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1 - 10 of 35 results for: PEDS ; Currently searching spring courses. You can expand your search to include all quarters

PEDS 116: Peer Education and the Campus Culture

This class prepares you to become a PEER (prevent, educate, empower, refer) educator.Multidisciplinary perspectives of public health, health psychology, sociology, and practice as it relates to substance use, sexual citizenship, and well-being. Students apply theoretical frameworks to health topics and outreach projects with attention to the reality of students¿ lived experiences. Participation in this course is required for prospective PEERs, but does not guarantee a future position as a PEER. Learn more: https://vaden.stanford.edu/super/programs/peers
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-3

PEDS 126: Design for Health: Building Early Relational Health (DESIGN 263)

We aim to address key challenges in early relational health, which is defined as healthy and positive and nurturing parent/caregiver child relationships, in the context of safe and secure communities. One in 4 adults in the US has an adverse child experience, which is associated with lifetime risks of mental and physical chronic health conditions. By applying "health literacy" as a lens in the constraint of pediatric primary care, we aim to develop key insights and to design solutions to these key challenges - with a focus on children, families and communities that have been historically and systematically undeserved. To do so, we will listen deeply to expert perspectives from healthcare workers, community leaders, and family members. We will apply human-centered design and related methodologies in real-world settings (hospital, clinics and homes), responsive to problems prioritized by system leaders. We will address questions that arise when seeking to address literacy and language ba more »
We aim to address key challenges in early relational health, which is defined as healthy and positive and nurturing parent/caregiver child relationships, in the context of safe and secure communities. One in 4 adults in the US has an adverse child experience, which is associated with lifetime risks of mental and physical chronic health conditions. By applying "health literacy" as a lens in the constraint of pediatric primary care, we aim to develop key insights and to design solutions to these key challenges - with a focus on children, families and communities that have been historically and systematically undeserved. To do so, we will listen deeply to expert perspectives from healthcare workers, community leaders, and family members. We will apply human-centered design and related methodologies in real-world settings (hospital, clinics and homes), responsive to problems prioritized by system leaders. We will address questions that arise when seeking to address literacy and language barriers to highly efficacious care for those in greatest need. Parents will be trained alongside Students with design skills to tackle this challenge. Results of this work will inform redesign across the >3000 pediatric clinics serving low-income communities through the Reach Out and Read National Network.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2
Instructors: Sanders, L. (PI)

