Dr. Katherine A. James is an engineer and epidemiologist whose work focuses on the environmental and climate-related determinants of health in rural and underserved communities across the Mountain West. With formal training in biological and environmental engineering (BS, MS) and a PhD in Epidemiology, she leads a robust research portfolio examining the cardiometabolic, renal, and developmental health impacts of arsenic, cadmium, and other metals. Dr. James is Principal Investigator of a large NIH R01 investigating how drought influences arsenic exposure and cardiometabolic outcomes in an aging rural population, and she directs multiple complementary studies on chronic kidney disease, maternal metal exposure and adverse birth outcomes, and community-level health disparities. Dr. James is Co-Lead of the NIH-funded Mountain West PACE-H (Partnerships in Action toward Community Health) Hub, a regional center focused on advancing climate and environmental health equity through community-driven research, training, and capacity-building. Through this Hub, she supports the development of sustainable, place-based strategies that strengthen climate resilience and reduce environmental health risks across rural and tribal communities in the Mountain West. She is also Principal Investigator of the Attitudes and Behaviors Survey (TABS) within CEPEG, conducted in partnership with the State Tobacco Education and Prevention Partnership (STEPP) at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment—an ongoing statewide surveillance initiative that monitors tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis-related behaviors and perceptions among Colorado adults. Through TABS, she leads analyses that inform state policy, prevention programs, and public health communication strategies. With more than two decades of community-based research experience in the San Luis Valley and throughout the region, Dr. James is deeply committed to transdisciplinary science, climate resilience, and environmental health. Her current efforts, including NIH-funded community-engaged projects on drinking water quality, drought, and cardiovascular health, emphasize sustainable partnerships, Total Worker Health®, and equity-centered approaches that bridge environmental science, epidemiology, and community priorities.
Dr. Katherine A. James is an engineer and epidemiologist whose work focuses on the environmental and climate-related determinants of health in rural and underserved communities across the Mountain West. With formal training in biological and environmental engineering (BS, MS) and a PhD in Epidemiology, she leads a robust research portfolio examining the cardiometabolic, renal, and developmental health impacts of arsenic, cadmium, and other metals. Dr. James is Principal Investigator of a large NIH R01 investigating how drought influences arsenic exposure and cardiometabolic outcomes in an aging rural population, and she directs multiple complementary studies on chronic kidney disease, maternal metal exposure and adverse birth outcomes, and community-level health disparities. Dr. James is Co-Lead of the NIH-funded Mountain West PACE-H (Partnerships in Action toward Community Health) Hub, a regional center focused on advancing climate and environmental health equity through community-driven research, training, and capacity-building. Through this Hub, she supports the development of sustainable, place-based strategies that strengthen climate resilience and reduce environmental health risks across rural and tribal communities in the Mountain West. She is also Principal Investigator of the Attitudes and Behaviors Survey (TABS) within CEPEG, conducted in partnership with the State Tobacco Education and Prevention Partnership (STEPP) at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment—an ongoing statewide surveillance initiative that monitors tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis-related behaviors and perceptions among Colorado adults. Through TABS, she leads analyses that inform state policy, prevention programs, and public health communication strategies. With more than two decades of community-based research experience in the San Luis Valley and throughout the region, Dr. James is deeply committed to transdisciplinary science, climate resilience, and environmental health. Her current efforts, including NIH-funded community-engaged projects on drinking water quality, drought, and cardiovascular health, emphasize sustainable partnerships, Total Worker Health®, and equity-centered approaches that bridge environmental science, epidemiology, and community priorities.
Dr. Katherine A. James is an engineer and epidemiologist whose work focuses on the environmental and climate-related determinants of health in rural and underserved communities across the Mountain West. With formal training in biological and environmental engineering (BS, MS) and a PhD in Epidemiology, she leads a robust research portfolio examining the cardiometabolic, renal, and developmental health impacts of arsenic, cadmium, and other metals. Dr. James is Principal Investigator of a large NIH R01 investigating how drought influences arsenic exposure and cardiometabolic outcomes in an aging rural population, and she directs multiple complementary studies on chronic kidney disease, maternal metal exposure and adverse birth outcomes, and community-level health disparities. Dr. James is Co-Lead of the NIH-funded Mountain West PACE-H (Partnerships in Action toward Community Health) Hub, a regional center focused on advancing climate and environmental health equity through community-driven research, training, and capacity-building. Through this Hub, she supports the development of sustainable, place-based strategies that strengthen climate resilience and reduce environmental health risks across rural and tribal communities in the Mountain West. She is also Principal Investigator of the Attitudes and Behaviors Survey (TABS) within CEPEG, conducted in partnership with the State Tobacco Education and Prevention Partnership (STEPP) at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment—an ongoing statewide surveillance initiative that monitors tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis-related behaviors and perceptions among Colorado adults. Through TABS, she leads analyses that inform state policy, prevention programs, and public health communication strategies. With more than two decades of community-based research experience in the San Luis Valley and throughout the region, Dr. James is deeply committed to transdisciplinary science, climate resilience, and environmental health. Her current efforts, including NIH-funded community-engaged projects on drinking water quality, drought, and cardiovascular health, emphasize sustainable partnerships, Total Worker Health®, and equity-centered approaches that bridge environmental science, epidemiology, and community priorities.
