Two Abstracts by General Surgery Residents Among Top 10 at NCCACS
Updated February 28, 2025
Two abstracts by general surgery residents—Drs. Amy Tsai and Jeff Choi—were selected among the top 10 abstracts of the 2025 Northern California Chapter of the American College of Surgeons (NCCACS) Russell Surgical Trainee Research Competition.
- "Modification of Post-operative Inflammation Through Infusion of a Young Donor Plasma Fraction in Older Patients" -Tsai
- "The Association Between Stringency of State Trauma Center Designation Criteria and Proliferation of For-profit and Nonprofit Trauma Centers" -Choi
“All submitted abstracts were scored by a panel of 10 reviewers composed of faculty members from Northern California surgical training programs,” wrote Dr. Tammy Chang, President Elect of the NCCACS. “The top abstracts were selected based upon the composite scores calculated from the scores provided by each reviewer.”
Both will present their work at the NCCACS Annual Educational Meeting, March 14-15, 2025 at the Grand Hyatt San Francisco.
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
- – Stanford CIGH
Announcing 16 new Stanford Global Health Seed Grant
"Phage Cryogels for Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacterial Infections in Low-Resource Communities" (PIs: Clifford Sheckter, Paul Bollyky, Ovijit Chaudhuri) received funding from the Department of Surgery
- – Surgery
Choi To Lead AAST Research Committee
Dr. Jeff Choi will serve as chair of the research committee for the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST)—associate members.
- – Children’s Wellness Warrior
Dr. Chao Named 2025 UCSF Medical Alumni Association Alum of the Year
“I know improving children’s health globally will take a whole society working together, but each of us has a role to play, and I’m committed to doing my part.”
- – Surgery
Dunn Receives MCHRI Grant
Dr. James Dunn (Surgery) — in collaboration with Calvin Kuo, MD PhD (Medicine) and Eric Appel, PhD (Engineering) have received a grant from the Maternal and Child Health Research Institute’s Transdisciplinary Initiatives Program to study whether they can cure a genetic disease of the intestine by cell transplantation.
- – Surgery
Four Surgery Faculty Graduate Stanford Leadership Development Program
Drs. Khan, Liebert, Momeni, and Pham graduated from Stanford’s Leadership Development Program.
- – Surgery
Dr. Eisenberg Receives Inaugural Harvey’s Award
Dr. Dan Eisenberg’s paper, “2022 ASMBS and IFSO: Indications for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery,” has been selected as one of the inaugural recipients of The Harvey’s Award, which is presented jointly by the TREO Foundation and SOARD.
- – Medscape
New Strategy to Manage Childhood Obesity
Obesity often begins in childhood and, according to mounting evidence, may not be preventable, underscoring the need for early and aggressive treatment with medication and surgery. Dr. Janey Pratt is interviewed.
- – Surgery
CUBES: Tamara Winston
Administrative Division Director Tamara Winston welcomes us the vibrant Center for Academic Medicine and Pediatric Surgery. Described as a vibrant community hub, her workspace features : • a snack basket that attracts colleagues from various departments, • personal touches, such as pink desk accessories and cozy furnishings, and • a display of artwork and keepsakes created by the children of faculty and staff.
- – Surgery
Drs. Arbaugh, Hameed, and Sheckter Recognized at Stanford Medicine Teaching Excellence Awards ceremony
Dr. Carlie Arbaugh received both the Kelley M Skeff Professionalism Award and the Arnold P. Gold Award for Humanism and Excellence in Training, Dr. Morad Hameed received the 2025 Arthur L. Bloomfield Award, and Dr. Clifford Sheckter received the 2025 Outstanding Community Clinic Preceptor, Pre-Clinical Instruction Award.
- – Surgery
Stanford Surgery Equipment Seed Grant Buys 4 H100 Compute Nodes
Thanks to a Department Seed Grant, Stanford Surgery faculty have purchased four supplemental nodes on the Stanford shared computing cluster, aka Sherlock, which will greatly increase the computing power available to researchers using large data sets and AI.