PEDS 199: Undergraduate Directed Reading/Research

Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-18 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aby, J. (PI) ; Addala, A. (PI) ; Agarwal, R. (PI) ; Alexander, S. (PI) ; Almond, C. (PI) ; Alvira, C. (PI) ; Amieva, M. (PI) ; Ammerman, S. (PI) ; Amylon, M. (PI) ; Anand, S. (PI) ; Anderson, C. (PI) ; Anoshiravani, A. (PI) ; Ariagno, R. (PI) ; Arvin, A. (PI) ; Avila, J. (PI) ; Aye, T. (PI) ; Bacchetta, R. (PI) ; Bachrach, L. (PI) ; Balagtas, J. (PI) ; Barr, D. (PI) ; Bass, D. (PI) ; Benitz, W. (PI) ; Bentley, B. (PI) ; Bergman, D. (PI) ; Bernstein, D. (PI) ; Bernstein, J. (PI) ; Berquist, W. (PI) ; Bhargava, S. (PI) ; Bhutani, V. (PI) ; Blankenberg, F. (PI) ; Blankenburg, R. (PI) ; Bonifacio, S. (PI) ; Bressack, M. (PI) ; Browne, M. (PI) ; Buckingham, B. (PI) ; Buckway, C. (PI) ; Burgos, T. (PI) ; Butte, A. (PI) ; Campbell, C. (PI) ; Carlson, J. (PI) ; Carmichael, S. (PI) ; Castillo, R. (PI) ; Castro, R. (PI) ; Castro, R. (PI) ; Ceresnak, S. (PI) ; Chamberlain, L. (PI) ; Chang, K. (PI) ; Chen, S. (PI) ; Cheng, A. (PI) ; Chin, C. (PI) ; Chinthrajah, S. (PI) ; Chiu, B. (PI) ; Cho, M. (PI) ; Chock, V. (PI) ; Cohen, H. (PI) ; Cohen, R. (PI) ; Conrad, C. (PI) ; Contag, C. (PI) ; Contopoulos-Ioannidis, D. (PI) ; Cornfield, D. (PI) ; Cox, K. (PI) ; Crain, L. (PI) ; Crawley, L. (PI) ; Czechowicz, A. (PI) ; DOSSANTOS, L. (PI) ; Dahl, G. (PI) ; Darmstadt, G. (PI) ; Davis, K. (PI) ; Dekker, C. (PI) ; Dorenbaum, A. (PI) ; Druzin, M. (PI) ; Dubin, A. (PI) ; Ebel, N. (PI) ; Edwards, M. (PI) ; Egan, E. (PI) ; El-Sayed, Y. (PI) ; Enns, G. (PI) ; Feinstein, J. (PI) ; Feldman, B. (PI) ; Feldman, H. (PI) ; Fisher, J. (PI) ; Ford, J. (PI) ; Frankel, L. (PI) ; Frankovich, J. (PI) ; Franzon, D. (PI) ; Gans, H. (PI) ; Garcia-Careaga, M. (PI) ; Geertsma, F. (PI) ; Gifford, C. (PI) ; Glader, B. (PI) ; Glasscock, G. (PI) ; Gloyn, A. (PI) ; Golden, N. (PI) ; Gomez-Ospina, N. (PI) ; Goodyer, W. (PI) ; Gould, J. (PI) ; Govindaswami, B. (PI) ; Grady Jr., S. (PI) ; Grimm, P. (PI) ; Gruber, T. (PI) ; Gutierrez, K. (PI) ; Haileselassie, B. (PI) ; Halamek, L. (PI) ; Halpern-Felsher, B. (PI) ; Hammer, G. (PI) ; Hammer, L. (PI) ; Harris, S. (PI) ; Hintz, S. (PI) ; Hong, D. (PI) ; Hood, K. (PI) ; Horwitz, S. (PI) ; Hsu, J. (PI) ; Hudgins, L. (PI) ; Huffman, L. (PI) ; Hurwitz, M. (PI) ; Imperial, J. (PI) ; Ismail, M. (PI) ; Jameson, S. (PI) ; Jeng, M. (PI) ; Joshi, S. (PI) ; Kache, S. (PI) ; Kahana, M. (PI) ; Kapphahn, C. (PI) ; Kaufman, B. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Kerner, J. (PI) ; Kharbanda, S. (PI) ; Kim, J. (PI) ; King, B. (PI) ; Koltai, P. (PI) ; Kraus, E. (PI) ; Krawczeski, C. (PI) ; Krensky, A. (PI) ; Kumar, M. (PI) ; Kuo, C. (PI) ; LaBeaud, D. (PI) ; Lacayo, N. (PI) ; Lee, H. (PI) ; Lee, T. (PI) ; Leonard, M. (PI) ; Lewis, D. (PI) ; Limon, J. (PI) ; Lin, M. (PI) ; Link, M. (PI) ; Lock, J. (PI) ; Loe, I. (PI) ; Longhurst, C. (PI) ; Loutit, C. (PI) ; Lowe, H. (PI) ; Lowe, J. (PI) ; Luna-Fineman, S. (PI) ; Maahs, D. (PI) ; Magnus, D. (PI) ; Majzner, R. (PI) ; Maldonado, Y. (PI) ; Manning, M. (PI) ; Maric, I. (PI) ; Marina, N. (PI) ; Mark, J. (PI) ; Marsden, A. (PI) ; Mathur, M. (PI) ; McCarty, J. (PI) ; McGhee, S. (PI) ; McNamara, N. (PI) ; Mellins, E. (PI) ; Mendoza, F. (PI) ; Milla, C. (PI) ; Misra, S. (PI) ; Moss, R. (PI) ; Murphy, D. (PI) ; Murphy, J. (PI) ; Nadeau, K. (PI) ; Nadimpalli, S. (PI) ; Namjoshi, S. (PI) ; Narla, A. (PI) ; Neely, E. (PI) ; O'Brodovich, H. (PI) ; Oghalai, J. (PI) ; Olson, I. (PI) ; Pageler, N. (PI) ; Park, K. (PI) ; Pasca, A. (PI) ; Patel, L. (PI) ; Peng, L. (PI) ; Penn, A. (PI) ; Perry, S. (PI) ; Pertofsky, C. (PI) ; Phibbs, C. (PI) ; Pico, E. (PI) ; Pizzo, P. (PI) ; Porteus, M. (PI) ; Potter, D. (PI) ; Priest, J. (PI) ; Prober, C. (PI) ; Profit, J. (PI) ; Punn, R. (PI) ; Rabinovitch, M. (PI) ; Ragavan, N. (PI) ; Rangaswami, A. (PI) ; Reddy, S. (PI) ; Rhine, W. (PI) ; Robinson, T. (PI) ; Robinson, T. (PI) ; Rodriguez, E. (PI) ; Roncarolo, M. (PI) ; Rosen, M. (PI) ; Rosenthal, D. (PI) ; Roth, S. (PI) ; Ruiz-Lozano, P. (PI) ; Russell, C. (PI) ; Sage, J. (PI) ; Sakamoto, K. (PI) ; Sandborg, C. (PI) ; Sanders, L. (PI) ; Sarwal, M. (PI) ; Scheinker, D. (PI) ; Schrijver, I. (PI) ; Schroeder, A. (PI) ; Seidel, F. (PI) ; Shah, A. (PI) ; Sharek, P. (PI) ; Shaw, G. (PI) ; Shaw, R. (PI) ; Shepard, E. (PI) ; Shin, A. (PI) ; Sibley, E. (PI) ; Sivakumar, D. (PI) ; Smith, A. (PI) ; Song, D. (PI) ; Sourkes, B. (PI) ; Spunt, S. (PI) ; Stevenson, D. (PI) ; Stirling, J. (PI) ; Stuart, E. (PI) ; Sutherland, S. (PI) ; Tacy, T. (PI) ; Thienemann, M. (PI) ; Tierney, S. (PI) ; Twist, C. (PI) ; Van Meurs, K. (PI) ; Wall, D. (PI) ; Wang, C. (PI) ; Weinacht, K. (PI) ; Weinberg, K. (PI) ; Willert, J. (PI) ; Wilson, D. (PI) ; Wiryawan, B. (PI) ; Wise, P. (PI) ; Wong, C. (PI) ; Wright, G. (PI) ; Wu, S. (PI) ; Wusthoff, C. (PI) ; Yen, S. (PI) ; Contag, C. (SI)