Dr. Katherine A. James is an engineer and epidemiologist whose work focuses on the environmental and climate-related determinants of health in rural and underserved communities across the Mountain West. With formal training in biological and environmental engineering (BS, MS) and a PhD in Epidemiology, she leads a robust research portfolio examining the cardiometabolic, renal, and developmental health impacts of arsenic, cadmium, and other metals. Dr. James is Principal Investigator of a large NIH R01 investigating how drought influences arsenic exposure and cardiometabolic outcomes in an aging rural population, and she directs multiple complementary studies on chronic kidney disease, maternal metal exposure and adverse birth outcomes, and community-level health disparities. Dr. James is Co-Lead of the NIH-funded Mountain West PACE-H (Partnerships in Action toward Community Health) Hub, a regional center focused on advancing climate and environmental health equity through community-driven research, training, and capacity-building. Through this Hub, she supports the development of sustainable, place-based strategies that strengthen climate resilience and reduce environmental health risks across rural and tribal communities in the Mountain West. She is also Principal Investigator of the Attitudes and Behaviors Survey (TABS) within CEPEG, conducted in partnership with the State Tobacco Education and Prevention Partnership (STEPP) at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment—an ongoing statewide surveillance initiative that monitors tobacco, nicotine, and cannabis-related behaviors and perceptions among Colorado adults. Through TABS, she leads analyses that inform state policy, prevention programs, and public health communication strategies. With more than two decades of community-based research experience in the San Luis Valley and throughout the region, Dr. James is deeply committed to transdisciplinary science, climate resilience, and environmental health. Her current efforts, including NIH-funded community-engaged projects on drinking water quality, drought, and cardiovascular health, emphasize sustainable partnerships, Total Worker Health®, and equity-centered approaches that bridge environmental science, epidemiology, and community priorities.
Visit the directory for all members of our team, including affiliated staff. To find out more about our local and academic partnerships, check out our partners page.
Tell me a little about your background and previous experience.
I am an Assistant Professor with the Rocky Mountain Prevention Research Center and Director of the Population Mental Health and Well-being concentration at the Colorado School of Public Health. After receiving my MPH from the Tulane School of Global Health and Tropical Medicine with a focus on maternal and child health.
Why did you decide to work at CU and with the RMPRC?
I started working with the RMPRC as a Professional Research Assistant because of their focus on community-based participatory research and well-being promotion.
What are you currently working on?
I am now a Principal Investigator/Co-Principal Investigator on intervention projects which seek to promote the well-being of low-resourced populations (e.g., pregnant and postpartum individuals, early care and education caregivers). I am currently PI of a training grant funded by the National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparities (Mothers Optimizing Resources Everyday (MORE)) where the primary research objective is to integrate advanced analytical modeling with qualitative data to inform the timing, duration, content and delivery modalities of a multi-level psychological capital intervention rooted in mindfulness-based best practices to promote perinatal well-being among specific low-resourced sub-groups. Her research experience, to date, is centered around three overarching goals: (1) to build expertise related to the analysis of developmental research questions using quantitative and qualitative methods, with specific focus on mental health (depression, stress, and anxiety) during sensitive periods (prenatal, postpartum, early childhood), (2) to investigate non-pharmacological methods (e.g. mindfulness and positive psychology interventions) that can be targeted and/or mobilized to optimize population mental health and resilience, and (3) to advance research in the field of dissemination science to identify core constructs that are most critical to enhance the uptake of evidence-based behavioral interventions into community and clinical settings. She enjoys collaborating with, and learning from, the excellent interdisciplinary researchers at the RMPRC, using mixed methods to investigate novel research questions, and partnering with local, national, and international communities.