School of Medicine
Showing 6,201-6,250 of 13,028 Results
-
Jennifer Lee
Professor of Medicine (Endocrinology) and, by courtesy, of Epidemiology and Population Health
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsI am a healthcare lead and physician scientist for innovation, R&D, and advanced analytics, and oversee these aspects at VA Palo Alto/VHA, within Stanford-VA relationship. The VA has the US's largest health care system and longest running EHR. I prioritize enabling multiple partners (industry, government, academia, foundations), to innovate/R&D in the VA health care system. We prioritize mentoring students from various Schools to become future leaders in R&D, innovation, and healthcare.
-
Jennifer Y Lee, MD
Clinical Associate Professor, Otolaryngology (Head and Neck Surgery)
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsDevelopment of treatment outcomes of Eustachian tube balloon dilation
-
Jin Hyung Lee
Associate Professor of Neurology and Neurological Sciences (Neurology Research), of Neurosurgery and of Bioengineering and, by courtesy, of Electrical Engineering
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsIn vivo visualization and control of neural circuits
-
Jinwoo Lee, MD, PhD, FAAD
Instructor, Dermatology
BioJinwoo Lee, M.D., Ph.D. is a board-certified dermatologist and clinical faculty in the Department of Dermatology. Dr. Lee completed his residency in dermatology at Stanford University, where he joined the Investigative Training Track to conduct basic science research in autoimmunity and inflammation. Dr. Lee’s scientific research focuses on identifying the mechanisms underlying the onset and progression of autoimmune diseases. His clinical interests include medical management of complex dermatologic conditions, autoimmune skin diseases, as well as general dermatology.
Dr. Lee is currently only seeing patients on Monday afternoons at the Stanford Medicine Outpatient Center in Redwood City. -
Jon B. Lee, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor, Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine
Clinical Assistant Professor, Emergency MedicineBioDr. Lee is board-ceritfied in emergency medicine, pain medicine, and addiction medicine. He works clinically as pain medicine and emergency medicine specialist at Stanford University.
Dr. Lee offers employs multi-modal medication utilization, injection therapies, radiofrequency ablation, and neuromodulation, to help patients manage their pain and improve their quality of life. Dr. Lee’s academic interests include interventional pain management in acute care settings, ED utilization and management for acute and chronic painful conditions, and transitions of care between inpatient and outpatient settings. He is actively involved in medical education, including programs for national pain conferences, focusing on training acute care providers in evidence-based, opioid-sparing approaches to pain management. -
Jonathan Lee (@ jonlee112)
Clinical Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
BioClincal:
Dr. Jonathan Lee, MD, PhD (@ jonlee112) is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Depression Clinic of Stanford University where he founded the "Am I Good? Examining life through the lenses of Philosophical Skepticism, Moral Philosophy, and Existentialism" philosophical psychotherapy group.
Jonathan Lee, MD, PhD (@ jonlee112) practices psychiatry, including psychotherapy, at Stanford University. He utilizes psychopharmacology alongside a particular approach to philosophical therapy, which he has termed ‘Decompositionism‘. Decompositionism is an approach to philosophical psychotherapy, developed by Jonathan Lee, MD, PhD (@ jonlee112), which is informed by knowledge from neuroscience, psychology, and philosophy…
Epistemology, Skepticism
Metaphysics, Ontology
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Moral Philosophy, Metaethics
Existentialism
…Decompositionism revolves around the use of analytical approaches aimed at decomposing cognitive concepts (words, phrases, thoughts, ideas, emotions, beliefs, etc) into their most fundamental components or features. Jonathan Lee, MD, PhD (@ jonlee112) designed Decompositionism to examine fundamental questions such as:
What is truth? What is reality? How do we know what we know? How do our brains/minds learn?
What actually exists in the universe?
What do we mean by the words, phrases, and concepts that we invoke in daily life?
What is right vs. wrong? What are our moral obligations?
What is good vs. bad?
What is the meaning of life? What is the point of life? What is the purpose of life?
Does free will exist?
