School of Medicine
Showing 101-120 of 255 Results
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James Michael Kilgour
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in DermatologyBioJames grew up in Oxford in the United Kingdom. He graduated from Cardiff University School of Medicine with honours in 2017, and has a BSc in Medical Education. Following graduation, he completed two years as a clinical academic in Dermatology at the University of Oxford, conducting research investigating patient-reported outcome measures and quality of life in patients with Graft-versus-Host-Disease following allogenic stem cell transplant. He subsequently completed a two year precision medicine fellowship at the Stanford University Department of Dermatology, focusing on cutaneous oncology and hidradenitis suppurativa. He has also extensively published in medical education, and co-founded a novel peer reviewed medical journal targeted at encouraging medical students to publish and peer review. He is currently completing his residency in Dermatology at Stanford.
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Hanna Maria Knihtila
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in PediatricsBioHanna Knihtila is a Pediatrics Resident at Stanford. She gained her MD in 2017 and PhD in 2018 from the University of Helsinki, Finland. She then completed her 2-year postdoctoral research fellowship at the Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School before joining Stanford for her residency training.
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Justin Kochanski
Affiliate, Department Funds
Fellow in Pediatrics - CardiologyBioI'm passionate about delivering high quality, equitable care to patients with congenital heart disease.
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Kiran Kocherlakota
Director, Proposal Development Office, SoM Proposal Development Office
Current Role at StanfordDr. Kiran Kocherlakota is dedicated to empowering research faculty members to effectively compete for coveted funding opportunities
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Katherine C. Konvinse, MD, PhD
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in PediatricsBioKatherine Konvinse, MD, PhD is a resident physician in the Stanford Pediatric Residency Research Track Program. She completed her MD and PhD training at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. Her current research focuses on characterizing the serum antibody responses in pediatric patients exposed to viral infections including COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) under the mentorship of Professor PJ Utz.
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Christine Shyrue Lai
Affiliate, Department Funds
Fellow in Pediatrics - Hematology/OncologyBioDr. Christine Lai is a Pediatric Hematology Oncology Fellow in the Bass Center at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. Prior to coming to Stanford, she trained in pediatric residency at Northwell Alexandra Cohen Children's Hospital in New Hyde Park, NY and attended medical school at New York University. Her current research interests are cancer immunotherapy and cancer glycobiology. She currently works in Professor Carolyn Bertozzi's lab and sees patients in the Bass Center Clinic.
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Michael Lange
Affiliate, Department Funds
Resident in Surgery - General SurgeryBioUndergrad: Brigham Young University
Medical School: Indiana University School of Medicine
Medical Internship: General Surgery, Stanford Health Care -
Evan Lee
Masters Student in Physician Assistant Studies, admitted Autumn 2022
BioEvan grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and completed his B.S. Physiological Sciences at UCLA. After undergrad, he worked as a medical assistant at a Bay Area allergy clinic, as well as an optometric assistant in Palo Alto before attending Stanford University to begin his Master's education in Physician Assistant Studies.
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Gracee Lee
Affiliate, Physician Assistant Studies
BioGrace Choi, PA is a physician assistant at Stanford Health Care's Orthopedic department. She specializes in arthritis and joint replacement.
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Julie J Lee
Affiliate, Department Funds
Fellow in Graduate Medical EducationBioJulie J. Lee, MD, MPH, is a board-certified internal medicine physician and clinical informaticist at Stanford University. Dr. Lee's expertise in clinical informatics enables her to implement informatics-driven approaches and new technologies, such as AI, to optimize clinical workflows, alleviate physician burnout, and champion health equity in a world of growing dependence on digitalized health systems.
Dr. Lee has been key to several initiatives in improving operational processes within Stanford. Her efforts range from advancing the governance of clinical decision support to the strategic integration of the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program into the electronic health record (EHR), thereby reducing clinician work burden in addressing the opioid crisis. Additionally, she has developed an innovative EHR tool that serves as a dynamic guide and triage system, effectively managing the surge of patient portal communications.
Health equity is her north star, informing Dr. Lee to dedicated engagement with historically underrepresented populations in medical research and collaborative partnerships between academia and community healthcare practitioners. Her previous role as an EpiScholar with the Los Angeles Department of Public Health involved researching the impact of language and acculturation on the Latino population's dietary habits and health behaviors, with a particular focus on diabetes. She has also worked with community health centers in east Los Angeles to bridge the translational gap between academic research and frontline healthcare workers, facilitating the transfer of cutting-edge liver disease research to those treating patients with substance abuse-related liver conditions. Of major clinical interest is cardiovascular disease—she has published several papers on impact of sex-specific risk factors for cardiovascular disease in women and transgender population.
Currently, as a part of her informatics approaches, Dr. Lee focuses health equity on leveraging patient data and AI/ML models to identify and mitigate health disparities, making certain they function as instruments of equity rather than increasing gaps. She is a member of Healthcare AI Applied Research Team (HEA3RT) with a focus on bringing code to bedside. In the upcoming academic year, Dr. Lee will lead as health equity informaticist within the Primary Care Population Health division at Stanford.