Daniel W. Klyce, PhD, LCP, ABPP, is a licensed clinical psychologist and board-certified rehabilitation psychologist. He is an associate professor (affiliate) in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Virginia Commonwealth University. Dr. Klyce is a research psychologist with the Central Virginia VA Health Care System, where he is the co-director for the Richmond Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center’s Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Model Systems project. At Sheltering Arms Institute, Dr. Klyce serves as the rehabilitation psychology advisor and supports VCU’s TBI Model Systems program, Sheltering Arms Institute’s ethics consultation service, and the psychology clinical service.
Dr. Klyce’s specialty is brain injury rehabilitation. His clinical expertise includes delirium management, neurocognitive assessment, adjustment to trauma, and interprofessional approaches to rehabilitation. His research interests include clinical measurement, supporting caregiving families, social determinants of health, and brain injury as a chronic condition among veterans and service members. Dr. Klyce serves on the boards of multiple scientific and service organizations, including the editorial board for his field’s flagship journal, Rehabilitation Psychology, and on the board of directors for both the Academy of Rehabilitation Psychology and the Brain Injury Association of Virginia.
Dr. Klyce is from Tennessee and completed undergraduate studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He completed graduate studies in clinical psychology at Purdue University and an internship in behavioral medicine at Vanderbilt University and the Tennessee Valley VA Health Care System. Dr. Klyce completed a postdoctoral fellowship in rehabilitation psychology at the University of Washington and Seattle’s Harborview Medical Center. He moved to Richmond and joined the faculty at VCU’s School of Medicine in 2013.