Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner
Mayo Clinic
EAU CLAIRE, Wisconsin, United States
Misty Hemm, MSN, PMHNP-BC, is a board-certified psychiatric and mental health nurse practitioner providing outpatient and inpatient psychiatric care at Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. She earned her Master of Science in Nursing with a focus on psychiatric and mental health across the lifespan from the University of North Dakota in 2024, following a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from Mercer University in 2016, where she graduated with honors. She served as a medical team member in clinics across rural Cambodia serving marginalized communities impacted by multigenerational complex trauma.
Misty brings nearly a decade of diverse leadership experience across inpatient, outpatient, and intensive care settings. Her current role involves psychiatric evaluations, psychotropic medication management, and trauma-informed care for individuals across the lifespan. She has particular clinical interest in complex trauma, dissociative disorders, and treatment-resistant mood disorders. She is certified in Basic Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART) and has pursued extensive continuing education on dissociation, complex trauma, and dissociative disorders, and in modalities such as DBT, CBT, ACT, ego state interventions, and dissociation-focused assessments such as the MID, DDIS, and SCID-D-R.
Her scholarly contributions include co-authorship of a published study on transcranial direct current stimulation for treatment-resistant depression in PLOS One, and poster presentations on ICU delirium and ventilator-associated pneumonia. She is currently developing a brief screening tool for prescribers for assessing dissociation.
Misty is a member of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD), International Society of Accelerated Resolution Therapy (IS-ART), the American Psychiatric Nurses Association (APNA), and Neuroscience Education Institute (NEI). She received the RN Individual Achievement Award from Mayo Clinic’s Department of Psychiatry and Psychology in 2024 for her clinical, scholarly, and leadership contributions, and continues to advocate for improved recognition and treatment of dissociative disorders among psychiatric prescribers.
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Unseen and Unheard: Clinical Consequences of Unrecognized Dissociation in Prescribing
Friday, March 27, 2026
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM US Pacific Time