Dr. Eisenberg Promoted to Professor

February 15, 2023

Dr. Dan Eisenberg

Dr. Dan Eisenberg has been promoted to Professor of Surgery: General Surgery in the UML, effective April 1, 2023.

"Dr. Eisenberg is one of the national leaders in the field of bariatric surgery. He has chaired the Clinical issues committee of our Society (ASMBS) and has led one of the most—if not the most —important efforts in national guideline changes," said Dr. Dan Azagury, Chief of the MIS and Bariatric Surgery Section at Stanford.

Eisenberg was the lead author on new guidelines for metabolic and bariatric surgery from the ASMBS and IFSO, Released in October 2022, the new evidence-based criteria replaced the 1991 NIH Consensus Statement on Bariatric Surgery, which guided patient selection, weight-loss procedures, and obesity.

"Dr. Eisenberg is one of the most accomplished metabolic and bariatric surgery physicians in the United States," said Dr. Sherry Wren, chief of general surgery at the Palo Alto Veterans Hospital. "He does an incredible service to both veteran patients and patients around the globe.

"He has also been the best partner anyone could ask for over the last 15+ years," she said.

Eisenberg earned his MD at Washington University before completing his general surgery residency and a fellowship in minimally invasive surgery at Yale-New Haven Hospital. He has served as the Director of Bariatric/Minimally Invasive Surgery at the Palo Alto VA since 2007 and Director of the Advanced GI/MIS Fellowship also at the Palo Alto VA since 2010.

Media Contact

Director of Communications

Bio

As the Director of Communications for Stanford Surgery, Rachel Baker tells the stories of her department's faculty, staff, and trainees. With the help of an amazing team of content creators, she produces and curates original articles, photos, videos, graphics, and even podcasts.She works personally with each division, center, program, and lab within her purview to define their audience and reach their goals while maintaining a consistent brand voice. She hosts quarterly professional development workshops open to all AEM web authors--please email her if you'd like to join! She also offers both 1:1 and group education to faculty and residents on a variety of topics including media training, using social media to advantage, and presentation refinement. Rachel holds a Bachelor's degree in journalism with a focus on photography from Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. A transplant from the DC-area, she still misses foliage and argyle but has happily adopted the official NorCal hobbies of visiting wineries, hiking local trails, and eating avocado.

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

    Non-Surgical Treatment for Pierre Robin Sequence with Dr. HyeRan Choo

    In this episode of Scrubcast, host Rachel Baker interviews Dr. HyeRan Choo, a clinical associate professor in the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Dr. Choo is doing innovative work treating Pierre Robin Sequence—a rare congenital condition—using a non-surgical method.

  • Surgery

    Kirane et al Receive MRA Team Science Award

    A team including Dr. Amanda Kirane has been awarded the Melanoma Research Alliance (MRA) Team Science Award for their translational therapy-predictive organoid model.

  • Stanford Health Library

    StoryCorps at SHC: Carlie Arbaugh

    Carlie Arbaugh (32) talks about her experience as a general surgery resident living with a rare diagnosis that has caused hearing impairment. Carlie shares how her personal experience undergoing has influenced the way she communicates with and cares for her patients.

  • Surgery

    SoM/GSE Fellowship Pilot Program

    Dr. Jim Korndorffer created a fellowship program linking Stanford's School of Medicine with its Graduate School of Education in an effort to improve medical education (and, by extension, patient care.) The fellows are currently wrapping up the first-year pilot.

  • Surgery

    🌍 Spotlight: Martin Bronk

    Dr. Martin Bronk recently visited UGHE in Rwanda for three weeks to teach senior medical students during their surgery clerkship.

  • Surgery

    Dr. Korndorffer Nominated to AOA

    Dr. Jim Korndorffer has been nominated by the University of South Florida (USF) Marsani College of Medicine Gamma Florida Chapter for Membership into the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Honor Society in the Alumni category.

  • Surgery

    Match 2024 Results

    The department welcomed its largest intern class ever with 14 new interns.

  • Surgery

    International Visiting Observer Program

    Stanford Surgery’s International Visiting Observer Program is a unique opportunity for surgeons, surgical trainees, and surgical nurses to spend up to 30 days observing clinical practice side by side with surgical specialty teams that align with professional interests.

  • News Center

    Carla Pugh appointed Joint Commission’s first presidential fellow

    The Joint Commission, which accredits more than 22,000 health care organizations, awarded surgeon Carla Pugh the inaugural fellowship, during which she plans to develop a technology-driven process to support the organization’s work.

  • Surgery

    Exploring the Impact of Resident-led Safety Council on Patient Care

    As a co-chair of the Resident Safety Council (RSC) alongside Pediatric Resident Dr. Katherine Xiong, Dr. Garrison Carlos had a vision to elevate safety standards and foster a culture of continuous improvement. Over the last two years, they spearheaded four distinct quality improvement initiatives.