Dr. Kimberly T. Arnold believes that everyone deserves the opportunity to be as healthy as possible. She is a health policy and mental health services researcher, implementation scientist, public health practitioner, and Registered Yoga Teacher who specializes in advancing health equity and reducing physical and mental health disparities through community engaged research, multisector collaboration, addressing inequities in social determinants of health, and implementing and evaluating evidence-based interventions in clinical and community settings. She is currently partnering with stakeholders—including church leaders, mental health providers, mental health advocacy organizations, and policymakers—to create tiered supports for mental health in churches to prevent, manage, and treat mental illnesses and connect church members to mental health services outside of the church when needed. She is also training mental health clinicians in spiritually informed mental health care.
Dr. Arnold is an Assistant Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health with a secondary appointment in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. As an expert in health equity and community engagement, she co-directs a health equity course at Penn and co-authored a chapter entitled, “Engaging Stakeholders,” in the book, Practical Implementation Science: Moving Evidence into Action. Her work has been funded by federal agencies, including the National Institute of Mental Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration, and foundations, including the John Templeton Foundation. She is frequently invited to share her work with local, national, and international audiences virtually and in person at conferences, workshops, trainings, and other events.
Dr. Arnold grew up on a small farm in Sumter, South Carolina and witnessed the effects of racism and unaddressed trauma on the mental and physical health of members of her family and community. Her desire to address health disparities and improve the holistic health of Black people led her to study biology, African American Studies, and health as an undergraduate student at the College of Charleston. After graduating in 2012, she completed a Master’s in Public Health at the Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health and Human Rights in 2014. She then worked with churches in South Carolina as Project Coordinator for the “Faith, Activity, and Nutrition” Program at the University of South Carolina before returning to graduate school. In 2019, she earned a PhD in Health Policy and Management with a certificate in Community-Based Public Health from the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health. In 2021, she completed a National Institute of Mental Health T32 postdoctoral fellowship in implementation science, mental health services research, and academic-community partnerships at the University of Pennsylvania Center for Mental Health.
During her self-care time, she enjoys teaching and practicing yoga, exercising, spa activities, reading books, traveling, and spending time with family and friends.
If you are in crisis please dial 988 for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. Please note that ADAA is not a direct service organization. ADAA does not provide psychiatric, psychological, or medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Founded in 1979, ADAA is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to the prevention, treatment, and cure of anxiety, depression, OCD, PTSD, and co-occurring disorders through aligning research, practice and education.