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About Kimberly Werner

Dr. Kim Werner has interdisciplinary training in behavioral neuroscience psychology and addiction epidemiology with a focus on the trauma related etiology and the physiological and psychopathological sequelae following traumatic and chronic stress. She earned her doctoral degree in Behavioral Neuroscience Psychology from UMSL and completed a postdoctoral fellowship in transdisciplinary addiction research at the Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis working with the School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry. Dr. Werner is a research psychologist with research interests in addiction epidemiology and racial disparities in the biopsychosocial risk factors of SUDs. Specifically, Dr. Werner's research focuses on the operationalization of stress exposure integrating multiple levels of stress at the individual (i.e. trauma exposure, discrimination, early substance use), family (i.e. parental psychopathology and parental-offspring relationship), and community (i.e. socioeconomic and neighborhood disadvantage) levels to better understand how acute traumatic and chronic stressors impact psychopathology differentially across race. She continues to collaborate with researchers at Washington University School of Medicine and Brown School of Social Work to address these areas of research. Currently, Dr. Werner serves at Principal Investigator for the Women's Health study examining Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain in Women Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence. She is also the Project Director for Tritons United: Against Gender Based Violence a programming grant funded by the Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women and a Lead Evaluator for the Emergency Room Enhancement Project. In addition, Dr. Werner developed the Compassion Fatigue training for First Responders. Dr. Werner is working towards developing research projects and protocols as well as programming to apply her expertise in trauma/stress related etiology of substance use disorder (SUD) and psychobiological indicators of PTSD to design and implement culturally competent prevention and intervention programs for trauma, SUDs, and related psychopathology.

Positions

May 2020 - Present Associate Professor, University of Missouri-St. Louis College of Nursing
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May 2017 - May 2020 Assistant Research Professor, University of Missouri-St. Louis Missouri Institute of Mental Health
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Honors and Awards

  • 2017 Enoch Gordis Research Recognition Award for Psychosocial Research at the Research Society on Alcoholism (RSA) Scientific meeting
  • 2015, 2016, & 2017 NIAAA Junior Investigator Award for the Research Society on Alcoholism (RSA) Scientific meeting
  • NIDA Women & Sex/Gender Differences Junior Investigator Travel Award for the 2015 meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD)
  • Psychology Department Graduate Instructor Award, University of Missouri – St. Louis 2013
  • Psychology Capstone Symposium: Certificate for excellence in the field practicum, 1st Prize Saint Louis University - 2006
  • Appointment and Congressional Nomination to the United States Military Academy – West Point - 2002

Education

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2014 - 2017 Postdoctoral Fellow, Washington University in St. Louis ‐ George Warren Brown School of Social Work
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2013 PhD, Behavioral Neuroscience Psychology, University of Missouri-St. Louis ‐ Department of Psychological Sciences
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2009 MA, Experimental Psychology, University of Missouri-St. Louis ‐ Department of Psychological Sciences
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2006 BA, Saint Louis University ‐ Psychology
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Open Access Works (2)

Research Works (30)