Research:
His research focuses on the causes and consequences of, as well as solutions to, rising skepticism and distrust in sources of expert information (e.g., science, health). He has a special interest in exploring skepticism and persuasion at the intersection of health and politics, which includes studying phenomena such as the politicization of science and health, political polarization, filter bubbles/echo chambers, the emerging post-truth world, and information warfare. It also includes seeking heteorgeneity in the findings across particular demographics at high socioeconomic and health risk. He draws on theories and methods from his uniquely interdisciplinary set of educational, research, and professional experiences, including those from experimental and behavioral economics, political science, psychology, philosophy, and machine learning. He is currently using machine learning-based text analytics to explore how trust/distrust in sources of expert information is discussed on traditional and social media -- followed by the use of online randomized controlled survey experiments to test the causal effects of particular persuasion strategies on perceptions of trust/distrust, as well as other important behavioral outcomes of interest. -
Julie Jung Hyun Lee
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Julie J. Lee is a board-certified physician in Internal Medicine, Obesity Medicine, and Clinical Informatics at Stanford, where she works at the intersection of technology, precision health, and real-world clinical care.
As Health Equity Informaticist in Stanford's Division of Primary Care and Population Health, she leads data-informed strategies to evaluate and integrate digital health tools into clinical environments. Her work spans AI in healthcare, remote patient monitoring, patient portal communication, and clinical decision support, with a focus on ensuring these tools are clinically grounded, operationally feasible, and built around how patients and clinicians actually work. She advises industry and innovators on what it takes to move from promising technology to real-world impact.
Her clinical practice centers on obesity medicine and cardiometabolic health, where she applies precision health approaches to challenge one-size-fits-all frameworks. She advocates for moving beyond outdated BMI-driven care toward more meaningful measures like body composition, and for building evidence that reflects the full diversity of patients, including Asian and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities.
Health equity and ethics shape how she approaches her work across research, clinical practice, and technology evaluation. As a clinician who speaks both the language of medicine and the language of technology, she brings a critical perspective to what AI can do, what it should do, and who it should serve. -
Maria Lee
Postdoctoral Scholar, Psychiatry
BioI am a clinical psychologist from Sweden, currently doing my postdoctoral fellowship at the Department of Psychiatry. With over 10 years of clinical experience in Sweden, I specialize in working with patients with severe mental illness, primarily psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. The majority of my clinical work has been done in outpatient clinics for individuals with recent onset of psychosis and I have extensive experience doing cognitive and diagnostic assessments, as well as delivering cognitive behavioral therapy in this population.
My current research focuses specifically on the menopause transition and severe mental illness. The aim of my project is to assess how this period affects risk of developing severe mental illness, as well as how menopause affects the clinical course for those already diagnosed with severe mental illness. -
Maxwell Lee
Resident in OHNS/Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery
BioMaxwell Y. Lee is a resident in Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery with clinical interests in head and neck oncologic and reconstructive surgery. He is also a postdoctoral scholar in the same department, whose work focuses on translational immuno-oncology and outcomes research in head and neck cancers. His research integrates single-cell and spatial transcriptomics to define tumor–immune niches and mechanisms of resistance to PD-1/PD-L1 blockade, with the goal of developing predictive biomarkers of treatment response.
-
Sandra Soo-Jin Lee, Ph.D
Sr Research Scholar, Pediatrics - Center for Biomedical Ethics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsDr. Lee is a medical anthropologist whose research focuses on the sociocultural dimensions and ethical issues of emerging technologies and their translation into clinical practice. Dr. Lee leads studies on the public understandings of research using clinical data and biological samples, concepts of race, culture and human genetic variation, and citizen science, commercialization of biotechnology and entrepreneurship.
-
Seolhyun Lee, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Nephrology
BioDr. Lee is a nephrologist and Clinical Assistant Professor in the Nephrology Division of the Stanford Department of Medicine.
He delivers expert, compassionate kidney care personalized to each patient he serves. Dr. Lee is committed to improving both the health and quality of life of his patients.
His work scholarship has appeared in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, Kidney Week, and Blood Purification.
Dr. Lee has received honors and awards including the prestigious Ben J. Lipps Research Fellowship from the American Society of Nephrology. The program funds original research projects by nephrology fellows.