School of Medicine
Showing 1-10 of 18 Results
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Vinh Lam
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Vinh Lam is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of Primary Care and Population health. He earned his MD from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and chose to stay in Los Angeles to complete his family medicine residency training at UCLA. During his training, Dr. Lam developed a strong interest in teaching and medical education through his involvement with resident education and the graduate medical education committee. He also spent 1 year as a resident informaticist where he also became very interested in informatics, medical technology, and innovative solutions to improving patient health outcomes and decreasing physician burnout. Dr. Lam enjoys caring for patients of all ages from pediatrics to geriatrics, performing office-based procedures, and prioritizing preventative care.
Outside of medicine, Dr. Lam loves to travel with his family, dabbles in photography and videography, and enjoys attempting to recreate meals he has had while traveling with his wife. -
Benjamin Laniakea
Clinical Associate Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Benji Laniakea serves as the chief of the Stanford LGBTQ+ Adult Clinical Program, which offers comprehensive and tailored healthcare for the LGBTQ+ patient population for patients of all ages, sexualities, and gender identities. They also serve as the theme lead for the Sex, Gender, Sexuality, and Sexual Function curriculum at the Stanford School of Medicine for which they received the Arthur L. Bloomfield Award, and have the honor of advising the American Medical Association on LGBTQ+ Health.
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Julie Jung Hyun Lee
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
BioDr. Julie J. Lee is a board-certified internal medicine physician, epidemiologist, and clinical informaticist at Stanford University. She works at the forefront of responsible technology and artificial intelligence (AI) integration in healthcare—spanning research, operations, and real-world clinical use. With degrees in Psychology from Columbia University and Epidemiology from Yale University, Dr. Lee brings a unique perspective as an end-user clinician, public health researcher, and systems thinker with deep technical fluency.
At the Stanford Division of Primary Care and Population Health, she serves as Clinical Assistant Professor and Health Equity Informaticist, leading data-informed strategies to close care gaps and implement technology that works in real clinical environments—particularly in primary care settings where systemic challenges around access, coordination, and equity are most visible. Her informatics work encompasses implementation research, governance and operations of clinical decision support (CDS), integration of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs (PDMPs), deployment of continuous glucose monitors (CGMs) in inpatient settings, and human factors research to improve health IT usability and physician-patient communication.
Dr. Lee’s expertise spans interoperability, EHR physician-builder capabilities, and human-centered design—applying design thinking, data science, and implementation science to drive equitable, clinically grounded innovations. Her focus on clinical feasibility ensures AI tools and digital health interventions are scalable, operationally feasible, and aligned with the real needs of patients and frontline care teams. She advises industry and innovators on designing health technologies that bridge the gap between innovation and implementation.
Health equity is Dr. Lee’s north star, guiding her work in both academic and community settings. Her decade of research spans cardiometabolic health, diabetes, applied AI, and patient safety, with a consistent focus on underserved populations. She has led projects on language and acculturation in Latino communities, translated liver disease research into frontline care in East Los Angeles, and contributed to foundational studies on sex-specific cardiovascular risk factors in women and transgender populations. She is currently focused on advancing precision health for Asian and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) communities, particularly in the realm of obesity medicine.
Dr. Lee is widely published in journals such as Diabetes Care, JAMA Network Open, NPJ Digital Medicine, Applied Clinical Informatics, Journal of the American Heart Association, and Menopause. Her informatics philosophy centers on translating research into practice—bringing high-quality evidence directly to clinicians in ways that are actionable, equitable, and embedded into the EHR workflow. -
Bryant Lin
Clinical Professor, Medicine - Primary Care and Population Health
Current Research and Scholarly Interests-Digital Health
-Medical device design, prototyping, testing and clinical trials
-Behavioral determinants of chronic disease
-Novel diagnostic processes for medical mysteries
-Asian Health
-Medical Humanities and Arts
-Medical Technology