Stanford University
Showing 11-20 of 33 Results
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Caitlin Gocecamat
Affiliate, School of Medicine - Biomedical Ethics
BioI am a 2026 Stanford Storytelling & Medicine Summer Scholar! I am a rising junior at San José State University (SJSU), majoring in Psychology with a minor in Child and Adolescent Development, and hoping to attend counseling psychology graduate school. As a McNair Scholar, I am investigating the impact of third places on Santa Clara County adolescents in retrospect. Also, I foster my cultural connections as a research assistant for the SJSU BIPOC-MPMH Lab by interviewing Filipinx in the Bay Area about their experiences with colorism and its impacts on mental health. Aside from research, I work as a Psychology Peer Mentor to enrich high schoolers' understanding and passion for psychology. In my free time, I love to dance, read interactive novels, listen to new music, sew, and scrapbook! I am excited to mix arts with medicine because wellness should be led by a holistic approach with lots of fun and emotion!
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Christy Hartman
Adm Svcs Admstr 1, School of Medicine - Biomedical Ethics
Current Role at StanfordProgram Manager, Medical Humanities and the Arts Program
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Stephanie Henry
Finance and Operations Director, School of Medicine - Biomedical Ethics
Current Role at StanfordDirector of Finance and Administration,The Laurie J. Girand Center for Biomedical Ethics at Stanford, Stanford University School of Medicine
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Niloufar Hosseinalipour
Affiliate, School of Medicine - Biomedical Ethics
BioNiloufar joined the French literature graduate program at the University of Minnesota in Fall 2023, completed her M.A. in June 2025, and is now pursuing her PhD. At Stanford, she participates in the Storytelling and Medicine program. Her research takes a historiographical approach to the intersections of French and Francophone literary traditions, the history of medicine, feminist thought, and postcolonial theory. She is particularly interested in how literary and medical discourses have collaborated in the pathologization of racialized and gendered bodies, and how these histories continue to shape contemporary understandings of illness and subjectivity. Drawing on thinkers such as Gayatri Spivak, Michel Foucault, and Georges Canguilhem, her work explores questions of representation, translation, and epistemic violence, as well as the ways literature both exposes and conceals the voices of marginalized subjects. Her interest in these issues is grounded in broader concerns about psychiatry’s political responsibility, the ethical stakes of diagnosis, and the role of narrative in mediating suffering.
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Henry Francis Isselbacher
Research Administrator, School of Medicine - Biomedical Ethics
BioHenry Isselbacher is a Research Administrator at the Laurie J. Girand Center for Biomedical Ethics at Stanford. He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in May 2024 with a degree in Economics and Public Health, earning honors in Public Health for his senior thesis titled "Vacancy Rates in US Hospitals with Workplace Violence Prevention Programs." As an undergraduate, Henry developed an extensive background in financial reporting and budgeting as CFO for UC Berkeley's student association and co-chair of several student fee committees. After graduating, Henry worked in the Division of Student Affairs at Cal as a Special Projects Coordinator, where he focused on efforts to streamline the accessibility and awareness of funding and other resources for students and student organizations.