Welcome to the Department of Medicine

Latest News

  • NIH Grants Rita Hamad a K08 and Four Years of Support

    Rita Hamad is using an NIH grant to study the relationship between social and economic circumstances during childhood and the effects they have on health outcomes.


  • Vinicio de Jesus Perez Receives Prestigious Award from ASCI

    Each year for the past several years, the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI) has presented about 30 Young Physician-Scientist Awards, which recognize medical professionals.


  • Staff Engagement Fiesta set for June 16

    Department of Medicine staff members are invited to join Cathy Garzio for a presentation of the employee engagement survey results, followed by a free taco lunch.


  • Chertow’s JAMA Editorial Challenges Nephrologists

    A randomized clinical trial designed to compare the effects of shorter and longer times to initiating dialysis in critically ill hospitalized patients with AKI was just published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and was accompanied by an editorial by Glenn Chertow.


Medicine Grand Rounds

June 8 @ 8-9 am

Reimagining Medical Education

LKSC, Berg Hall, 2nd Floor

June 15 @ 8-9 am

Cardiac Evaluation of Patients Undergoing Non-Cardiac Surgery

LKSC, Berg Hall, 2nd Floor

June 22 @ 8-9 am

Medicine is a Performance Art: Reframing the Medical Encounter through the Lens of Magic and Performance Studies

LKSC, Berg Hall, 2nd Floor

Faculty Activities Of Note

Research Corner with Ken Mahaffey

Vice Chair of Clinical Research Ken Mahaffey sits down with Rebecca McCue to discuss clinical research at Stanford.

The Great Lie that Tells the Truth | Abraham Verghese | TEDxStanford

Cardiology 2015: The Year in Review

In the latest episode of “The Bob Harrington Show” on Medscape’s theheart.org, Drs Harrington and Gibson give their annual review of the highs and lows in medicine with a focus on cardiology.

Divisions in the Department of Medicine

Stanford Internal Medicine Residency Program Hangout

  • “I think I’ve finally found my calling in immunology.”

    Having come to the United States from India in 1998, Purvesh Khatri, originally planned a career as an electronics and communications engineer.