Dr. Karen L. Weihs, MD
Adolescent Psychiatrist | Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ, 85724About
Dr. Karen Weihs practices Child & Adolescent Psychiatry in Tucson, AZ. Dr. Weihs evaluates patients throughout childhood and adolescence using many different procedures, in order to determine what treatments must be carried out in order to properly assess their symptoms. Child & Adolescent Psychiatrists are trained and certified to administer psychotherapy, medication, and many other means of treatment. Dr. Weihs seeks to improve each patients quality of life.
Education and Training
Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine Medical Degree 1979
Board Certification
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN)
American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) 1982 to 2018
Family MedicineAmerican Board of Family MedicineABFM
Psychiatry and NeurologyAmerican Board of Psychiatry and NeurologyABPN
Provider Details
Dr. Karen L. Weihs, MD's Expert Contributions
Should I see a psychologist for low self esteem?
Hello, Low self esteem can interfere with taking steps to meet your goals in life and can generate substantial emotional distress. You could likely benefit from treatment with a counselor - psychologist, licensed counselor, among others. READ MORE
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Can addressing family relationships improve outcomes in chronic disease? Report of the National Working Group on Family-Based Interventions in Chronic Disease.
- Continuation phase treatment with bupropion SR effectively decreases the risk for relapse of depression.
- The effects of age and emotional acceptance on distress among breast cancer patients.
- Naturalistically observed swearing, emotional support, and depressive symptoms in women coping with illness.
- Considerations of culture and social class for families facing cancer: the need for a new model for health promotion and psychosocial intervention.
- "Like a Mexican wedding": psychosocial intervention needs of predominately Hispanic low-income female co-survivors of cancer.
- Un Abrazo Para La Familia: providing low-income Hispanics with education and
- Cardiac vagal control as a prospective predictor of anxiety in women diagnosed with breast cancer.
- Linguistic indicators of patient, couple, and family adjustment following breast cancer.
- Information and support for co-survivors during or after cancer treatment: Consideration of Un Abrazo Para la Familia as a model for family-focused intervention in cancer rehabilitation.
- Cancer conversations in context: naturalistic observation of couples coping with breast cancer.
- The Interplay of Stress and Attachment in Individuals Weathering Loss of Employment.
- A longitudinal examination of re-employment quality on internalizing symptoms and job-search intentions.
- Affective agnosia: Expansion of the alexithymia construct and a new opportunity to integrate and extend Freud's legacy.
- Feasibility of Cognitively-Based Compassion Training (CBCT) for breast cancer survivors: a randomized, wait list controlled pilot study.
Faculty Titles & Positions
- Professor of Psychiatry University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson -
- Associate Professor of Family and Community Medicine University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson -
Awards
- The Outstanding Clinical Care Award 2008 American Psychosocial Oncology Society
- Who’s Who Among Executives and Professionals “Honors Edition” 2009
- Senior Women’s Health Scholar, Women’s Center of Excellence 2009 University of Arizona
Treatments
- Bipolar Disorder
- Anxiety
- Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (adhd)
- Adjustment Disorder
Fellowships
- University of Wisconsin child and adolescent psychiatry 1991
Fellowships
- University of Wisconsin
Dr. Karen L. Weihs, MD's Practice location
Tucson, AZ 85724Get Direction
Tucson, AZ 85713Get Direction
Dr. Karen L. Weihs, MD's reviews
Write ReviewMedia Releases
Get to know Psychiatrist Dr. Karen L. Weihs, who serves patients in Arizona.
As a trusted and sought-after psychiatrist, Dr. Weihs is committed to treating each patient with respect and compassion. She is a Comprehensive Member & the Coordinator of Psychosocial Support and PsychoOncology Services for the Arizona Cancer Center.
As such, she has an ongoing program of psychosocial intervention research, where she also has an active clinical practice of psychiatric care for cancer patients embedded with the multidisciplinary team. She collaborates with intervention scientists to test innovative approaches to psychosocial interventions for breast cancer patients. She has conducted three prospective longitudinal studies to determine the impact of emotional and interpersonal processes on medical, psychiatric, functional, and quality of life outcomes in breast cancer patients. These studies enrolled 179, 140, and 460(two sites) subjects with multiple occasions of in depth data collection over 1 – 3 years with seven year follow-up for disease outcomes.
