Bios
Linda Bily, MA
Linda Bily is the director of patient advocacy and community outreach for Cancer Services
                     at Stony Brook. She coordinates all non-clinical services for patients, including
                     support groups, physical activities and financial counseling. Her collaboration with
                     community partners provides comforting amenities such as hot lunches, inspirational
                     artwork, wigs, manicures and holiday food baskets. More recently she has spearheaded
                     the creation of the GATE (Guest Artists to Empower) program, an arts-in-medicine program
                     offered to oncology patients on the inpatient units. Linda has been published in msJAMA,
                     Cochrane Collaboration, Extraordinary Healers and What Helped Me Get Through This.
                     Linda is a well received motivational speaker, nationally recognized advocate grant
                     reviewer and the recipient of numerous awards focused on cancer survivorship.
She has studied multiple marginalization and the intersections of gender, race, poverty, and disability. She currently studies capacity building and health promotion for people with disabilities through participatory intervention research with community non-profit organizations. Current research involves peer mentoring and overcoming barriers to physical and recreational activity for children and adults with Multiple Sclerosis and cultural representations of Autism, communication, family and community. Recent publications discuss teaching disability studies in community health and rehabilitation programs.
Turhan Canli, PhD
Turhan Canli is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology and a neuroscientist
                     and psychologist working on the brain basis of individual differences in emotion and
                     personality. He has also published, and appeared as a contributor to a PBS program,
                     on the topic of neuroethics–an emerging field of inquiry that is concerned with the
                     ethical implications of neuroscientific discovery. Dr. Canli uses cutting-edge methodologies,
                     including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), magnetic brain stimulation,
                     and molecular genetic techniques to investigate how we differ from each other in our
                     responses to emotional experiences. He received the 2002 American Psychological Association
                     Grand Marquis Award for the best publication in Behavioral Neuroscience in the preceding
                     year and his work has been featured in numerous national and international newspapers,
                     magazines, and radio shows. Specific areas of expertise: Brain Imaging. Brain Stimulation. fMRI. Brain Basis of Emotion, Personality, and
                     Sex Differences. Neuroethics.
Gregg Cantor, DO, MA
Born and raised on Long Island, Gregg Cantor, DO, MA, completed his medical school
                     training at NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine. Following medical school, he completed
                     his Internal Medicine training at Stony Brook University Hospital and he is currently
                     in the third year of his Cardiology Fellowship program, also at Stony Brook. Since
                     medical school, Gregg has had an interest in bioethics, which led him to complete
                     a Master’s Degree in Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care, and Bioethics during
                     his residency training. Gregg continues to utilize the skills that he gained through
                     this Master’s program with his patients daily.
Latha Chandran MD, MPH
Dr. Chandran is currently the Vice Dean for Undergraduate Medical Education and Professor
                     of Pediatrics in the Department of Pediatrics at Stony Brook University Medical Center.
                     She received her MD from Kerala University, Medical College Trivandrum and her MPH
                     from Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Chandran has several years of faculty leadership
                     experience. During her tenure as Division Director of General Pediatrics, she led
                     a successful expansion of primary care access in the areas surrounding Stony Brook
                     University Medical Center incorporating resident and medical student education as
                     well as ensuring financial solvency. She has experience on academic promotions and
                     tenure committee and was instrumental in creating guidelines to facilitate promotion
                     of clinician educators using an educator portfolio template. Dr. Chandran was the
                     first clinician educator to receive tenure in the Educator Scholar track at Stony
                     Brook University Medical Center. Dr. Chandran is the co-director of a large, three-year
                     national faculty development and certification program–the Academic Pediatric Association’s
                     Educational Scholars Program with forty current scholars. Scholarly work related to
                     this project has been disseminated widely. In addition, she is a graduate of the Executive
                     Leadership in Academic Medicine (ELAM) Program through Drexel University, Harvard
                     Macy Institute Program for Physician Educators, AAMC Professional Development Seminars
                     and Leadership Development for Physicians in Academic Health Centers from Harvard
                     School of Public Health. She is the recipient of numerous awards including teaching
                     awards.
Jane M. Chun, PhD
As an inter-disciplinary scholar and practitioner, Dr. Jane Chun works at the intersection
                     of inner states of being and organizations and systems. As Program Director of Specialized
                     Programs at the Compassion Institute, she oversees initiatives in healthcare and social
                     change. Jane is also a Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) instructor. She has led
                     trainings and has spoken at the UN Development Program (UNDP), Columbia Business School,
                     World Bank, Asian Development Bank, Brookings Institute, and University of Oxford.
