School of Medicine
Showing 1-50 of 77 Results
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Marc Carmichael, PhD
MD Student with Scholarly Concentration in Bioengineering / Immunology, expected graduation Spring 2025
BioMarc Carmichael, PhD earned a BS with honors in Chemical Engineering and PhD in Biomedical Engineering from Rutgers University and is currently completing MD training at Stanford University School of Medicine. Before pursuing an MD, Dr. Carmichael worked as both a Chemical and Process Engineer in the R&D divisions at Centocor and Merck & Co. with a focus on process development, tech transfer, and new technology development in the production of biopharmaceuticals from mammalian cells. Throughout his training, Marc has been dedicated to understanding and addressing unmet needs and understudied areas in neuroscience and population health. As a neuroscientist, his research has been focused on two streams: 1) exploring the restorative capacity of the CNS by characterizing the endogenous stem/progenitor cell response in the brain following spinal cord injury and 2) understanding the combinatorial effects of astrocyte priming and later cytokine exposure on cortical synchrony, bursting, and maturation during the perinatal period. As an advisor in the health tech industry, he worked on innovative ways to employ health data and machine learning to identify new opportunities to combat health disparities in childhood asthma, uncover the populations of children most vulnerable to the adverse consequences of climate change, and leverage novel AI approaches in the early detection of patients with rare disease. Marc’s work has been featured in Forbes, the LA Times, and Wall Street Journal. Outside of his academic and industry pursuits, Marc enjoys playing pickup basketball, sailing, and various teaching, mentoring, and service activities for under-resourced communities.
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Andrew Y. Chang, MD, MS(Epi)
Member (Postdoc), Cardiovascular Institute
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy research interests center around the epidemiology, environmental determinants, and health services dimensions of heart disease, with an emphasis on vulnerable populations, both international and domestic. Current projects include the development of novel care quality metrics for use in rheumatic heart disease in East Africa, testing of low sodium salt substitutes in South Asia, and describing the cardiovascular impacts of cyclical climate change-associated major environmental events.
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Kyle N. M. Chang
Masters Student in Clinical Informatics Management, admitted Summer 2024
BioAloha and Hello!
I'm Kyle and I am currently enrolled in the Masters of Clinical Informatics Management (MCiM) program at Stanford Medicine.
If you'd like to connect, please reach out to me at knmchang@stanford.edu or via LinkedIn.
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Mathieu Chenier
MD Student, expected graduation Spring 2029
Bio• Current MD/PSTP student
• Studied biomedical engineering and engineering physics at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, between 2019-2024
• Interested in pediatric medicine, bioengineering, and engineering in medicine
• From Belle River, Ontario