Full Name
Kimberly Kalupa PhD
Job Title
Manager of Behavioral Health/Clinical Psychologist
Company
UNMMG Truman Health
Speaker Short Bio
Dr. Kalupa is a licensed clinical psychologist with strong interests in health psychology and trauma. She has extensive experience working in a variety of medical settings, both in and outpatient, and specializes in integrated care. She earned a Ph.D. in Medical/Clinical Psychology from the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences, completed a health psychology internship (University of Florida) and a post-doctoral fellowship in Clinical Health Psychology (Minneapolis VA Medical Center).
She is currently working at UNM Medical Group Truman Health Services as the Manager of Behavioral Health. She manages a multidisciplinary team of BH care providers and provides integrated behavioral health care to patients who are living with HIV and/or are seeking gender affirming care. She provides direct patient care and consultation to serve our highly diverse patient population and she also supervises clinical psychology interns. Working within our NCQA (with Behavioral Health Distinction) Patient Centered Medical Home model allows our team to provide compassion care to our patients that are managing acute and chronic illnesses and that may face significant stigma and other social barriers to accessing care.
She is currently working at UNM Medical Group Truman Health Services as the Manager of Behavioral Health. She manages a multidisciplinary team of BH care providers and provides integrated behavioral health care to patients who are living with HIV and/or are seeking gender affirming care. She provides direct patient care and consultation to serve our highly diverse patient population and she also supervises clinical psychology interns. Working within our NCQA (with Behavioral Health Distinction) Patient Centered Medical Home model allows our team to provide compassion care to our patients that are managing acute and chronic illnesses and that may face significant stigma and other social barriers to accessing care.
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