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AI offers UCSF clinicians novel opportunities for patient care
Mark Pletcher, MD, MPH; Yulin Hswen, ScD, MPH; and Jean Feng, MS, PhD, discuss the opportunities and challenges of medical AI.
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Effects of structural racism on mortality in underserved groups
| Salma Shariff-Marco, PhD, MPH, and Iona Cheng, PhD, MPH, will study the effects of structural racism on mortality in a variety of racial and ethnic minoritized groups. | |
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Antibiotic therapy in acutely malnourished children | Catie Oldenburg, ScD, MPH, will study the use of azithromycin as an adjunct to nutritional care in children with severe acute malnutrition. | |
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Social determinants of cardiometabolic health in young adults | Alison Cohen, PhD, MPH, is studying the economic and educational factors on young adults’ cardiometabolic health at two California public universities. | |
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Telehealth is as safe as a visit to the clinic for abortion pills | PhD student Leah Koenig, MSPH, is co-author of a large national study that finds that video visits, texting, and mailing pills are all safe and effective in providing medical abortion. This study was featured in UCSF News, the New York Times, and the San Francisco Chronicle. | |
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American Heart Association awards “food is medicine” approaches to health care delivery | Alexis Beatty, MD, MAS, received an award to study cardiac rehab participants and the efficacy of navigation and text messaging interventions for increasing participation in a food is medicine program. | |
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Aaron Scheffler received R01 award | Aaron Scheffler, PhD, MS, received his first R01 award from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to study Bayesian object-oriented modeling of multi-modal imaging data. | |
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Daisy León-Martínez named a Health Equity Scholar | Master in Advanced Studies (MAS) student Daisy León-Martínez, MD, is a 2024 School of Medicine Dean’s Population Health and Health Equity Scholar. She will study the risk factors for prenatal cardio-metabolic disease in Medicaid-eligible pregnant people and whether group prenatal care may mitigate the risks. | |
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William Pace received Prostate Cancer Program pilot award | Third-year medical student William “Aidan” Pace will work with June Chan, ScD, and team on examining inflammation markers pre- and post-exercise using blood samples from their Active Surveillance Exercise Trial. | |
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Redesigned course in Justice and Advocacy in Medicine | Kala Mehta, DSc, MPH, received an award in recognition of her redesign of “Justice and Advocacy in Medicine,” a course on social determinants of health through an advocacy lens that is taken by UCSF medical students. | |
Photo collage from the study's website of healthy food and people being active. | |
Study to improve cancer survivorship expands to more cancer types |
The Tools To Be Fit study, led by Erin Van Blarigan, ScD, has expanded to include survivors of bladder, breast, colon, endometrial, kidney (renal cell carcinoma), ovarian, prostate and rectal cancers. This study was also selected for the CDI2/UC BRAID Health Data Warehouse Pilot Project to test clinical study recruitment across the UC campuses.
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New center for computational cancer biology | Katie Pollard, PhD, received a grant from the Biswas Family Foundation to establish a new Center for Transformative Computational Cancer Biology. | |
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Two faculty members received PCORI supplemental funding | Jean Feng, MS, PhD, and Mi-Ok Kim, PhD, MS, MA, each received supplemental funding from PCORI for “Methods Supplement to Support Innovative Research on AI and Large Language Models in Patient-Centered Clinical Effectiveness Research.” | |
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Name change for public health research collab CPR3 | Two separate initiatives—the UC-CDPH Modeling and Advanced Analytics Consortium and the California Collaborative for Pandemic Recovery and Readiness Research—were created to inform COVID-19 recovery efforts. They have expanded into additional public health research areas and merged into the California Collaborative for Public Health Research (CPR3). | |
New course director for the Implementation Science Training Program
Patience Afulani, PhD, MD, MPH, joined the program and is developing a new course in mixed methods for Spring 2025.
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Apply to become a 2024 RISE Fellow
Research in Implementation Science for Equity (RISE) is an all-expense paid training opportunity for junior faculty in the biomedical sciences. Apply for the 2024 Institute. Applications received by March 15 will be given priority.
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Apply for Training in Clinical Research master and certificate
Training in Clinical Research has four programs to advance your career: Master in Advanced Studies, Certificate, 1-year workshop, and summer workshop. Apply by March 31 for the master's program and May 2 for the certificate program.
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Register for spring courses by March 31
Check out our individual course offerings in implementation science, clinical research, epidemiology, biostatistics, data science and more.
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Apply for Health Data Science master’s or certificate by April 1
Health data science is a rapidly growing field, and our graduates are prepared for many careers in clinical research, public health, biotechnology, consulting, academia, and more.
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Register for Training in Reproducible Research on Aging for Social Science and Epidemiology (TRASE)
Register for a new virtual course, Data Analysis Skills for Reproducible Social and Behavioral Research on Health & Aging (Spring 2024), which will take place from April 15 to 17.
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Apply to become a 2024–25 CRISP postdoctoral fellow by April 1
The Clinical Research Informatics Postdoctoral (CRISP) program has two openings for postdoctoral fellows starting July 1. The program is designed for clinician scientists with strong mentorship who have identified feasible research projects focused on healthcare improvement.
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Assistant Professor Paul Wesson
Paul Wesson, PhD, is an epidemiologist focused on quantifying the health burdens of (and disparities related to) hard-to-reach and socially marginalized populations, particularly as they relate to infectious diseases.
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Statistical and Machine Learning Strategies in High-Dimensional Data Analytics
March 20, 2024 | 3 to 4 p.m. PST, MH-2700 & Zoom
Guest speaker: Syed Ejaz Ahmed, MD, Professor of Math & Statistics, Brock University
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“Torch-eCpG: a fast and scalable eQTM mapper for thousands of molecular phenotypes with graphical processing units.”
BMC Bioinformatics. Feb. 14, 2024. Kober KM, Berger L, Roy R, Olshen A.
“Temporary childbirth migration and maternal health care in India.”
PLoS One. Feb. 8, 2024. Diamond-Smith N, Gopalakrishnan L, Patil S, Fernald L, Menon P, Walker D, El Ayadi AM.
“Factors associated with anxiety during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States: An analysis of the COVID-19 Citizen Science study.”
PLoS One. Feb. 6, 2024. Cozen AE, Carton T, Hamad R, Kornak J, Faulkner Modrow M, Peyser ND, Park S, Orozco JH, Brandner M, O'Brien EC, Djibo DA, McMahill-Walraven CN, Isasi CR, Beatty AL, Olgin JE, Marcus GM, Pletcher MJ.
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“Improving the Safety of Computed Tomography Through Automated Quality Measurement: A Radiologist Reader Study of Radiation Dose, Image Noise, and Image Quality.”
Investigative Radiology. Jan. 25, 2024. Smith-Bindman R, Wang Y, Stewart C, Luong J, Chu PW, Kohli M, Westphalen AC, Siegel E, Ray M, Szczykutowicz TP, Bindman AB, Romano PS.
“Forest-goers as a heterogeneous population at high-risk for malaria: a case-control study in Aceh Province, Indonesia.”
Malaria Journal. Jan 30, 2024. Gallalee S, Zarlinda I, Silaen MG, Cotter C, Cueto C, Elyazar IRF, Jacobson JO, Gosling R, Hsiang MS, Bennett A, Coutrier FN, Smith JL.
Our faculty published 105 articles from January through February 2024.
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APPLY BY MARCH 15
Junior faculty members who are conducting cardiovascular or pulmonary disease research and interested in implementation science are invited to apply for RISE - Research in Implementation Science for Equity - Summer Institute.
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