Advancing medicine through academics and excellent patient care, Dr. Weihs holds privileges at Banner – University Medical Center South & Banner – University Medical Center Tucson. At the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, she serves as a Professor of Psychiatry and as an Associate Professor of Family and Community Medicine.
At the start of her academic career, Dr. Weihs graduated with her medical degree from Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine in 1979. She then went on to perform her residencies in family medicine at WellSpan York Hospital and Hunterdon Medical Center. This was followed working as a faculty person in Family Medicine at Brown University where she studied improved approaches to teaching interviewing skills to physicians. She then undertook a residency in psychiatry and a fellowship in child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin in 1989 and 1991, respectively.
With over four decades of experience, she is board-certified in psychiatry & hospice and palliative medicine by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (ABPN). The ABPN is a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to serving the professions of psychiatry and neurology.
Furthermore, she was board-certified in family medicine by the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) from 1982 to 2018. The ABFM is a non-profit, independent medical association of American physicians who practice in family medicine and its sub-specialties.
Dr. Weihs’ research focuses on family processes and emotion regulation as they affect both mental health and disease progression in patients with cancer and end stage renal disease. She has written and lectured widely on family influences on medical illness.
Additionally, she is an experienced psychopharmacology researcher, focusing on pharmacologic interventions for anxiety and depressive disorders in children, adolescents, and adults. At the Center for Family Research, she collaborated on prevention studies of children of depressed parents and children in families stressed by parental unemployment. Her research included a longitudinal study of marital quality in breast cancer patients, examining oxytocin as a mediator of the salutary effects of close personal relationship on disease progression. This was a five-year study funded by the Army Medical Research Program in Breast Cancer Research.
Psychiatry is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of mental disorders. These include various maladaptations related to mood, behavior, cognition, and perceptions. Psychiatrists evaluate, diagnose, and treat patients with mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders. They conduct thorough psychiatric evaluations, develop treatment plans, prescribe medication, and evaluate treatment results.
Among Dr. Weih’s awards and honors include: The Outstanding Clinical Care Award, American Psychosocial Oncology Society, 2008; Who’s Who Among Executives and Professionals “Honors Edition”, 2008-2009; and Senior Women’s Health Scholar, Women’s Center of Excellence, University of Arizona, 2009.
Recommended Articles
- Separation Anxiety in Children: Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis and More
It’s normal for young children to feel anxious when they're separated from a loved one. However, when this fear occurs in a child above six years of age, is intense, and persists for more than four weeks, the child may have separation anxiety disorder.What is Separation Anxiety Disorder?Separation...
- What Is Disorganized Schizophrenia?
Schizophrenia is a serious mental disorder involving a breakdown that drastically affects how a person thinks, feels, and behaves. The disorder has five subtypes, one of which is disorganized schizophrenia. Its very name implies the typical and predominant characteristics by which it is identified:...
- Learning About the Beck Depression Inventory
Depression and AnxietyDepression and anxiety are disorders that are different from each other, but people suffering from depression often have symptoms that closely resemble those of anxiety. The disorder, in fact, starts out as anxiety, and if not treated at the right time with the right diagnosis,...
- Symptoms of Atypical Depression
Depression is usually signified by extended moods of sadness and a generally low mood even when events occur that should normally lift someone’s spirits. Patients generally ignore all positive stimuli, preferring to remain in a cocoon irrespective of external circumstances. At one stage, the loss...
- What Causes Eating Disorders
An eating disorder is usually classified as any one of a broad range of psychological disorders, but more specifically ones that demonstrate eating habits that are abnormal or absurd. The most common eating disorders are anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge-eating disorder. Anorexia refers...
- Autism and Its Additional Complications
Since autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder, there are a variety of different symptoms. Different children with ASD will have different reactions, symptoms, and complications on different levels. Typically, autism impairs social and communication skills; however, the...
Nearby Providers
- Dr. Clara Lee MD1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724
- Dr. Thomas M Reichenbacher MD1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724
- Dr. Nathan Forrest Osborn M.D.1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724
- Dr. Peter F. Afsari D.O.1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724
- Dr. Harinder Ghuman MD1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724
- Dr. Suchet Srivamsi suryadevara Rao M.D.1501 N Campbell Ave Tucson AZ 85724