Awards

We acknowledge the accolades of our colleagues who are committed to advancing the UCSF PRIDE values and ideals of our department.

National & International Conference Awards

Poonam Vohra & Tim Gilpatrick, ASC award for DEIDr. Timothy Gilpatrick was awarded the Excellence in Research Award at the American Society of Cytopathology 2023 Annual Scientific Meeting in Austin, Texas!

Along with his coauthors, Drs. Poonam Vohra, Steve Long, and Peyman Samghabadi and with Cytologist Reza Mousavi, Tim analyzed anal cancer disparities at ZSFG and demonstrated age and race-based differences in anal cytology.
 

Departmental Awards

MAO Leadership Awards are awarded annually to one staff member and one faculty member in either the Department of Pathology or Laboratory Medicine to recognize a staff and a faculty member (colleague, team member, mentor, etc.) for excellence in advancing and sustaining opportunity for all.

MAO Leadership Award for Staff (2023)

Mark WeinsteinMark Weinstein
Department Manager, Anatomic Pathology, ZSFG

Mark Weinstein has initiated a strategy in this department to have the supervisors and staff work with each other to address QC issues between the units of the Pathology Department (Cytology, Gross Room). This has reduced operational opacity between the units and prompted better understanding of the challenges and successes to each unit as well as promote an inclusive environment between supervisors as well as staff and supervisors in the various units. This approach has opened permanent lines of communication between supervisors and staff members to give important workflow feedback and eased tensions when systematic changes need to be addressed. The model of inter-unit communication has established a structure where supervisors and staff members feel supported by each other, which promotes communication and a sense of protection for staff members by the supervisors.

MAO Leadership Award for Faculty (2023)

Poonam VohraPoonam Vohra, MD
Professor, Anatomic Pathology

Dr. Vohra has been committed to advancing and sustaining opportunity for all since she was a fellow and subsequently as faculty at the ZSFG since 2011. As cytology director at the ZSFG, she has demonstrated a commitment to building a workplace that reflects the diversity of the ZSFG community. She is also a member of the UCSF Cancer Global Program, and she serves as a mentor to a research scholar in the Cancer Research Training Program in Tanzania). Dr. Vohra is currently working on a project titled "Correlation between HER2 overexpression and clinicopathological features of bladder carcinoma” at Muhimbili National Hospital, Tanzania. Since January 2019, Dr. Vohra has volunteered to review consult cases from Tanzania and being a part of “Partners in Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment in Africa Coalition”, which is an American Society of Clinical Pathologists for Africa telepathology initiative.

Her recent research reflects her sustained commitment to the UCSF PRIDE values: "Urine Cytology in Patients with Gender Confirmation Surgery and Hormone Therapy: Evaluation of Urine Cytology Performance in an Underserved Patient Population" was published in the Journal of the American Society of Cytopathology, July 2023 issue. She brought together a group of residents, faculty and fellows to work on a unique project together. A related platform presentation at the International Congress of Cytology-American Society of Cytopathology (ICC-ASC) Scientific Meeting in Baltimore Maryland in November 2022 received the "Excellence in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Research Award" for the best scientific paper advancing DEI goals from the American Society of Cytopathology.

Through Dr. Vohra’s work in teaching the improvement process and by engaging cytology fellows with quality improvement projects, Dr. Vohra has changed the culture for our trainees with projects that have direct and immediate bearing on more universal care for patients at ZSFG and also serve as a model for staff and faculty for developing programs.  These projects have included: “Local Anesthesia Administration: Improvements in Clinical Cytopathology Practice”. This project addressed documented discrepancies in patients receiving lidocaine administration for FNA biopsy. The aim of the project was to mitigate the impacts of any potential unconscious/implicit bias on the decision of whether or not to use lidocaine prior to FNA biopsy. This initiative fundamentally changed the culture for the FNA service and exemplifies the UCSF commitment to Differences Matter for the patient experience and quality of care.

William HowellMAO Leadership Award for Staff (2022)

Will Howell is demonstrating all the qualities of opportunity and community outreach in his daily job. We have had a wide variety of  trainees in our lab over the last years, and Will has been, and still is, a welcoming member who takes on training and welcoming of new trainees. He acts naturally with the UCSF PRIDE values in daily life.

 

 

Ron BalassanianMAO Leadership Award for Faculty (2022)

Ronald Balassanian, MD
Professor, Anatomic Pathology

Dr. Balassanian has been mentoring students at the college, pre-med, and medical school level including URM staff members.  He helped change the culture at UCSF with regard to LGBTQ+ issues. Despite having an LGBTQ resource center, primarily for students, UCSF has never sponsored a unified or group presence at the SF Pride Parade, leaving it to individuals to join on their own. Through his position on the LGBTQ+ committee, he met with Chancellor Renee Navarro and explained the need to have representation at the parade from all the UCSF Deans and Vice Deans as well as UCSF Health administrators including the CEO.  He helped develop the UCSF Heath LGBTQ+ web page which went live in 2021, providing an online resource to access UCSF LGBTQ+ providers and allies for the first time: https://www.ucsfhealth.org/about/lgbtq-care.

Through serving on the ASC Diversity Equity and Inclusion committee, he developed an online summer program for high school and college students from various  backgrounds to learn about career opportunities in medicine and cytology. He also developed a new DEI award for best abstract to be presented at the ASC/ICC annual meeting in 2022. The award will be presented annually going forward.
 
Dr. Balassanian also serves as the head of the committee for developing the Department’s Global Pathology strategic plan, and he has been involved in mentorship and collaboration for residents and faculty in low and middle income (LMIC) countries, including Tanzania, Peru, and Ethiopia.

Institutional Awards

Carolyn SangokoyaDr. Carolyn Sangokoya has been selected as a 2021 Watson Scholar in the UCSF School of Medicine. This award from the SOM Dean’s Diversity Fund is given to select faculty each year to support the recruitment and retention of faculty who share the university’s commitment to all individuals and our belief that we have the responsibility to care for underserved and vulnerable populations. Carolyn will receive funds to support her research program in stem cell biology as well as for continuing her campus-wide advocacy and mentoring efforts as a founding member of the UCSF Women Physician-Scientist Supergroup. January 2022 Spotlight by Women of UCSF Health - link

 

 

 

Dr. Roberto Ruiz-Cordero

Dr. Roberto Ruiz-Cordero, a cytopathologist and one of our Committee Members, was selected as a 2020 Watson Scholar in the UCSF School of Medicine. This award from the SOM Dean’s DiversityFund is given to 8 faculty each year in support of academic pursuits to benefit underserved and vulnerable populations. Dr. Ruiz-Cordero will develop novel molecular workflows to improve cancer diagnostic disparities in Mexico in collaboration with the HDFCCC Global Cancer Program. Dr. Ruiz-Cordero’s work is a wonderful example of how pathologists can meaningfully leverage molecular tools, which one might traditionally consider cost-prohibitive in low resource settings, to address healthcare disparities.
Roberto Ruiz-Cordero, MD: 2020 Watson Scholar (YouTube)