Dr. Bailey is a Neuropsychologist and an Associate Professor of Neurology at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. He also serves as the Director of Neuropsychology for the Neurological Institute as well as the Director of the Concussion Management Programs for the Neurological and Sports Medicine Institutes of University Hospitals in Cleveland. Dr. Bailey is also the founding Director of the Adult Neuropsychology Post-Doctoral Fellowship Program at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center.
Dr. Bailey completed his graduate training at Penn State University before completing an internship in neuropsychology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and serving as the Chief Fellow in neuropsychology at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Dr. Bailey is board certified in Clinical Neuropsychology through the American Board of Professional Psychology.
At University Hospitals in Cleveland, Dr. Bailey has worked collaboratively with multiple departments and specialties to update, integrate, and standardize concussion management services across a large hospital system, including developing a network of multidisciplinary concussion specialists with the goal of improving concussion identification and management on and off the sports field. Clinically, he has assisted in the neuropsychological management of concussion in all contexts, including work at all levels of sport. His current clinical roles include being the neuropsychological consultant to the Cleveland Browns, the Cleveland Monsters, as well as assisting in the management of sports concussion at multiple colleges/universities, high schools, and youth sport organizations throughout northeast Ohio. Dr. Bailey also assists in the clinical management of a wide variety of neurological conditions, including patients with Memory Disorders of all kinds, patients with cognitive impairment from Parkinson's Disease and other Movement Disorders, as well as patients with memory loss from Epilepsy. Dr. Bailey is active in several national neuropsychology organizations, including being a fellow of the National Academy of Neuropsychology and the Sports Neuropsychology Society. He regularly makes invited addresses and is the principal investigator on several research projects focused on brain health. He has particular research experience in developing improved methods for identifying and treating the residual effects of concussion.