School of Medicine
Showing 601-650 of 1,001 Results
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Grace Mitchell, DO
Clinical Instructor (Affiliated), School of Medicine - Student Affairs
BioDr. Grace Mitchell was a ballet dancer before college and went into medicine after studying Nutritional Biochemistry and Metabolism. She partners with patients to include nutrition, exercise, and medication recommendations for individualized care. Osteopathic training has given her an extra set of tools for treating musculoskeletal pain and other structural problems. She enjoys every aspect of Family Medicine, especially maternity care, diabetes, and pediatrics. For fun, she enjoys Spanish conversation, salsa and swing dancing, board games, and trying new cuisines.
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Daria Mochly-Rosen
George D. Smith Professor of Translational Medicine
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsTwo areas: 1. Using rationally-designed peptide inhibitors to study protein-protein interactions in cell signaling. Focus: protein kinase C in heart and large GTPases regulating mitochondrial dynamics in neurodegdenration. 2. Using small molecules (identified in a high throughput screens and synthetic chemistry) as activators and inhibitors of aldehyde dehydrogenases, a family of detoxifying enzymes, and glucose-6-phoshate dehydrogenase, in normal cells and in models of human diseases.
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Marco Antonio Monroy
Associate Director for Biosciences Graduate Education Initiatives, School of Medicine - Grad Student Support
Current Role at StanfordDirector, Biosciences ADVANCE Institute
Associate Director for Stanford Biosciences Graduate Education Initiatives -
Aurelie Montagne
Affiliate, Department Funds
Fellow in Psychiatry and Behavioral SciencesBioDr. Aurélie Montagne is a psychiatrist whose work centers on psychotherapy, systemic approaches to care, and the organization of psychiatric services. Throughout her training, she has developed advanced expertise across multiple psychotherapy modalities, with a particular interest in group-based interventions. Her research has explored innovative models of care delivery, including teletherapy for complex trauma.
In parallel with her clinical and scholarly work, Dr. Montagne has pursued additional training and supervision in systemic and relational approaches to psychiatry. Her work in this area emphasizes the integration of interpersonal and contextual factors into psychiatric formulation and care.
Dr. Montagne has also been actively engaged in medical education and leadership. She has been a dedicated teacher of medical students and residents and has held leadership roles aimed at strengthening undergraduate psychiatric education. Her clinical expertise extends to day hospital (partial hospitalization) programs, where she integrates psychotherapy, group-based care, and systemic thinking into program development and delivery. She will be joining the McGill University Health Centre as an Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, where she will lead the Adult Psychiatry Day Hospital. -
Carson T. Moss
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in MedicineBioDr. Carson T. Moss is an Internal Medicine resident at Stanford and incoming Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine fellow, starting in 2026. He has contributed to multicenter clinical trials including STOP-BOS, ATHOS-III, and PETAL-ROSE. His clinical and research focus centers on pulmonary complications in immunocompromised patients, with particular expertise in bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS), a rare manifestation of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. His work with Dr. Joe Hsu has been published in Blood Advances and Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, with findings presented at annual ATS meetings.
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Patricia Moussatche
CTSA Hub QA/QC Project Manager, Translational Research Operations
Current Role at StanfordCTSA Hub QA/QC Program Manager
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Kevin Nee, MD, PhD
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in SurgeryBioDr. Nee is a general surgery resident at Stanford, Department of Surgery. He completed his MD/PhD training at UC Irvine: School of Medicine in the Medical Scientist Training Program. His dissertation research focused on defining pericytes, fibroblasts, and adipocytes in breast cancer using single-cell RNA sequencing.