PEDS 202C: Qualitative Research Methods and Study Design

In-depth introduction to qualitative research methods and study design. Gain theoretical and practical knowledge necessary to design and implement a qualitative study. Explore qualitative methods through class lectures, foundational readings and hands-on learning. Core topics include: theoretical frameworks, research questions, methodological approaches (i.e. interviews, focus groups, participant observation, photovoice), data collection, sampling, reliability and validity, and IRB protocols. Students enrolled for 2-units participate in journal club-style discussions of literature employing qualitative methods to gain an appreciation for how qualitative projects are conducted, and what settings and research questions are relevant to qualitative inquiry. Students enrolled for 3-units plan and design an independent research project (i.e. Med Scholars, dissertation, honors thesis), receiving extensive support and feedback to further develop individual study designs and data collection instruments. Prerequisite: Consent from instructor for undergraduates.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-3

PEDS 220: Past, Present, and Future: Lessons from COVID-19

This course aims to reflect on the COVID-19 pandemic and consider how our experience with this pandemic can reshape American healthcare and improve preparation for future microbial threats. We will discuss key moments in the COVID-19 pandemic and evaluate societal and economic impacts, effective responses and innovations, and lessons that can be carried forward to improve healthcare access, equity, and public health now and in the future. Students will engage in lectures from faculty in the School of Medicine and guest lecturers who worked on the COVID-19 response at the local, state, and federal levels. There are no formal assignments. See the course syllabus for details.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1 | Repeatable 10 times (up to 10 units total)

