Danielle Mosley, PsyD, is a licensed psychologist with a practice in pediatric and clinical psychology. She works with children, adolescents, and family members to provide assessment and treatment related to acute and chronic medical conditions and associated developmental, behavioral, anxiety, and mood concerns. She has experience with children across all ages and developmental levels, including infants, toddlers, and preschoolers, as well as with children who have developmental disabilities and/or physical impairments. For young children, regardless of whether or not they have a health condition, Dr. Mosley provides parent training to address concerns related to sleep, feeding/eating, toileting, fears and phobias, and disruptive behavior. She also specializes in the assessment and treatment of pediatric sleep disorders for children of all ages.
Dr. Mosley utilizes behavioral and cognitive-behavioral interventions to support healthy child development, promote positive coping and adjustment, optimize medical adherence, manage pain and anxiety, increase adaptive functioning, and improve overall health and quality of life. She offers individual therapy, family therapy, parent training, and consultation with medical and educational providers to coordinate care across multiple settings.
Dr. Mosley completed her undergraduate training at Southeast Missouri State University where she obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology. She completed her graduate training at the Georgia School of Professional Psychology at Argosy University – Atlanta and obtained a Master of Arts degree and a Doctor of Psychology degree in Clinical Psychology with a concentration in Child and Family Psychology.
Throughout graduate school, Dr. Mosley completed practicum training at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta in the Department of Neuropsychology and the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, as well as Emory Autism Center and the Fetal Alcohol and Drug Exposure Clinic at Marcus Autism Center.
Dr. Mosley completed predoctoral internship and postdoctoral fellowship training in the Pediatric Psychology Clinic and Consultation Program in the Department of Behavioral Psychology at Kennedy Krieger Institute and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Mosley completed an additional fellowship in the Department of Psychology at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. During internship and fellowship, Dr. Mosley received advanced training in the provision of pediatric psychology services to children and their families in a variety of medical settings. Her clinical responsibilities included providing inpatient consultation-liaison services, outpatient therapy, and subspecialty clinic-based services.
Dr. Mosley is a member of the Society of Pediatric Psychology and the American Psychological Association.