School of Medicine
Showing 1-25 of 25 Results
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Kim Walker
Academic Prog Prof 3, Technology & Digital Solutions
Current Role at StanfordKim is Manager of the Instructional Design and Production group (EdTech) in the School of Medicine at Stanford University. She consults with SoM faculty to design and develop online, hybrid, and face-to-face courses for undergraduate, graduate and continuing medical education. Kim holds a Ph.D. and M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction with an emphasis in Instructional Design and Science Education from the University of South Florida. Her undergraduate degree is in biology from the University of Colorado. She formerly worked at Stanford Hospital as a Program Manager and Education Specialist in Graduate Medical Education.
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Grace Hung
Software Lead, Technology & Digital Solutions
Current Role at StanfordSoftware team lead and architect with 20+ years of experience managing and developing enterprise scale custom applications. A seasoned Stanford technical leader that sets vision, provides guidance and drives initiatives for the team. Self-driven and highly motivated, I practice open communication and encourage collaboration across functional teams to achieve objectives.
Responsible for defining project scope, analyzing requirements and designing deliverables for various administrative and research software solutions. Lead and collaborate with cross functional teams including product managers, security/privacy offices, infrastructure teams and project team members, to deliver solution in time. Representing the AAS team to propose SOW (statement of work) and negotiate service agreements with business clients. -
Jinglong Wang
Postdoctoral Scholar, Radiation Biology
BioDr. Wang was trained at the Jacques Monod Institute and École Normale Supérieure in Paris, France under the mentorship of Dr. Terence Strick. and obtained his Ph.D. degree from the University of Paris in 2019. He dissected the molecular machinery of human and bacterial NHEJ, and interrogated the mechanism of SpCas9 tolerance to non-specific substrate using single-molecule nanomanipulation tools.
Jinglong’s research in the Frock Lab focuses on DSB-related chromosome topological changes and genomic interactions. -
Susan Weber
Director, Engineering, Technology & Digital Solutions
BioSusan C. Weber, PhD is Director of Engineering in Research IT (IRT). Dr. Weber has a PhD in Computer Science and 30 years' experience as a professional software developer.
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Hannah Binzen Wild
Affiliate, Senior Associate Dean for Global Health
BioResearch Interests: Pastoralism, Health and Conflict, Humanitarian Response
Regions: Ethiopia, South Sudan
Hannah Wild is an MD Candidate at Stanford University School of Medicine. Her research focuses on the health of nomadic populations and more broadly, the intersection of health, armed conflict, and culture in Sub-Saharan Africa. She received her undergraduate degree in Comparative Literature from Harvard University with special fields in oral literature and ethnography. Prior to beginning medical school she received a post-graduate fellowship to conduct ethnographic fieldwork with the Nyangatom, a tribe of nomadic pastoralists in the Omo Valley of southwest Ethiopia. She spent 18 months living with the Nyangatom’s nomadic cattle camps and studying their traditional medical practices, and is fluent in the local language. As a medical student, she developed methodology for including nomadic groups in population data and household surveys (https://news.stanford.edu/2019/11/27/hard-to-count-matter/). Her work on pastoralists' role in regional conflict dynamics has been cited by policymakers including the United Nations Report of the Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan (https://undocs.org/A/HRC/40/CRP.1). Her current research focuses on humanitarian care in conflict and the epidemiology of conflict-related injury among noncombatants. She will pursue residency training in general surgery with a focus on trauma and critical care. -
Rokeena Williams
eLearning Manager, School of Medicine - Post Grad Med Education (CME)
Current Role at StanfordeLearning Manager
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Meredith Wiltsie
Affiliate, School of Medicine - Student Affairs
BioMeredith Wiltsie became a Nurse Practitioner in 2008; she is board certified as both an Adult and Family Nurse Practitioner. She has worked at Stanford in the Advanced Lung Disease Center since 2015 in both hospital and outpatient settings.
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Albert Y. Wu, MD, PhD, FACS
Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy translational research focuses on using autologous stem cells to recreate a patient’s ocular tissues for potential transplantation. We are generating tissue from induced pluripotent stem cells to treat limbal stem cell deficiency in patients who are bilaterally blind. By applying my background in molecular and cellular biology, stem cell biology, oculoplastic surgery, I hope to make regenerative medicine a reality for those suffering from orbital and ocular disease.
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Sean M. Wu
Professor of Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine) and, by courtesy, of Pediatrics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsMy lab seeks to identify mechanisms regulating cardiac lineage commitment during embryonic development and the biology of cardiac progenitor cells in development and disease. We believe that by understanding the transcriptional and epigenetic basis of cardiomyocyte growth and differentiation, we can identify the most effective ways to repair diseased adult hearts. We employ mouse and human embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cells as well as rodents as our in vivo models for investigation.