                     She holds a DPhil from the University of Oxford where her research investigated the
                     intersection of human ecology, decision sciences, and forced migration.
Vincent de Luise, MD Vincent P. de Luise, MD FACS is an Assistant Clinical Professor Of Ophthalmology at Yale University School Of Medicine, and adjunct clinical professor of ophthalmology at Weill Cornell Medical College where he also serves on the Humanities and Medicine Committee and Music and Medicine Initiative. He is physician program chair of the Connecticut Society of Eye Physicians and is on the teaching faculty of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery. Dr de Luise is also a clarinetist, is president of the Connecticut Summer Opera Foundation, and co-founded the annual classical music recital at the American Academy of Ophthalmology. As a Harvard fellow, he has been engaged in developing a national humanities rubric for medical school pedagogy.
Lisa Diedrich, PhD
Lisa Diedrich received her PhD in Women's Studies from Emory University in 2001. Since
                     then, she has taught in the Women’s Studies Program at Stony Brook University. Her
                     research and teaching interests include feminist cultural studies of science and medicine,
                     disability studies, and feminist theories and methodologies. She is the author of
                     Treatments: Language, Politics, and the Culture of Illness (Minnesota, 2007). She is also the editor (with Victoria Hesford) of Feminist Time Against Nation Time (Lexington, 2008). She is currently working on two projects. The first is called
                     A Prehistory of AIDS: Doing Health and Illness, 1960-1985, and traces the continuities and discontinuities between AIDS activism in the early
                     1980s and several earlier transformations of the practices of health and illness,
                     including, for example, the emergence of Family Practice as a new specialization within
                     medicine, and the emergence of health activist movements, like the women's health
                     movement, that would influence medicine from the outside. The second project begins
                     where the first leaves off, around 1985, and explores the scientific, medical, political,
                     and economic enactments of "breast cancer on Long Island," through oral history and
                     discourse analysis of the popular media accounts and scientific studies of the possible
                     relationship between breast cancer and the environment of Long Island.
Suzanne D. Fields, MD
Suzanne D. Fields is Director of the Long Island Geriatric Education Center. LIGEC is part of a national network of 45 geriatric education centers funded by
                     the Bureau of Health Professions of the US Department of Health and Human Services
                     Administration. It is also a member of the Coalition of New York Geriatric Education
                     Centers. The education and training programs focus on primary and transitional care,
                     health promotion and disease prevention, multicultural aging, patient safety, and
                     outreach to medically underserved communities.
Iris Granek, MD
Iris Granek is Founding Chair of the Department of Family, Population and Preventive
                     Medicine.
Magdalen E. Hull, MD, MPH
Dr. Hull is a Clinical Associate Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive
                     Medicine at Stony Brook University School of Medicine and at the Northwell Health
                     Hofstra School of Medicine. She received her B.S. in Biology from Fordham University
                     and her M.D. degree from New York Medical College. After completing her residency
                     at the Albert Einstein School of Medicine and Fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology
                     at Wayne State University, she joined the full time faculty at Stony Brook in 1985.
                     She is board certified in Ob/Gyn and Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility. While
                     at Stony Brook, she received her MPH in Health Policy Management from the Mailman
                     School of Public Health at Columbia University in 1995. That same year, she became
                     the Chief of Reproductive Medicine at Winthrop University Hospital. She was named
                     by New York Magazines’ Doctors in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility in 1999
                     and 2003 and is a member of ACOG, ASRM and the New York Obstetrical Society. She also
                     volunteers at Project Hope through St Hugh’s Church in Huntington, St. Anthony’s High
                     School Mother’s Guild and is a member of Soroptomist International. She joined the
                     Suffolk County Department of Health Services in 2006 and has served as medical director
                     of the Family Planning program. She has published articles concerning endometriosis
                     and its treatment concerning infertility. Recently retired from Suffolk County, she
                     is now pursuing a Certificate in Bioethics at Hofstra University School of Law and
                     interests in ethics of assisted reproductive technologies and teaches biomedical ethics
                     to medical students.
Raja Jaber, MD
Dr. Raja Jaber is the Director of the Wellness and Chronic Illness Program in the Department of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine and Clinical Associate
                     Professor of Family Medicine at Stony Brook University Hospital and Medical Center.
                     Dr Jaber co-directs and teaches the nutrition course to first- and second-year medical
                     students and teaches integrative family medicine to medical students and residents.
