Nov 2 2023

The Black Scholar Series:Dr. Inger Burnett-Zeigler (Affinity Session)

November 2, 2023

11:45 AM - 12:45 PM America/Chicago

photo of Dr. Burnett-Zeigler standing

The Affinity Session provides the opportunity for Black students, staff, and faculty to come together in community with each other and the visiting scholar to collectively reflect on their realities of being Black and in the field of psychology.

Zoom Auto Transcription is provided. If you require a Live Transcriptionist, please email Dennis Sparta (dsparta@uic.edu) or Loretta Hsueh (lhsueh@uic.edu).

Contact

Dr. Loretta Hsueh

Date posted

Aug 28, 2023

Date updated

Oct 26, 2023

Speakers

Dr. Burnett-Zeigler | Licensed Clinical Psychologist and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University

Dr. Inger Burnett-Zeigler is a licensed clinical psychologist and associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University. She has two decades of clinical experience helping people with stress, trauma, mood and anxiety conditions, and difficulty in interpersonal relationships. In her clinical practice she promotes holistic wellness through mindfulness, self-compassion and healthy behavior change. Inger’s scholarly work focuses on the role that social determinants of health play in mental illness and treatment, particularly in the Black community. She conducts community based effectiveness-implementation research that squarely centers the needs of the most underserved. Inger has written dozens of articles and other publications on mental health in the Black community and lectures widely on barriers to access and engagement in mental health treatment, mindfulness and strategies to improve mental health outcomes and participation in treatment. She is the author of the book Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen: The Emotional Lives of Black Women. Inger is an advocate for normalizing participation in mental health treatment and ensuring that all individuals have access to high-quality, evidence based mental health care. She is an active contributor to the public discourse on mental health and she has been featured in the New York Times, TIME Magazine, and Chicago Tribune. Inger received her undergraduate degree in psychology from Cornell University, her doctorate in clinical psychology from Northwestern University, and completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the VA Ann Arbor/University of Michigan. She lives in Chicago