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Joseph Kitterman, MD is a neonatologist at Lucile Packard Children's Health Services at UCSF, professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, and a senior staff member at the Cardiovascular Research Institute. He is director of UCSF's neonatology fellowship program. Dr. Kitterman has had a long time research interest in the development of the respiratory system of the fetus and newborn. He and his colleagues provide care to more than 800 infants a year in the UCSF neonatal intensive care unit

David Teitel, MD is pediatric cardiologist Lucile Packard Children's Health Services at UCSF. He is a professor of pediatrics and the chief of the division of pediatric cardiology in the department of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, and is an associate staff member of the Cardiovascular Research Institute. His clinical interests focus on interventional cardiac catheterization in infants and children. At UCSF he developed the first digital, networked cardiac catheterization laboratory, which specializes in providing high resolution digital images of the heart, critical in the repair of congenital heart defects. His research focuses on the development of the cardiovascular system in the fetus and the newborn.

Pediatric cardiologist Daniel Bernstein, MD is the chief of the division of pediatric cardiology at Packard Children's Health Services at Stanford. He is an associate professor of pediatrics at Stanford University School of Medicine. His clinical and research interests include pediatric heart transplantation and cardiomyopathy.

Neonatologist David Stevenson, MD is the director of the Charles B. and Ann L. Johnson Center for Pregnancy and Newborn Services. He is chief of the division of Neonatal and Developmental Medicine at Stanford School of Medicine and the Harold K. Faber Professor of Pediatrics. His research interests include neonatal jaundice and the developmental biology of heme oxygenase, the enzyme that controls the production of jaundice pigment. He and his colleagues at Lucile Packard Children's Health Services at Stanford treat over 1,400 infants a year in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

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