Stanford University
Showing 2,021-2,040 of 37,047 Results
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Grant Barber
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Gastroenterology & Hepatology
BioDr. Grant Barber is a Clinical Assistant Professor at Stanford University. His clinical passion is in the care of patients suffering from inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. After completing his medical training at Harvard Medical School, he completed his training in gastroenterology as well as a Master's degree in clinical research at Stanford. He completed additional training in advanced IBD management at Stanford before joining faculty. His research is focused on male reproductive health in IBD, quality improvement in the provision of IBD care, and economic studies to identify strategies that provide excellent outcomes while being sustainable within the healthcare system. He is an expert in tailoring evidence-based therapies to need of individual people with IBD.
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Simon R Bare
Distinguished Staff Scientist, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordStanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL)
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Stacy Anton Bare
Veteran Fellow,
Affiliate, FinanceBioI am a nationally recognized outdoor recreation and conservation leader with a career focus on ensuring time outdoors is viewed as a fundamental aspect of health and that outdoor athletes have access to mental health support. I am a community driven, consensus and bridge building leader. I am seeking an opportunity to combine my experience in health, the outdoors, nonprofit leadership, fundraising, and community building into a transformative leadership opportunity. For the last nearly four years I’ve been an award winning executive director of Friends of Grand Rapids Parks, leading habitat restoration, trail building, and tree planting.
I am working through the Veteran Fellowship at The Hoover Institute to design a regional investment framework to coordinate public and private efforts, identify policy barriers, and activate landowners, agencies, and funders. The result: a replicable model for cross-jurisdictional collaboration that drives rural revitalization through outdoor infrastructure.