STANFORD HEALTH CARE

Where Innovation
Meets Care

Every Kind of Care for
Every Kind of Patient

STANFORD HEALTH CARE

Where Innovation
Meets Care

Every Kind of Care for
Every Kind of Patient

WHY CHOOSE

Stanford Health Care?

IN THE NEWS

Separation of ED Services

SPECIALTY CARE

Request a Specialty
Care Appointment

The best way to make an appointment is to contact your doctor or clinic directly.

If you need help, call guest services at 650-498-3333.

PRIMARY CARE

New to Primary Care
at Stanford?

We'll help you find the soonest appointment with a doctor near you.

Or call 1-833-777-6151 (Weekdays 8am - 5pm).

A Legacy of Innovation

Access to tomorrow’s therapies through clinical trials

Clinical trials are critical to progressing medical
advancements and helping people live longer. Many
of the treatments used today would not be available
if they were not first tested in clinical trials.

STANFORD HEALTH CARE

Where Innovation
Meets Care

Every Kind of Care for Every Kind of Patient

A reimagined space for health and healing, this extraordinary new facility doubles our capacity for patient care and modernizes our ability to treat and cure. It blends the most advanced medical technologies with a human-centered approach to patient care and brings us closer to achieving our vision—to predict, prevent and cure more precisely.

WHY CHOOSE

Stanford Health Care?

IN THE NEWS

Separation of ED Services

SPECIALTY CARE

Request a Specialty
Care Appointment

The best way to make an appointment is to contact your doctor or clinic directly.

If you need help, call guest services at 650-498-3333.

PRIMARY CARE

New to Primary Care
at Stanford?

We'll help you find the soonest appointment with a doctor near you.

Or call 1-833-777-6151 (Weekdays 8am - 5pm).

Why Choose Stanford Health Care

WHY CHOOSE

Stanford Health Care?

Exterior of Adult Emergency Department at 1199 Welch Road

IN THE NEWS

Separation of ED Services

SPECIALTY CARE

Request a Specialty
Care Appointment

The best way to make an appointment is to contact your doctor or clinic directly.

If you need help, call guest services at
650-498-3333.

PRIMARY CARE

New to Primary Care
at Stanford?

We'll help you find the soonest appointment with a doctor near you.

Or call 1-833-777-6151 (Weekdays 8am - 5pm).

A Legacy of Innovation

Access to tomorrow’s therapies through clinical trials

Clinical trials are critical to progressing medical
advancements and helping people live longer. Many
of the treatments used today would not be available
if they were not first tested in clinical trials.

A Legacy
of Innovation

Access to tomorrow’s therapies through clinical trials

Clinical trials are critical to progressing medical advancements and helping people live longer. Many of the treatments used today would not be available if they were not first tested in clinical trials.

CARE OPTIONS

Care Where And When You Need It

Expert
Specialty Care

Exceptional
Primary Care

Same Day
& Express Care

Emergency
Services


If you need help, call guest services at 650-498-3333

CARE OPTIONS

Care Where And When
You Need It

Expert
Specialty Care

Exceptional
Primary Care

Same Day
& Express Care

Emergency
Services

BECOMING A PATIENT

Care designed with
patients, for patients

Becoming a patient at Stanford Health Care is easy, no matter where you live or work.

GET A SECOND OPINION

Stanford Medicine Second
Opinion Program

Get a second opinion from a Stanford Medicine doctor without leaving home.

BECOMING A PATIENT

Care designed with
patients, for patients

Becoming a patient at Stanford Health Care is easy, no matter where you live or work.

GET A SECOND OPINION

Stanford Medicine Second
Opinion Program

Get a second opinion from a Stanford Medicine doctor without leaving home.

BECOMING A PATIENT

Care designed with
patients, for patients

Becoming a patient at Stanford Health Care is easy, no matter where you live or work.

GET A SECOND OPINION

Stanford Medicine Second Opinion Program

Get a second opinion from a Stanford Medicine doctor without leaving home.

