Stanford University
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Sneha Shah Jain MD, MBA
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Cardiovascular Medicine
BioDr. Sneha S. Jain is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at Stanford University, where she specializes in general cardiovascular medicine and preventive cardiology. She co-founded and is the director of GUIDE-AI, which focuses on the development, responsible deployment, and pragmatic evaluation of AI tools to augment healthcare delivery and improve patient outcomes across the healthcare enterprise.
Dr. Jain completed her undergraduate studies in Economics at Duke University, graduating with distinction, before earning her MD from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and her MBA from Harvard Business School. She completed internal medicine residency training at Columbia/NewYork-Presbyterian, and fellowship training in cardiovascular medicine at Stanford University.
Dr. Jain serves as an Expert AI Consultant for the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, a member of the AHA Expert Panel for the AI Validation Lab, and Co-Director of the Cross-Sectional Artificial Intelligence Working Group at the American College of Cardiology, where she also serves on the Healthcare Innovation Council. -
Yash Jain
MBA, expected graduation 2026
BioYash is an MBA candidate at the Stanford GSB (Class of 2026).
Prior to Stanford, he worked at McKinsey & Company and later at Careem (an Uber company), where he helped build and scale Careem Pay, one of the fastest-growing fintech platforms in the Middle East. His work focused on strategy, digital payments, and launching new products across emerging markets - specially in the Middle East.
At Stanford, Yash is exploring new ventures at the intersection of technology and entrepreneurship. He is driven by a broader goal of creating lasting impact - building institutions, products, and communities that leave things better than they were and open doors for people who may never have believed those doors were meant for them. -
Siddhartha Jaiswal
Associate Professor of Pathology
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsWe identified a common disorder of aging called clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP). CHIP occurs due to certain somatic mutations in blood stem cells and represents a precursor state for blood cancer, but is also associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease and death. We hope to understand more about the biology and clinical implications of CHIP using human and model system studies.