                     She received her MD with distinction from the American University of Beirut, is an
                     Alpha Omega Alpha member, is board-certified in Family Medicine, and is a Diplomate
                     of the American Board of Holistic Medicine. She is listed in the Best Doctors of America
                     List. Her clinical model integrates conventional medicine with nutritional, mind-body
                     and exercise/manual medicine. The model is team-based and collaborative. Her mission
                     is to help create a viable model of integrative primary care, based in a bio-psychosocial
                     comprehensive approach, and emphasizing wellness, lifestyle management, self management
                     and personal growth. She has conducted a successful group visits program for patients
                     with hyperlipidemia, asthma, and osteoporosis, and conducts stress reduction workshops
                     based on mindfulness meditation. Dr. Jaber has published several articles on the process
                     of change, the doctor-patient relationship, and group visits.
Elizabeth Ann Kaplan, PhD
E. Ann Kaplan is Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literary and Cultural
                     Studies at Stony Brook University, where she also founded and directs The Humanities Institute. She is Past President of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. Kaplan has written
                     many books and articles on topics in cultural studies, media, and women's studies,
                     from diverse theoretical perspectives including psychoanalysis, feminism, postmodernism,
                     and post-colonialism. She has given lectures all over the world and her work has been
                     translated into six languages. Kaplan’s pioneering research on women in film (viz
                     her Women in Film: Both Sides of the Camera, Women in Film Noir and Motherhood and Representation) continues to be in print and influential in the United States and abroad. Kaplan co-edited
                     three volumes that emerged from research undertaken at the Humanities Institute, one
                     of which, Playing Dolly: Technologies and Fantasies of Assisted Reproduction (1997) (co-edited with Susan Squier) remains in print.Her recent books include Trauma and Cinema: Cross-Cultural Explorations (co-edited with Ban Wang in 2004), Feminism and Film (2000) and a monograph, Trauma Culture: The Politics of Terror and Loss in Media and Literature (2005). She is working on two further book projects, Public Feelings, Memory, and Affective Difference and The Unconscious of Age: Screening Older Women.
Eva Feder Kittay, PhD
Eva Feder Kittay is a SUNY Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University.
                     Her most recent books include Love's Labor: Essays on Women, Equality, and Dependency (Thinking Gender Series, Routledge, 1999). She is co-editing Theoretical Perspectives on Dependency and Women with Ellen Feder (Rowman and Littlefield), Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy with L. Alcoff (Blackwell), Special Issue of Hypatia: Feminism and Disability with A. Silvers and S. Wendell, and Special Issue of Social Theory and Practice: Embodied Values: Philosophy and Disabilities with R. Gottlieb. Areas of Specialization: Feminist philosophy, feminist ethics, social and political theory, metaphor, disability
                     studies. Additional Interests:Philosophy of language, normative ethics, social thought.
Matthew T. Lee, PhD
Matthew T. Lee, Ph.D., is Director of Empirical Research of the Human Flourishing
                     Program at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University. He
                     received his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Delaware in 2000. He was a
                     Professor and Chair of sociology and an Interim Chair in anthropology and classical
                     studies at the University of Akron, with a secondary appointment in criminal justice
                     studies, in addition to serving as a Faculty Fellow in both the Center for Conflict
                     Management and the Center for Experiential Learning. He was Chair of the American
                     Sociological Association’s Section on Altruism, Morality, and Social Solidarity and
                     President of the North Central Sociological Association. He is also a non-resident
                     Research Fellow at Baylor University’s Institute for Studies of Religion. His current
                     research explores pathways to human flourishing, benevolent service to others, and
                     the integration of social science and the humanities.
Marci Lobel, PhD 
Marci Lobel is Associate Professor of Social and Health Psychology. Her research focuses
                     on stress, coping, and their effects on women's reproductive health. Dr. Lobel is
                     Principal Investigator of the Stony Brook Pregnancy Project, a set of federally-funded
                     studies examining the impact of prenatal maternal stress on infant and maternal outcomes.
                     She also collaborates with teams of investigators in other states including Iowa,
                     Virginia, South Carolina, and Georgia to examine the impact of domestic violence in
                     pregnancy, and to evaluate interventions for socioeconomically disadvantaged pregnant
                     and postnatal women. Her research has been published in numerous professional journals
                     and is widely cited in the popular media. Dr. Lobel is currently Consulting Editor
                     of The Psychology of Women Quarterly and previously served as Associate Editor of Women's Health: Research on Gender, Behavior, and Policy. She teaches courses in the Psychology of Women's Health and is the recipient of
                     several teaching awards.
