A black and white photo of a smiling woman wearing hoop earrings.

Kristi Husk

Consulting Neuropsychologist

Dr. Kristi Husk is a clinical neuropsychologist with over 25 years of experience in neurorehabilitation. Dr. Husk is a Diplomate of the American Board of Neuropsychology and a Certified Brain Injury Specialist. Dr. Husk completed her doctorate from the Arizona School of Professional Psychology which included a predoctoral internship in Neuropsychology and Geriatrics at the Malcolm Randall VA Hospital in Gainesville, FL. She completed her post-doctoral residency at the Boston Consortium (Boston VA Medical Center, Harvard University, and Boston University consortium) in Clinical Psychology in Neuropsychology and Geropsychology/ Geriatric Neuropsychology. 


Dr. Husk practiced for two years in New Hampshire as a neuropsychologist in an outpatient hospital setting before accepting a position at the Center for Transitional NeuroRehabilitation (CTN) at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center/Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, Arizona (2008-2018), a comprehensive neurorehabilitation center. In 2018, Dr. Husk went into private practice where she performs primarily evaluations for a wide range of neurological conditions including TBI, concussion, stroke, dementias, mild cognitive impairment, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders, and multiple sclerosis. Dr. Husk performs both clinical and forensic evaluations. In 2022, Dr. Husk joined the NRC team as a consulting neuropsychologist providing evaluation and intervention services for residential and outpatient clients. 


Additionally, Dr. Husk has been active in teaching and training in her career. She currently holds adjunct professor positions at Grand Canyon University in the College of Social Sciences teaching both graduate and undergraduate psychology courses, and at Logan University in the Doctoral of Health Professionals in Education. Dr. Husk also provides supervision and mentorship to psychology graduate students at Midwestern University and through her Post-doctoral residency program through the Arizona Psychology Consortium.