Surgery hosts Bi-Annual New and Junior Faculty Retreat
October 1, 2025
"When you become faculty, you have more flexibility, you have more choice, and that means employing strategy," said Assistant Professor Dr. Cliff Sheckter. "You have to be intentional. Make a plan."
The Department of Surgery's bi-annual New and Junior Faculty Retreat, held Sept. 19 and organized by Vice Chair of Professional Development Peter Lorenz and Associate Vice Chair of Professional Development Dr. Stephanie Chao, equipped new Stanford Surgeons the tools and information to craft their individual roadmaps for success.
"We covered a variety of topics," said Chao. "Dr. [Mary] Hawn presented on how departmental finances flow—a session that has proven invaluable even for senior faculty, and we also covered keys to promotion and success at Stanford."
During a panel on "Funding Your Academic Mission" hosted by the Vice Chairs of Research, Dr. Olivia Martinez said, "All of the opportunities can be overwhelming. People dive into everything and then are spread so thin, they can't gain traction." Something Dr. Joe Forrester experienced firsthand.
"My first year as faculty, I said 'yes' to too many societies, but after a year, I realized I couldn't contribute as much as I wanted to each of them and had to cut back," said Forrester.
Instead, she recommends "digging in and gaining prominence" in one or two areas. Dr. George Poultsides mirrored the suggestion adding, "This is important for national prominence, which is important when it comes to promotion."
Support for new faculty doesn't end after the retreat, Chao and Lorenz will meet with all faculty after the retreat to counsel and discuss their needs.
Media Contact
Bio
About Stanford Surgery
The Stanford University Department of Surgery is dedicated to inventing the future of surgical care through:
• pioneering cutting-edge research,
• developing the next generation of leaders, and
• healing through incomparable surgical skills and compassion.
To learn more, please visit surgery.stanford.edu
The Latest
- – Surgery
Dr. Greg Tiao Joins Stanford Surgery
Greg Tiao, MD will join the Stanford Surgery team as a Professor in in the UML effective January 1, 2026. Tiao will be dual-appointed in the Divisions of Abdominal Transplantation and Pediatric Surgery.
- – Surgery
Staff Awards 25
Administrative Division Manager for General Surgery Ivette Arenas and Department Human Resources Administrator Anna Noriega are the inaugural recipients of the Stanford Surgery Staff Awards.
- – Surgery
Stanford Surgery Strengthens Academic and Research Collaboration in Montréal
A Stanford Surgery delegation traveled to Montréal last week to advance a growing collaboration with the Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM) and the Université de Montréal’s surgical and medical research programs. The visit focused on expanding joint clinical innovation, research exchange, and future opportunities for trainee engagement between the two institutions.
- – Surgery
20 years of Improving Transplant Tolerance with Dr. Stephan Busque
Dr. Stephan Busque shares insights from his 20-year journey in transplant tolerance, revealing groundbreaking research that will improve patient care, including the recent allogenic islet cell + bone marrow transplant for a Type 1 diabetes patient.
- – Surgery
Dr. Kimura Receives ACS Resident Research Scholarship
The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Scholarships Committee selected Dr. Cintia Kimura as a recipient of the 2026-2028 ACS Resident Research Scholarship.
- – CAP Profiles
Dr. Kirane Promoted!
Dr. Amanda Kirane has been promoted to Associate Professor in the Division of General Surgery, effective January 1, 2026.
- – Surgery
Lusaka Kidney Transplant Update Nov. 2025
Transplant Surgeon Dr. Tom Pham just returned from his most recent trip to Lusaka, Zambia, where he is working to create a kidney transplant program. This time, he was accompanied by fellow Stanford faculty members: Drs. Ken Tran from the Division of Vascular Surgery and Maha Mohamed from the Division of Nephrology in the Department of Medicine.
- – Surgery
Future Physician Feature: Dianelis Lopez
Dianelis Lopez is a Stanford Medical Student working in Dr. Sherri Krams' Lab and with the Center for Global Health.
- – Vascular & Endovascular Surgery
Dr. Anand Athavale Awarded 2026 AVF-Jobst Research Grant
Dr. Anand Athavale, Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery in the Division of Vascular Surgery at Stanford, has been selected to receive the prestigious 2026 AVF-JOBST Clinical Research Grant Award from the American Venous Forum (AVF).
- – News Center
Machine-learning model could save costs, improve liver transplants, Stanford-led research shows
A machine learning-based model predicts how long it will take an organ donor to die after removing life support, aiding surgeons in deciding whether organs can be successfully transplanted.