Marilyn London, EdD
Dr. Marilyn London is currently a Lecturer in the School of Professional Development.
                     She has taught in SPD for over 16 years, including Project Seminar (SPD and HEA-Higher
                     Education Administration Program), Cultural Diversity in American Musicals (SPD),
                     and Leadership in Higher Education Administration (HEA). She is also a Volunteer Clinical
                     Assistant Professor in the School of Medicine who facilitates small group sessions
                     in the Medicine in Contemporary Society II sections and the TTR course. She Also works
                     with medical students, interested in topics related to music, in the MD with Recognition
                     in Humanities Research program in the Stony Brook School of Medicine. Dr. London recently
                     retired from her position as Assistant Dean for Medical Education and Registrar for
                     the Stony Brook School of Medicine. Dr. London has an eclectic background. She holds
                     a Doctorate in Education from Rutgers University, a Master's Degree in Piano Performance
                     and a Master's degree in Cultural Anthropology, both earned at the University of Illinois,
                     Urban-Champaign. She co-authored a book called First Time Leaders of Small Groups
                     with Dr. Manny London and has co-taught an international Human Resources course. She
                     has also published in the field of music, and has presented several workshops and
                     posters at national and regional medical education conferences.
Dr. London has held several teaching and leadership positions during her career including working on several committees in the School of Medicine, developing a group piano program at Westminster Choir College in Princeton, running a library concert series in New Jersey, and co-leading the Belle Mead Friends of Music in New Jersey. As a young musician, Dr. London performed solo and four-hand piano in Illinois, Wisconsin, New Jersey, and locally across Long Island for over 20 years before moving into higher education administration. She also ran a private studio, and taught at Illinois Wesleyan University, Rutgers University, Westminster Choir College, and public and adult schools.
Robyn McKeefrey
Robyn McKeefrey is a Teaching and Research Baccalaureate prepared Certified Registered
                     Nurse at Stony Brook University Hospital who received her Nursing degree from Adelphi
                     University. Robyn's proficiency and expertise encompasses nearly thirty years in the
                     specialty of maternal health. Ms. McKeefrey benchmarked an obstetrical case management
                     program where she was pivotal in instituting the use of care maps along with a focus
                     on length of stay, admission, discharge and continued stay criteria. Ms. McKeefrey
                     is currently a Risk Manager where her goal and mission is to coordinate safe patient
                     care while integrating medicine and the law. Robyn received her Master of Arts degree
                     in Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care and Bioethics from Stony Brook University
                     which further enhance her abilities to coordinate medicine, law and ethics on a consultative
                     basis to the staff and community which she serves.
Salvatore Mangione, MD
Dr. Sal Mangione is a clinician-educator with a long interest in Physical Diagnosis,
                     Medical History and community service. After obtaining his MD summa cum laude from
                     the Catholic University of Rome, Dr. Mangione trained in Internal Medicine and Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
                     at the Medical College of Pennsylvania, before eventually moving to Jefferson Medical College where he is currently Associate Professor of Medicine, Associate Program Director
                     for the Internal Medicine Residency, Director of the second year Physical Diagnosis
                     Course, and coordinator for the History of Medicine lecture series and the Jefferson
                     Medical Cineforum. Dr. Mangione’s innovative programs and engaging teaching style
                     have been recognized by multiple awards for excellence in clinical teaching, including
                     the 2005 Golden Apple Award, the 2006 Jefferson Portrait Presentation, and the 2009
                     Lindback Award. His work has also been featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles
                     Times, the Wall Street Journal, the BBC, CNN and NPR. (full bio)
Lester Paldy
Lester Paldy is Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in the Department of Pathology
                     and Department of Technology and Society at Stony Brook where he has taught since
                     1967. He teaches the Global Issues course to seniors in the undergraduate Honors College
                     and is Distinguished Visiting Scholar in the Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate
                     Care, and Bioethics. He served on the U.S. Geneva delegation that reached a nuclear
                     weapons testing agreement with the Soviet Union signed by Presidents G.H.W. Bush and
                     Mikhail Gorbachev and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement
                     of Science. His interest in international efforts to ban nuclear, chemical, and biological
                     weapons led to his exploration of the origins of medical codes requiring informed
                     consent from research subjects.
