About
She didn't plan this career.
She followed it.
Who she is
There was no five-year plan. A dog bite as a child planted a seed that eventually led her to medicine. A phone call about a young man dying in a Florida jail cell redirected a clinical career into systems reform. An email from Crisis Text Line arrived at exactly the right moment.
Dr. Shairi Turner grew up in the Bronx, the daughter of Black theater artists. She was adopted. She attended Fieldston, Stanford, Case Western, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Harvard. She had access to every corridor that medicine opens. She chose the ones where the problems were hardest.
As Florida's first Director of Juvenile Justice Health Services, she built a healthcare system for incarcerated youth that did not exist when she arrived. As Deputy Secretary for Health at the Florida Department of Health, she operated at the intersection of policy, clinical care, and political reality. As Chief Health Officer at Crisis Text Line, she oversees Clinical Supervision, Public Policy, and co-leads U.S. Services, while serving as CTL's primary voice in national media.
“I recognize that I come from a community that's in crisis. I come from a culture that's in crisis. And I cannot separate myself from that.”
Her media footprint spans 217 catalogued engagements: NBC Meet the Press, CBS News, MLB Network, CNN, TIME, USA Today, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, WNYC, Harvard, Axios, EBONY, Essence. A single 2024 satellite media tour generated 12.4 million impressions across 49 outlets and 366 secured airings.
Education
MPH
Harvard School of Public Health
Residency, Internal Medicine
Massachusetts General Hospital / Harvard
MD
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
BS, Biology
Stanford University
K-12
The Fieldston School, New York City
Topics She Owns
- Youth mental health crisis
- Suicide prevention and crisis intervention
- Trauma-informed care
- Mental health in juvenile justice
- Black physician experience and health equity
- Parenting and family resilience
- Social media's impact on youth
- Athlete mental health
- Holiday and seasonal stress
- Bullying, doomscrolling, war-news anxiety