STANFORD HEALTH CARE NOW

Explore the Latest Stories and Innovations

Stanford’s Online Second Opinion Program: World-Class Expertise. The Convenience of Home.
Imagine learning that you have a rare cancer, but limited treatment resources where you live. That was Cami’s experience, until she connected with Stanford Health Care’s Online Second Opinion Program. From the comfort of her home, she accessed highly-specialized expertise and new options for treatment. This video is intended for use by staff of Stanford Health Care. No representatives or warranties are made for outside use. Not for reproduction or publication without permission. Published September 2019 Stanford Health Care © 2019
When it Matters Most: High-Risk Patient Controls Colon Cancer Risk with Regular Screenings
Sara always suspected she was at high risk for colon cancer. Her mom had colon cancer three times, and both of her grandparents had the disease. Because of her family history, she had her first colonoscopy in her 30s. An all-clear result put her on a schedule to repeat the test in five to eight years. But Sara wondered if this was frequent enough. She came to the Stanford Health Care Digestive Health Center for a second opinion. At her first appointment, Dr. Uri Ladabaum, MD, Director of Stanford’s GI Cancer Prevention Program, allayed her fears. “He said, ‘We’re going to develop a plan for you. It’s going to be okay,’” said Sara. “Colorectal cancer is one of the leading causes of death from cancer, but the majority of deaths from colorectal cancer are preventable,” said Dr. Ladabaum. “Screening is proven to decrease the risk.” A routine colonoscopy allows doctors to both detect and remove small growths called polyps, all during one outpatient procedure. By removing polyps early, before they are left to develop into cancerous lesions, colonoscopies can prevent colon cancer from ever developing. Because of her family history, Dr. Ladabaum recommended she have a colonoscopy every year, not every five to eight years. Sara has faithfully followed his advice, coming to Stanford annually, despite living three hours away. Her tests had all been clear until a year ago when Dr. Ladabaum found and removed a medium-sized polyp. If left to grow, she said, the polyp would have become cancerous. “Colon cancer is completely preventable, so why not go and get a colonoscopy?” Sara asked. “I can’t control if I get a polyp, but I can control if we get it out in time.” Learn More: Colonoscopy: https://stanfordhealthcare.org/medical-tests/c/colonoscopy.html General Endoscopy: https://stanfordhealthcare.org/medical-clinics/digestive-health-endoscopy-suite-redwood-city.html Advanced Endoscopy: https://stanfordhealthcare.org/medical-clinics/digestive-health-endoscopy-suite.html Dr. Uri Ladabaum: https://stanfordhealthcare.org/doctors/l/uri-ladabaum.html
Robotic spine surgery - No scarring, faster recovery. Pain-free, artist paints again.

Minimally Invasive Text

When heart disease is inherited, Stanford treats the whole family
When Monica’s dad died suddenly at age 68, it was a wake-up call for Monica and her siblings. She was referred to the Stanford Center for Inherited Cardiovascular Disease. “I always thought something was off, but no one could really tell me what until coming to Stanford,” said Monica, who had a history of heart irregularities. The team of cardiologists, genetic counselors and clinical nurse specialists at Stanford used her family history, medical tests and genome analysis to determine a diagnosis; Monica’s heart showed minor symptoms of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Minimally Invasive Outpatient Procedure Eases Prostate Enlargement
A man’s prostate gland grows with age. For Thomas, that meant almost hourly bathroom breaks that kept him from enjoying quality of life he’d earned after a career as a nurse. Medications failed to manage his symptoms. He completed exhaustive research on surgical approaches and alternatives. Then, he came to Stanford Health Care, one of the few health centers in the country to offer Prostate Artery Embolization (PAE). This video is intended for use by staff of Stanford Health Care. No representatives or warranties are made for outside use. Not for reproduction or publication without permission. Published September 2019 Stanford Health Care © 2019
Minimally Invasive Valve Repair Gives Patient Her Life Back
At age 58, Laura Hosking was unusually young to need a new aortic heart valve. But as a teen, she was treated with extensive chemotherapy and radiation, a therapy that worked to cure her of lymphoma, but left a legacy on her internal organs. In her 40s, shortness of breath sidelined Laura from the activities she loved. She sought the help of Stanford Medicine cardiology, and was diagnosed with aortic stenosis, a narrowing of the aortic valve opening. Given her complex medical history, the Stanford cardiology team recommended a non-surgical approach to repair her valve—a relatively new, minimally invasive procedure known as transcatheter aortic valve replacement, or TAVR. With TAVR, the new valve is compressed inside a thin catheter and threaded through a blood vessel in the leg up to the aorta. No open surgery or heart-lung bypass, so recovery is quicker. “TAVR gave me back my life in an immediate and profound way,” said Laura, who was up and walking the day after her procedure. Today, she is able to play golf, clock 10,000 steps a day and volunteer again.