Diane Ranieri, MA, RPAC
Diane Ranieri is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Physician Assistant
                     Education in the School of Health Technology and Management at Stony Brook. She teaches
                     in the entry level Physician Assistant Program in the areas of Medical Ethics, Pediatrics,
                     Obstetrics and Gynecology, Gastrohepatology, Radiology, Dermatology and Infectious
                     Diseases. She also teaches Medical Ethics for the PA Post Professional Master's Program
                     as well as the Health Care Policy and Management Program. She received her BA, BS
                     and MA from Stony Brook University. She is the vice chair of the Academic Standing
                     Committee and is a member of the Curriculum Committee for the School of Health Technology
                     and Management. Her clinical experience includes interventional radiology, inpatient
                     pediatrics, neonatology, HIV care and outpatient pediatrics.
Michael Roess, PhD
Michael Roess was a Research Assistant Professor in the Center for Medical Humanities,
                     Compassionate Care and Bioethics; Department of Family, Population and Preventive
                     Medicine. He earned his PhD in Philosophy at Stony Brook in 2012. Michael has published
                     in the areas of stem cell ethics, medical humanities, the development of compassionate
                     traits and practices among clinicians, and physician well-being.
Lisa Strano-Paul, MD
Dr. Lisa Strano-Paul is a Professor of Clinical Medicine at Stony Brook School of
                     Medicine and maintains an outpatient Primary Care Internal Medicine and Geriatric
                     practice. She is board certified in both Internal Medicine and Geriatrics. She is
                     the Assistant Dean for Clinical Education for the School of Medicine and Course Director
                     of the Primary Care Clerkship. Her educational focus has been to integrate geriatric
                     core competencies, promote end-of-life education and Professional Identity Formation
                     (PIF) throughout the medical school curriculum. She has developed curricular innovations
                     that promote PIF in the School of Medicine.  Reflection Rounds began as a pilot project
                     funded by Templeton, Gwish foundations and has expanded after the funding cycle to
                     be a mandatory part of every clinical rotation in Phase II. Reflection Rounds provide
                     students with the opportunity to verbally reflection on their patient encounters with
                     trained faculty facilitators. This promotes the development their own inner resources
                     for addressing the suffering of others. She designed an end-of-life teaching module
                     which centers on an interprofessional home hospice visit and reflection on that experience.
                     This experience students has resulted in the students gaining a deep appreciation
                     of the human identity of hospice patients and a humanistic understanding of their
                     own role as future physicians and has had a lasting impact on students’ emerging professional
                     personas. She was invited to collaborate on a PIF project awarded to Drexel University
                     by the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation in cooperation with Arthur Vining Davis Foundation.
                      This new resource, ProfessionalFormation.org focuses on a web based resource which
                     enhances learners’ professionalism and interprofessional team skills in order to improve
                     patient care. ProfessionalFormation.org will be a useful resource to faculty in role-modeling
                     and giving feedback on professional behavior and remediating professionalism lapses.
Nancy Tomes, PhD 
Nancy Tomes is professor of history at Stony Brook University. A native of Louisville,
                     Kentucky, she received her undergraduate education at Oberlin College and the University
                     of Kentucky, and her doctorate in American history from the University of Pennsylvania.
                     While a fellow at the National Humanities Center, she developed Medicine and Madison Avenue, a digital collection on the history of health-related advertising. Her research
                     interests include the history of medicine, women and gender, and U.S. cultural history.
                     Her book The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women, and the Microbe in American Life(Harvard University Press, 1998) was winner of the 2002 Welch Medal from the American
                     Association for the History of Medicine.
Clare Whitney, PhD, MBE, RN
Professor Whitney, Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing at Stony Brook University,
                     mentors PhD students and teaches courses in the doctoral program. As a nurse scientist
                     and bioethicist, her teaching interests are in providing doctoral nursing students
                     with quality methodologic and ethical training to become scholars in their areas of
                     interest. Her program of scholarship is focused on uncovering the moral and ethical
                     dimensions of nursing care, especially in relation to the care of highly stigmatized
                     or underserved communities. She believes that the ability to provide patients with
                     excellent, compassionate, and humanistic care necessitates the understanding of clinicians'
                     ethical and moral considerations in care.  She is particularly interested in qualitative
                     approaches to inquiry and theoretical foundations for nursing science. Professor Whitney
                     completed her undergraduate and graduate training in nursing and ethics at the University
                     Pennsylvania. Her dissertation research involved exploring the circumstances under
                     which clinicians moralize substance use during pregnancy and lactation.
