Mar
2
Tue
2021
Diversity Lecture: Fatima Stanford, MD, MPH, MPA
Mar 2 @ 7:00 am – 8:00 am

Fatima Cody Stanford, MD, MPH, MPA, FAAP, FACP, FAHA, FTOS is an obesity medicine physician scientist, educator, and policy maker at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Mar
15
Mon
2021
ZOOM | Weekly Work-In-Progress Session
Mar 15 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Weekly Work-In-Progress

Presented by:
Tom Handley, MD
Knight-Hennessy Scholar
Stanford University

Title: Cost-effectiveness of Dapagliflozin for Non-Diabetic Chronic Kidney Disease

Bio: Tom Handley is an MD from the UK. He is a Knight-Hennessy Scholar studying for a master’s degree in Health Policy, with specific interests in transplant policy and optimization.

For dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynski@stanford.edu

Mar
23
Tue
2021
Grand Rounds: Zara Cooper, MD, MSc
Mar 23 @ 7:00 am – 8:00 am

Zara Cooper, MD, MSc is an acute care surgeon, trauma surgeon, and surgical intensivist certified in palliative medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Mar
29
Mon
2021
Weekly Work In Progress Session
Mar 29 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Balasubramanian Narasimhan, Dept. of Statistics

Presented by:
Dr. Dr. Balasubramanian Narasimhan
Director and Senior Research Scientist-Physical, Biomedical Data Science
Stanford University

Yulin Chien
Software Developer
Stanford University Research Informatics Center (RIC)

Eileen Kiamanesh
Research Data Analyst
Stanford University Research Informatics Center (RIC)

Title: “Introduction to the Research Informatics Center”

For dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynski@stanford.edu

Apr
6
Tue
2021
Grand Rounds: Wei Zhou, MD
Apr 6 @ 7:00 am – 8:00 am

Wei Zhou, MD, FACS, is a professor of surgery and the chief of the Division of Vascular Surgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson.

Apr
12
Mon
2021
ZOOM | Weekly Work-In-Progress Session
Apr 12 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Kristen Davis, MPH
Social Science Research Professional, S-SPIRE Center
Stanford University

 

 

 

 

 

Marzena Sasnal, PhD
Social Science Research Professional, S-SPIRE Center
Stanford University

 

 

TITLE: “NIH Grant Updates, Data Sharing Plan & Working Session: Updating Your Biosketch to the New NIH Format”

ZOOM DIAL IN:

For dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynki@stanford.edu.

Apr
19
Mon
2021
Weekly Work-In-Progress Session
Apr 19 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Presented by:
Talha Rafeeqi, MBBS
General Surgery Resident
Valley Health System, Las Vegas, NV

Under the mentorship of Dr. Bruzoni
Associate Professor of Surgery (Pediatric Surgery)
Stanford University Medical Center

Title: “The Effect of Metabolic Surgery on Diabetes Remission in the Underserved Hispanic
Pediatric Population”

Bio:
Dr. Rafeeqi was born and raised in the Bay Area and graduated from Palo Alto Senior High School.  He elected to study medicine in the country of his heritage, Pakistan, where he attained his medical degree from Dow University of Health Sciences.  Since then, he has journeyed from working with Dr. Brendan Visser in the HPB Surgery department, to New Jersey where he completed his intern year, and now Las Vegas where he is completing third year of his general surgery residency.  He will be starting this July as the Pediatric Surgery department’s Innovations in Pediatric Surgery research fellow, where he will work to organize and carry out research to further the management of pediatric surgical disease.

For Zoom dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynski@stanford.edu.

Apr
26
Mon
2021
Weekly Work In Progress Session
Apr 26 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Presented by:
Francesca Rinaldo, MD, PhD

Title: “Case Studies in Digital, Real-world Data Collection and AI Model Building”

Bio:

Francesca Rinaldo, MD, PhD is a physician- scientist with a background in basic/translational research, clinical research and healthcare delivery innovation. She is an affiliated scholar at the Stanford Clinical Excellence Research Center (CERC), a Design, Innovation and Clinical Entrepreneurship (DICE) Fellow, and Director of Clinical Success at doc.ai, where she works with multidisciplinary teams to design and execute digital clinical studies and build novel and clinically relevant machine learning models.  From 2015-2020 she was a resident in General Surgery at Stanford, and completed the CERC Healthcare Design Fellowship in 2017-2018.  As a CERC fellow, Francesca was a Clinical Lead for the Stanford CERC Partnership for AI-assisted Care (PAC) and received seed funding from the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. She is a content matter expert in Aging and Late Life, and her clinical interests are strongly rooted in health services and technology aimed at improving the health of the rapidly aging global population. She is passionate about exploring novel applications of digital health technology for improving the quality, cost and accessibility of healthcare for all individuals.

 

For dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynski@stanford.edu.

Weekly Work In Progress Session
Apr 26 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Presented by:
Shipra Arya, MD
Associate Professor, Vascular Surgery

Title: “Home-Time and Health-Related Quality of Life: A Mixed Methods Study of Veterans after Surgery”

Bio:

Shipra Arya, MD SM FACS is an Associate Professor of Surgery at the Stanford University School of Medicine and section chief of vascular surgery at VA Palo Alto Healthcare System. She has a Master’s degree in epidemiology from the Harvard School of Public Health with focus on research methodology and cardiovascular epidemiology. She completed her General Surgery Residency at Creighton University Medical Center followed by a Vascular Surgery Fellowship at University of Michigan. She has been funded by American Heart Association (AHA), NIH/NIA GEMSSTAR grant, VA Palo Alto Center for Innovation and Implementation (Ci2i) and is currently funded by VA HSR&D. The accumulated evidence from her research all points to the fact that frailty is a versatile tool that can be utilized to guide surgical decision making, inform patient consent and design quality improvement initiatives at the patient and hospital level. The field of frailty research in surgical population is still relatively nascent and her current work focuses on streamlining frailty evaluation, and implementation of patient and system level interventions to improve surgical outcomes and enhance patient centered care.

 

For dial-in instructions, please contact Ana Mezynski at mezynski@stanford.edu.

May
4
Tue
2021
Grand Rounds: CANCELLED
May 4 @ 7:00 am – 8:00 am

Tune in for Homan21 on Friday! https://surgery.stanford.edu/holman/2021.html