KL2 Career Development Program
Patricia Cavazos-Rehg, PhD
Professor of Psychiatry
Leadership, Coursemaster, Alumni
- Email: pcavazos@wustl.edu
Leadership Role(s):
Director, Mentored Training Program in Clinical Investigation (MTPCI)
Co-Director, K12 Career Development Program in Substance Use and Substance Use Disorder
Associate Director, KL2 Career Development Award Program
Department: Psychiatry
Mentor for Program(s):
TL1 Predoctoral Program
TL1 Postdoctoral Program
KL2 Career Development Award
K12 Career Development Program in Substance Use and Substance Use Disorder
Victoria J. Fraser, MD
Adolphus Busch Professor of Medicine and Department Chair
- Email: vfraser@wustl.edu
Leadership Role(s):
Chair, Department of Medicine
Co-Director, CRTC
Co-Director, KL2 Career Development Award
Director, Doris Duke Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists (DDFRCS)
Department: Medicine
Division: Infectious Diseases
Mentor for Program(s):
KL2 Career Development Award
T32 Training Program in Infectious Diseases
Dominic Reeds, MD
Professor of Medicine
Leadership- Phone: 314-362-8430
- Fax: 314-362-8230
- Email: dreeds22@wustl.edu
Department: Medicine
Division: Nutritional Science
Leadership Role(s):
Director, KL2 Career Development Program
Director, Summer Program for the Advancement of Research Relevant NIDDK (SPARK) (STEP UP R25)
Director, The Postbaccalaureate Research Education Program in Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases (PRIDE R25)
Associate Director, Postdoctoral Mentored Training Program in Clinical Investigation (MTPCI)
Associate Director, Master of Science in Clinical Investigation (MSCI)
Mentor for Program(s):
Summer Program for the Advancement of Research Relevant NIDDK (SPARK) (STEP UP R25)
The Postbaccalaureate Research Education Program in Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases (PRIDE R25)
Research keywords: Use of stable isotope tracers to study the regulation of substrate metabolism in humans. Metabolic abnormalities present in patients with HIV infection, and changes in glucose and lipid metabolism during weight gain or loss.