We are a diverse group of clinicians, researchers, educators, staff, and trainees working across 15 divisions and centers, united by our mission to improve the health of our local community and the world at large.
Stanford Department of Medicine's leadership team, led by Dr Euan Ashley and senior faculty and staff, works to advance excellence in medical research, education, and patient care.
Meet Stanford Department of Medicine's divisional leaders including our division chiefs and administrative directors. Explore division highlights across research, education, and patient care.
Find active faculty across the whole Department of Medicine, including recalled emeritus faculty. Search by faculty name, or sort by division, rank, and line. Click on each profile to learn more about the faculty member’s work, interests, and educational background.
Robert Negrin is capping an extraordinary 2025-26 with major leadership roles, lifetime achievement awards, and renewed NIH funding for Stanford’s BMT-CT program.
Through expert interviews and clear, engaging updates, Stanford Department of Medicine Communications brings you the latest scientific breakthroughs, in broad and accessible terms.
Stanford's William Robinson, MD, and his team have revealed how the Epstein-Barr virus reprograms immune cells to set off lupus-cracking one of immunology's longest-standing mysteries.
Designed by Samantha Wang and Marcel Hite, the event highlighted the division's remarkable growth, commitment to academic excellence, and strong culture of mentorship.
Stanford Medicine researchers reveal new evidence connecting Epstein-Barr virus, a common infection that causes mononucleosis, to the development of multiple sclerosis.
Led by Dr. Jennifer Tremmel, Stanford's new Women's Heart Health Fellowship trains physicians like Dr. Cathevine Yang to advance equitable, personalized cardiovascular care for women.
Stanford Department of Medicine kicked off its newly revamped Medical Grand Rounds series with a keynote from William E. Flanary, MD, better known as Dr. Glaucomflecken.
Stanford hospitalists are addressing social drivers of health-like food insecurity and housing instability – through community partnerships, improving outcomes and advancing health equity.
Stanford researchers are advancing allergy care-from addressing disparities in Asian American communities to exploring environmental impacts of asthma inhalers.
Learn how Suzanne Tamang is using AI to transform public health research, linking environmental exposures to autoimmune disease in vulnerable communities.