School of Medicine


Showing 131-138 of 138 Results

  • Jessica Kopcho Buesing, MD

    Jessica Kopcho Buesing, MD

    Clinical Assistant Professor (Affiliated), Med/Hospital Medicine

    BioDr. Jessica Buesing is a board-certified internal medicine physician dedicated to providing empathic, honest, and compassionate patient care. Before joining Menlo Medical, she cared for veterans as a hospitalist at the Palo Alto VA. Prior to that, she completed her internal medicine residency and chief resident year at Stanford.

    Her professional interests include improving health span and quality of life, chronic disease prevention and management, obesity medicine, lipid management and cardiovascular risk reduction, comprehensive cancer survivorship care, mental health support, women’s health, and addiction treatment. She is committed to personalized medicine and emphasizes shared decision-making, recognizing that effective healthcare must be tailored to each patient’s unique circumstances. Outside of work she enjoys exercise (especially Barry’s Bootcamp!), playing piano and singing, camping, travel, and spending time with her husband, two children, and cats.

  • Nam Quoc Bui

    Nam Quoc Bui

    Clinical Associate Professor, Medicine - Oncology

    BioDr. Bui is a Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine at the Stanford Cancer Institute and a specialist in Sarcoma. Dr. Bui earned an undergraduate degree in Computer Science at Stanford University and went on to earn his medical degree from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. He completed Internal Medicine residency at Stanford Hospital and Hematology/Oncology fellowship at the University of California San Diego, where he performed extensive research in bioinformatics to analyze tumor sequencing data.

    He is involved in numerous sarcoma clinical trials, leading efforts to take new therapeutics from the lab to clinical practice. His research background and interests are in the field of bioinformatics as applied to large data sets and the study of novel compounds in rare malignancies. He also is involved in education at the Stanford University School of Medicine, serving as a lecturer and mentor to medical students, residents, and oncology fellows. Dr. Bui is the founding Editor-in-Chief of the journal “Current Problems in Cancer: Case Reports”, an international, peer-reviewed journal that publishes groundbreaking cases that give insight into redefining concepts in cancer. He also serves as the Chair of the Data Safety Monitoring Committee at the Stanford Cancer Institute, overseeing the board that reviews all investigator-initiated cancer trials run at Stanford.

  • Jeffrey Bunker

    Jeffrey Bunker

    Fellow in Medicine - Med/Infectious Diseases

    BioJeffrey Bunker is an infectious diseases physician-scientist, immunologist, and microbiologist. He is currently a clinical fellow in infectious diseases at Stanford University; he previously completed residency training in internal medicine at Stanford University and an M.D. and Ph.D. in immunology at the University of Chicago. Bunker’s research investigates interactions between the microbiome and the immune system, including fundamental questions about how and why certain microbes generate immune responses and how this interplay influences both normal homeostasis and infectious or inflammatory diseases. His clinical interests include microbial pathogenesis, antimicrobial resistance, and the diagnosis and treatment of complex infections.

  • Stephan Busque

    Stephan Busque

    Professor of Surgery (Abdominal Transplantation), and by courtesy, of Medicine (Nephrology)

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy research interest is focused on the improvement of clinical immunosuppression. I am involved in the evaluation of new immunosuppressive drugs, potentially more efficacious or less toxic. My ultimate goal is to achieve tolerance, a state that would obviate the need for any drugs. I am an investigator part of a multidisciplinary tolerance induction project using total lymphoid irradiation and donor hematopoietic stem cells infusion after living donor kidney transplantation.

  • Zachary Butzin-Dozier

    Zachary Butzin-Dozier

    Assistant Professor of Pediatrics (Clinical Informatics) and of Medicine (Computational Medicine)

    BioZach Butzin-Dozier is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Division of Clinical Informatics, with a joint appointment in the Department of Medicine, Division of Computational Medicine. His research applies machine learning and artificial intelligence for causal inference via electronic health record data. He draws from large-scale databases, such as Epic Cosmos, PEDSnet, and the National Clinical Cohort Collaborative, to answer pressing questions in pediatric and infectious disease medicine. His research evaluates vaccine effectiveness, drug repurposing, and the long-term sequelae of viral infection, including Long COVID. He aims to bridge rigorous biostatistical methodology with clinically meaningful research questions. He received his PhD in Epidemiology and MPH from UC Berkeley, and he is an NIAID K01 recipient.