School of Medicine


Showing 11-20 of 35 Results

  • Cheng Chen, MS, MA

    Cheng Chen, MS, MA

    Biostatistician 2, Stanford-Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education Center

    Current Role at StanfordBiostatistician 1, S-SPIRE
    Stanford-Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education Center

  • Peiqi Chen, MA

    Peiqi Chen, MA

    Social Science Research Professional 1, Stanford-Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education Center

    BioPeiqi Chen, M.A., B.A., is a Social Science Research Professional at the S-SPIRE Center. With a bachelor’s degree in Sociology and Psychology, and a certificate in non-profit organization management from the University of Iowa. Followed by a master’s degree in Social Sciences from the University of Chicago, Peiqi has developed a robust knowledge and skill set in various research methodologies and research tools. In her MA program in Social Science at the University of Chicago and writing a thesis about family planning policy evaluation on women’s maternity rights. At S-SPIRE, she assists clinical researchers with qualitative data gathering and analysis. Before attending Stanford, she completed two internships at nonprofit organizations. She conducted research on social stigma toward COVID19 patient and front-line health workers during the pandemic. Her research interests lie in sexual health, the evaluation of policy outcomes, and the improvement of social welfare for underrepresented populations.

  • Xingxing Shelley Cheng

    Xingxing Shelley Cheng

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

    Current Research and Scholarly InterestsDr. Xingxing Cheng's expertise is in applying the tools of decision science to clinical practice and policy analysis. Her current research is in the following areas:
    1) the costs, effectiveness, and implementation of work-up before kidney transplantation, including pretransplant cardiovascular screening;
    2) ethics of and decision-making in in multi-organ transplantation.

  • Justine Chinn

    Justine Chinn

    Resident in Surgery

    BioJustine Chinn is a general surgery resident at Stanford University. She completed her medical degree from University of California Irvine in 2021. She is currently a Stanford AHRQ Health Policy fellow and performing outcomes research with the Minimally Invasive/Bariatric Surgery team.

  • Bill Chiu

    Bill Chiu

    Associate Professor of Surgery (Pediatric Surgery)

    BioDr. Chiu obtained his B.S. degree in Biological Sciences and graduated with Honors from Stanford University. After graduating, he received his Medical Degree at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, where he remained for his internship and General Surgery residency training. Dr. Chiu completed his Pediatric Surgery training at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He is an Associate Professor at Stanford University School of Medicine where he has an active research program studying innovative approaches to treat patients with neuroblastoma.

  • Jeff Choi

    Jeff Choi

    Fellow in Surgery - General Surgery

    BioChief Surgical Critical Care Fellow ('25-'26).
    Former Stanford General Surgery resident (Administrative Chief Resident '24-'25).
    Ex-president of Surgeons Writing About Trauma.
    Founding course instructor of SURG238: Practical Introduction to Surgical Research.

    My research vision is to save or better the most possible number of lives using data. My group focuses on:

    1) building and implementing useful clinical prediction tools
    2) bringing various AI applications (e.g. NLP, vision) to the bedside
    3) optimization algorithms and geospatial analysis to improve access to care
    4) challenging dogma in surgical practice with contemporary data

    We collaborate with trauma surgery and data science colleagues in the US and South Korea.

    My passions are advocating for higher statistical and machine learning methodology quality in surgical literature, and fostering the growth of the next generation of clinician-data scientists.