Priyanka Agarwal, MD
Volunteer Associate Clinical Professor
Medicine
School of Medicine
priyanka.agarwal@ucsf.edu 415-502-2596
Priyanka Agarwal, MD, MBA is an Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine in the Division of Hospital Medicine at the University of California, at San Francisco (UCSF). She also works at UCSF's Center for Digital Health Innovation, where she woks on strategy and partnerships for the Center, and for UCSF's Telehealth Resource Center where she is the Clinical Lead for Telehealth.
Show full bio (70 words) Hide full bio
She completed medical school at Harvard University, her internship in internal medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital, and her residency in internal medicine at UCSF.
Priyanka's interests are in the use of digital technology to improve health and healthcare. She believes strongly in empowering individuals to better manage their health, and is excited about the power of technology to facilitate these efforts and to more broadly transform healthcare.
Awards
Show all (5) Hide
- Internal Grants Program Awardee, UCSF Division of Hospital Medicine, 2018
- Ron Rankin Booster Grant, UCSF Partners in Care, 2018
- Loan Repayment Program, National Institutes of Health, 2014
- Barry M. Goldwater Scholar, Barry M. Goldwater Foundation, 2002
- Barry M. Goldwater Scholar, Barry M. Goldwater Foundation, 1998
Education & Training
Show all (5) Hide
- Residency, Internal Medicine University of California, San Francisco 2013
- Internship, Internal Medicine Brigham & Women's Hospital 2011
- MBA Harvard University 2010
- MD Harvard University 2010
- BS, BA Stanford University 2004
Interests
Show all (5) Hide
- Disruptive innovations
- Patient engagement
- Digital health
- Value-based care
- Usability
Websites
Show all (1) Hide
- @@pagarwalMD on Twitter (twitter.com)
Videos
Show all (1) Hide
Publications (2)
Top publication keywords:
Lymphoma, T-Cell, CutaneousRupture, SpontaneousHerpesviridae InfectionsIntestinal PerforationSkin NeoplasmsDiagnosis, DifferentialIntestinal NeoplasmsHerpesvirus 4, HumanNose NeoplasmsSkin Diseases, BacterialBiomarkers, TumorRNA, ViralAntigens, CDMycobacterium Infections, NontuberculousNatural Killer T-Cells
-
Extranodal natural killer cell/t-cell lymphoma, nasal type, presenting as cutaneous nodules and a small-bowel perforation.
The American Journal of dermatopathology 2010 Agarwal P, Ruzinova MB, Harris MH, Qureshi AA, Stebbins WG -
Gene expression patterns vary in clonal cell cultures from Rett syndrome females with eight different MECP2 mutations.
BMC medical genetics 2002 Traynor J, Agarwal P, Lazzeroni L, Francke U