NIH Record - National Institutes of Health

UW’s Walters Selected to Lead Tribal Health Research Office

Dr. Karina Walters
Dr. Karina Walters

Dr. Karina Walters, an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, has been named director of NIH’s Tribal Health Research Office (THRO). She succeeds Dr. David Wilson, who is on assignment to the White House Council on Native American Affairs. Walters began her new role as THRO director on Apr. 24. 

A social epidemiology and health prevention scholar, she currently is a tenured full professor and the Katherine Hall Chambers scholar at the University of Washington (UW) School of Social Work. She also serves as an adjunct professor in the department of global health and the School of Public Health and is the founding director of the UW Indigenous Wellness Research Institute. 

Prior to her current positions, Walters served from 2012 to 2019 as associate dean for research at UW School of Social Work, overseeing and assisting faculty in generating $20 million to $30 million in grants annually.

Walters will work to advance initiatives to ensure tribally informed biomedical and behavioral research, enhance NIH’s tribal consultation and tribal engagement efforts and coordinate American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) research and research-related activities across NIH and with other federal entities. 

She has more than 28 years of AI/AN health research experience, encompassing foundational science, disease prevention, health promotion and intervention research. She has conducted social epidemiological research on the environmental, historical, social and cultural determinants of health and health equity in AI/AN communities as well as designed and empirically tested, tribally derived chronic disease prevention interventions. 

“[Dr. Walters’s] wealth of experience and deep commitment to engaging tribal leadership in health research efforts makes her ideally suited for the position,” noted Dr. Lawrence Tabak, performing the duties of NIH director, announcing the appointment. “Her commitment to community-based participatory research is evident in her demonstrated ability to sustain collaborations with diverse Native communities and conduct successful randomized clinical trials in tribal communities.”

Much of Walters’s early social epidemiological research involved LGBT, Two Spirit and urban AI/AN populations across the United States. Additionally, she has conducted tribal-based intervention research in the areas of substance use disorders, obesity prevention and physical activity promotion, diabetes and depression, and HIV prevention. 

Walters has served as principal investigator or co-investigator on 35 awards from multiple NIH institutes. 

She is the first American Indian fellow inducted into the American Academy of Social Welfare and Social Work.

Walters earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology and an M.S.W. and a Ph.D. in social welfare, all from the University of California, Los Angeles. 

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