School of Medicine
Showing 11-20 of 22 Results
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Alan M Glaseroff
Other Teaching Staff-Hourly, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Alan Glaseroff served as the Director of Workforce Transformation in Primary Care at Stanford from the fall of 2015 until mid-June of 2016, where he was responsible for training the teams for Primary Care 2.0, a radical redesign of primary care underway in 2016. He will be joining the faculty at Stanford's Clinical Excellence Research Center this summer, working with Dr. Arnie Milstein to help develop new models of care. He formerly served as Co-Director of Stanford Coordinated Care, a service for patients with complex chronic illness from 2011 to the end of 2015. Dr. Glaseroff, a member of the Innovation Brain Trust for the UniteHERE Health, currently serves as faculty for the Institute of Healthcare Improvement’s “Better Care, Lower Cost” collaborative and served as a a Clinical Advisor to the PBGH “Intensive Outpatient Care Program” CMMI Innovation Grant that completes in June 2015. He served on the NCQA Patient-Centered Medical Home Advisory Committee 2009-2010, and the “Let’s Get Healthy California” expert task force in 2012,. Dr. Glaseroff was named the California Family Physician of the Year for 2009.
Dr. Glaseroff’s interests focus on the intersection of the meaning of patient-centered team care, patient activation, and the key role of self-management within the context of chronic conditions.
The Coordinated Care clinic is an exclusive benefit for eligible members of the Stanford University, Stanford Health Care, SLAC and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital community and their covered adult dependents with ongoing health conditions.
Please complete the Coordinated Care self-assessment to determine eligibility based on health condition(s) and health insurance: https://stanfordmedicine.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_2siBNrfJ8zmn3GB -
Cassandra Gross
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Cassandra Gross is a physician specializing in internal medicine and geriatric medicine, with a clinical focus on post-acute and long-term care. Dr. Gross is passionate about empowering older adults to make healthcare decisions that reflect what matters most to the individual and collaborating with interdisciplinary teams to deliver high quality care. Her academic interests include medical education in the skilled nursing facility setting, improving LGBT+ care across the continuum of care, and optimizing nutrition in older adults. She leads a Sustainable Practices Curriculum for geriatrics fellows to help foster self- reflection and career resilience.