School of Medicine
Showing 181-190 of 259 Results
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Or Gozani
Dr. Morris Herzstein Professor
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsWe study the molecular mechanisms by which chromatin-signaling networks effect nuclear and epigenetic programs, and how dysregulation of these pathways leads to disease. Our work centers on the biology of lysine methylation, a principal chromatin-regulatory mechanism that directs epigenetic processes. We study how lysine methylation events are generated, sensed, and transduced, and how these chemical marks integrate with other nuclear signaling systems to govern diverse cellular functions.
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Erin Elizabeth Grady
Clinical Professor, Radiology - Rad/Nuclear Medicine
BioErin Grady, MD, CCD, FACNM, FSNMMI is a nuclear medicine physician at Stanford Hospital and Clinics in Stanford, California. She serves as the Interim Division Chief of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Associate Chair of Education and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and is program director for the nuclear radiology and nuclear oncology fellowship programs, as well as a coach for the diagnostic radiology program. She is actively involved nationally in the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging as a Director-at-Large on the SNMMI Board of Directors, and chair of the Government Relations Committee. She serves on the Nuclear Medicine Residency Review Committee for ACGME appeals panel member and assisted with milestone 1.0 development committee for Nuclear Medicine and 2.0 milestone revision committee for Nuclear Radiology at the ACGME. She has been involved in multiple guideline and appropriate use documents on topics related to thyroid cancer (NCCN panel), neuroendocrine tumors, bone scintigraphy, lung scintigraphy and more. In addition, she is a past chair of the American Board of Nuclear Medicine and past president of the American College of Nuclear Medicine. Her areas of research interest include quality, education, radiopharmaceutical therapy and finding answers to clinical questions that arise during the course of practice. She is passionate about education, nuclear medicine’s future, collaboration across specialties, and is a staunch advocate for patients.
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Sally Graglia
Clinical Associate Professor, Emergency Medicine
BioDr. Graglia, the youngest of four in an immigrant family, grew up in Southern California. Considering veterinary medicine, journalism, architecture, and Disney animation, Dr. Graglia ‘discovered people’ during a summer in undergrad working in Ethiopia, decided on medicine as her path forward, and has never looked back.
A UC child, she completed her undergraduate studies at UC Berkeley, medical school at UC Davis, and residency at UCSF with deviations to the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health for a Masters of Public Health and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) for fellowship in Emergency Ultrasound.
Having worked, learned, and/or taught throughout Africa, Europe and Eastern Europe, and Central and South America, her three pillars continue to be point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS), education, and global health with an unending drive to serve the underserved.
Outside of work, Dr. Graglia enjoys her growing family, yoga, hiking, being outside, and exploring - new cultures, places, and languages. -
Laura Graham
Other Teaching Staff-Hourly, Surgery
BioI am an epidemiologist and health services researcher with nearly 20 years of experience in surgical outcomes research. My work focuses on improving healthcare delivery and outcomes for Veterans and other vulnerable populations, particularly those who are older or medically complex. Using large administrative datasets from the Veterans Health Administration (VA), I study surgical processes and outcomes to inform system-level improvements.
With postdoctoral training in health economics and implementation science, I bring expertise in causal inference methodology and artificial intelligence, particularly the use of natural language processing (NLP). I apply these methods to extract insights from unstructured clinical data and to strengthen causal analyses in complex healthcare datasets. These approaches allow me to address research questions that were previously difficult to study with standard empirical approaches.
As a collaborative leader, I have mentored junior investigators and worked across academic and industry sectors to advance health services research. My goal is to translate evidence into practice, ultimately improving the quality of surgical care for Veterans.