PEDS 223: Human Rights and Global Health

Open to medical students, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates. Examines the newly emerging field of human rights and global health, beginning with the essential background into the field of human rights, and the recent emergence of health as a human right. Emphasis is on the pioneering work of Dr. Paul Farmer and Partners in Health and the challenge he and his organization have posed to the conventional wisdom about approaches to combating poor health and disease worldwide. Topics include the "big three" infectious diseases -- tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV/AIDS -- as well as emerging infectious diseases, clean water and sanitation, and malnutrition and famine.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

PEDS 231: Writing and Storytelling Workshop for Clinical Students

This course is an intensive workshop for clinical students devoted to oral and written communication skills. Students receive instruction in the art and craft of storytelling for a variety of media from radio/podcast to print media. Topics covered: methods for constructive self-editing; the art of interviewing; pitching creative work to agents and editors; writing craft for narrative nonfiction and personal essay; negotiating consent with subjects; communication about difficult topics; best practices for science and medical communication; slide design for impactful presentation and best practices for public speaking and live storytelling. The workshops are held off-campus (fall workshop is a Sat/Sun (wknd) at Soul Food Farm), spring and winter workshops are daylong, held Pie Ranch with a single two-hour follow up session. Enrollment limited to 55. Please visit the course website at whatsyourstory.club for more information.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1 | Repeatable 8 times (up to 8 units total)

PEDS 232: Bioethics, Film and Advocacy

This course will examine narrative films, documentaries, and shorts on bioethics. We will focus both on the content of the films, in terms of ethics and advocacy, as well the filmic and narrative techniques they employ. We will explore how these films promote engagement and advocacy for those individuals and groups most impacted by disease, illness and disability in the world. During class we will screen films and employ open discussion, critical analysis, as well as reflective writing. The students will also be asked to work in teams to create an original media product and present these at end of term.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2

PEDS 241: Community Engagement Practicum: Building on Health Education Efforts

In this course students will learn about health priorities of pre-teen and adolescent youth and engage in developing and presenting health educational materials for children enrolled in Redwood City Middle Schools, or other under-resourced schools in San Mateo County.Building on the philosophy of H.E.L.P for kids (Health Education for Life-Partnership for Kids) founded by Dr. TW Wiedmann, this course aims to expand the network of Stanford students dedicated to preparing youth in our local community for life?s challenges, while fostering Stanford?s mission of pursuing service to benefit humanity.In collaboration with the Haas Center for Public Service, students in this course will learn about engaging with community partners in the process of identifying areas of priority, development and delivery of educational materials, as well as evaluating educational interventions. Community engagement (CE) can be an effective strategy for harnessing community potential, especially in health impro more »
In this course students will learn about health priorities of pre-teen and adolescent youth and engage in developing and presenting health educational materials for children enrolled in Redwood City Middle Schools, or other under-resourced schools in San Mateo County.Building on the philosophy of H.E.L.P for kids (Health Education for Life-Partnership for Kids) founded by Dr. TW Wiedmann, this course aims to expand the network of Stanford students dedicated to preparing youth in our local community for life?s challenges, while fostering Stanford?s mission of pursuing service to benefit humanity.In collaboration with the Haas Center for Public Service, students in this course will learn about engaging with community partners in the process of identifying areas of priority, development and delivery of educational materials, as well as evaluating educational interventions. Community engagement (CE) can be an effective strategy for harnessing community potential, especially in health improvement, and our community partners will include the Rosalyn Rendu Center in East Palo Alto and selected Middle Schools in Redwood City.Students will learn about focus groups and interviewing as a way of eliciting engagement from youth, parents, and teachers. Students will participate in selecting and developing health education materials and providing one-on-one tutoring or classroom presentations. Students will also have an opportunity to reflect on Principles of Ethical and Effective Service guidelines to inform interaction with the community partners, develop and provide health education, and evaluate interventions. The course will offer a didactic session once a week and opportunity for weekly group activities and tutoring engagement.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-3 | Repeatable 2 times (up to 6 units total)

PEDS 254: Pediatric Physical Findings Rounds

The aim of this elective is to provide MD and PA students hands-on exposure to the unique nature of the physical exam in pediatric patients. Children hospitalized at LPCH with various physical findings are identified and then introduced to students. Students (in small groups) examine patients at the bedside to note the physical finding and discuss it together within the context of the patient's clinical problem. Emphasis is placed on understanding the cause of the finding and the variability of exam with age.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1 | Repeatable for credit
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