School of Medicine
Showing 51-60 of 77 Results
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Justin Norden, MD, MBA, MPhil
Adjunct Professor, Med/BMIR
BioDr. Justin Norden is an Adjunct Professor at Stanford Medicine in the Department of Biomedical Informatics Research. He teaches courses on digital health and AI in Medicine. His research focuses on AI in healthcare, digital health, and care system transformation.
Additionally, Dr. Norden is a Partner at GSR Ventures where he focuses on early-stage investments in digital health and AI/ML in healthcare. Prior to GSR Ventures, Dr. Norden was founder and CEO of Trustworthy AI which was acquired by Waymo (Google Self-Driving). He worked on the healthcare team at Apple, co-founded Indicator (an NLP based platform for biopharma decision making), and helped start the Stanford Center for Digital Health.
Dr. Norden received an MD from Stanford University School of Medicine, where he served as student body president. An MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business, where he served as president of the healthcare club. An M.Phil in Computational Biology with distinction from the University of Cambridge, and a BA in Computer Science with distinction from Carleton College.
Finally, he is a professional athlete for the Oakland Spiders (ultimate frisbee) - holding the team all-time records for assists and completions. He is a 3x World Champion, 1x professional champion, former Team USA Captain (U24), and D1 University National Champion. -
Natalie Pageler
Clinical Professor, Peds/Clinical Informatics
Clinical Professor, Medicine - Biomedical Informatics ResearchCurrent Research and Scholarly InterestsIn my administrative role, I oversee the development and maintenance of clinical decision support tools within the electronic medical record. These clinical decision support tools are designed to enhance patient safety, efficiency, and quality of care. My research focuses on rigorously evaluating--1) how these tools affect clinician knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors; and 2) how these tools affect clinical outcomes and efficiency of health care delivery.
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Malvika Pillai
Postdoctoral Scholar, Biomedical Informatics
BioMalvika Pillai is a postdoctoral research fellow in the VA Big Data Scientist Training Enhancement Program (BD-STEP), jointly in Stanford University in Medicine (Biomedical Informatics) in the Boussard Lab and VA Palo Alto. She received her BS in Quantitative Biology and PhD in Health Informatics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her current work focuses on developing, evaluating, and implementing fair artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML) models that can lead to high-quality, patient-centered care.
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Thomas Robert Savage
Masters Student in Biomedical Informatics, admitted Autumn 2022
BioDr Thomas Savage is a Hospitalist at Stanford University Hospital. He teaches residents and medical students on the general medicine service as well as covers the oncology, cardiology and transplant services as a nocturnist. His research interests include artificial intelligence applications to medicine and wearable medical devices.