interest include ADHD, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, and Mood Disorders. He is also very interested in medical student and resident education and advocating for children. Dr. Lewkowiez is currently president of the Georgia Council for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and serves on the Committee on Residents and Students for the Georgia Psychiatric Physicians Association.

P. Alex Mabe received his doctoral degree in clinical psychology from Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida. Currently, he is professor, Director of Psychology Residency and Postdoctoral Training, and Chief of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry and Health Behavior at the Georgia Health Sciences University. Dr. Mabe is currently the principal investigator for the MCG-VAMC Consortium-Psychology Workforce Development program, Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, Graduate Psychology Education Program, having successfully obtained grant awards on this project since 2002.
His publications include over 60 articles in the areas of clinical child and pediatric psychology as well as other mental health care issues. He is a member of the American Psychological Association and a Fellow of the Georgia Psychological Association. He has been a reviewer for 13 professional journals and has made numerous presentations at national and international professional meetings on topics related to children's mental health, family and parent management training, and the recovery model of mental health services. Dr. Mabe is licensed as a psychologist in Georgia and South Carolina and has been providing clinical psychology services to children and their families in the Central Savannah River Area for 30 years including extensive work with military families on assignment at Fort Gordon, Georgia.
His current research interests include parenting and child treatment services. In addition he is the team leader of Project GREAT (Georgia Recovery-Based Educational Approach to Treatment) that has been developing innovative approaches to transforming an academic psychiatry department to a Recovery model of care. Project GREAT was the recipient of the American College of Psychiatrists' annual award for Creativity in Psychiatric Education in 2012.


Dr. Sandra Sexson graduated from the University of Mississippi College of Medicine and completed postgraduate
training in Child Development and Pediatrics (University of Mississippi), General
Psychiatry (University of Texas at San Antonio) and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
(Washington University in St. Louis). She served as Chief of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry and Training Director at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio and for
20 years at Emory University. She is board certified in Psychiatry and Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry. Her primary professional focus has been in psychiatric education
with a clinical and research focus in education and clinical areas of interest.
Dr. Sexson is an active leader in psychiatric education in the United States. She
has served in her career in leadership roles in many of the major psychiatric organizations.
Some of these positions include: President of both the American Association of Directors
of Psychiatric Training and the American Association of Directors of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry; a member of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)
and Psychiatry ACGME Review Committee, including serving as both its Vice-Chair and
Chair; and a team leader in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry for the American Board
of Psychiatry and Neurology, as well as a member of various test development committees,
and as a senior examiner in both Psychiatry and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
Additionally, Dr. Sexson has been an active leader in the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) as an officer and through extensive work with Education
and Training, as well as Lifelong Learning. She has worked with the American College
of Psychiatrists (ACPsych) where she has served on the Board and as both the former
Editor-in-Chief of PRITE, the psychiatry in-training examination and the founding
editor of the CHILD PRITE, the child psychiatry in-training examination and presently
as the chair of the Board for the PIPE, the psychiatry in practice exam. Dr. Sexson
also has served as the psychiatric consultant to medical education in Singapore with
ACGME-International and as a part of a consultant medical specialty group, again representing
psychiatry, to Qatar as their postgraduate medical education programs prepare to apply
for accreditation to ACGME-International. Presently she serves on the Medicine Based
Specialties Review Committee for the ACGME-International. She has served on the international
medical specialties review committee for the ACGME- International. She has published
over 50 articles, 12 chapters and one book.
Dr. Sexson has been awarded many regional and national awards. Some include Atlanta’s
Black Psychiatrist of the Year (for her efforts in expanding the number of African
American child and adolescent psychiatrists in Georgia), as well as numerous local
and regional teaching awards. Within AACAP she has received the Mentorship Award,
the most prestigious Catcher in the Rye Award three times, and most recently the Virginia
Q Anthony Woman Leader of the Year in 2018. Other education awards include the American
College of Psychiatrists Bowis Award and in 2017 she was the Vestermark Award winner
from the American Psychiatric Association which “recognizes excellence, leadership,
and creativity in the field of psychiatric education.” As an educator, she has trained
well over 100 child and adolescent psychiatrists just here in Georgia, many of whom
still practice here, including one who is presently the first African American woman
to be president of the American Medical Association. Her goal always has been to
expand access to excellent mental health care to children and their families wherever
they may live. During her time at Emory she was the Director of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry at Grady Memorial Hospital where she moved outpatient services into the
community through a Medicaid waiver to provide psychiatric services within selected
Atlanta City Schools.
Dr. Sexson’s focused clinical interests have been in the areas of infant psychiatry and emotional issues of children and adolescents with chronic medical illnesses, although her practice runs the full gamut of child and adolescent psychiatry. She has been named annually to the prestigious lists of America’s Top Doctors and Top Psychiatrists in America since 2005 and Best Doctors in America since 2008. In 2018 she received the Castle Connolly Exceptional Woman in Medicine Award and, in 2019, she was named as one of the Top 1% of America’s Most Honored Professionals. In 2021 Dr. Sexson received the Marquis Who’s Who Albert Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award along with their America’s Top Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Professionals.

Ryan Shuler, DO
