School of Medicine
Showing 81-90 of 138 Results
-
Kameron C. Black
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine
BioDr. Kameron Black is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Division of Hospital Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine, where his research focuses on the safe deployment of agentic artificial intelligence in real-world healthcare systems. He completed his Internal Medicine residency at Oregon Health & Science University and fellowship in Clinical Informatics at Stanford Health Care prior to joining the faculty. His clinical expertise is in the care of adult patients admitted to the inpatient general medicine services.
Dr. Black is a leader in the deployment and evaluation of agentic AI in healthcare. His research has been featured by Anthropic, Forbes, Bloomberg, and the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI. He has published scholarly work in journals including NEJM AI, Nature Medicine, npj Health Systems, JMIR AI, Nature Scientific Data, and Applied Clinical Informatics. Previously, he held research roles at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Black has delivered invited talks and participated in panels on agentic AI in healthcare for the American Academy of Home Care Medicine, the Healthcare Agent Summit hosted by Wedge Inc., and others.
Beyond his research, Dr. Black is dedicated to advancing undergraduate medical education (UME). He co-founded one of the nation's first longitudinal digital health curricula for medical students. Today, he continues to lecture at the UME level and across various departments at Stanford Medicine on agentic AI, the Cosmos data science platform, and other related topics.
He is certified across Epic's analytics and build tools, including Physician Builder and the Cosmos data science platform.
Additional areas of research focus: Medical AI Benchmarking, Clinical Workflow Automation, Healthcare Administrative Burden, Physician Burnout, Healthcare Workforce Shortage.
Eph 2:8-9
Gal 1:10 -
Brian Blackburn
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy interests include parasitology and global health; I've investigated cryptosporidium and angiostrongylus outbreaks; schistosoma/strongyloides seroprevalence in refugees, and the distribution and impact of ITNs for malaria and filariasis prevention in Nigeria and India. I have done clinical and programmatic work at teaching hospitals in Liberia and Bangladesh and have opportunities for research in Bangladesh and Kenya, in collaboration with ICDDR,B and CDC, Kenya
-
Alexandria Blacker
Program Director - Community Partnership, Medicine
BioAlexandria Blacker, PhD, MPH is the Director of the Stanford Department of Medicine’s Community Partnership Program and adjunct fauclty in the Milken School of Public Health at George Washington University. As a public health professional, Dr. Blacker has worked in breast cancer behavioral research, primary care redesign, community health, health care worker well-being, and program implementation.
In her current role, she focuses on building bi-directional, equitable, and sustainable partnerships to advance local health equity. Dr. Blacker’s research focuses on understanding processes to developing sustainable community-academic partnerships and exploring the complexity of interprofessional health care teams including teaming behaviors and contextual influences.
Dr. Blacker has had the pleasure of working with Stanford in both the health care and University settings. As a Stanford Health Care employee, Dr. Blacker worked for the Stanford Coordinated Care clinic and managed the disease management program for employees and staff. She also worked closely with her colleagues to assist in the change management efforts for the Primary Care 2.0 redesign implementation by developing educational curriculum and go-live execution with physicians, clinic managers, and team members.
As a University employee, Dr. Blacker previously worked as part of the HealthySteps to Wellness team as the Wellness Manager for Stanford Health Care. In this role, she worked cross-functionally with department heads to design and manage wellness-based trainings. She has developed curricula in positive psychology, stress management, and behavior change. She has conducted over 100 trainings and conducted programmatic evaluations to streamlining processes to increase overall effectiveness. -
Terrence Blaschke
Professor of Medicine and of Molecular Pharmacology, Emeritus
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsClinical pharmacology of antiretroviral drugs
Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic mechanisms of variability in drug response.
Drug development -
Douglas W. Blayney
Professor of Medicine (Oncology), Emeritus
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsImproving the quality of cancer care at Stanford, in our network of care, and nationally
-
Catherine Blish
Frances Krauskopf Conley Professor
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsThe major goal of our research is to gain insight into the prevention and control of HIV and other viral pathogens by studying the interplay between the virus and the host immune response. We investigate the role of various arms of the immune response, but with a particular focus on NK cells. We hope to gain additional insights into control of infectious diseases by studying how pregnancy modulates immune responses.