Public Psychiatry Fellow Bios

Public Psychiatry Fellow Bios

Public Psychiatry Fellow Bios

Fellows

Dr. Anna Fiskin was born in Belarus and immigrated to the United States at age eleven. She obtained her MD at Case Western Reserve University and an MSc in Medical Anthropology at Oxford University. Throughout her time in medical school, she sought out opportunities to work on health promotion in the community. This ranged from volunteering to design nutrition workshops for the student run free clinic, collaborating with an African American congregation in Cleveland to develop a Health & Wellness series, or organizing diabetes workshops within the Lumbee tribe as a health justice intern in North Carolina. Her decision to become a psychiatrist was sealed after she did a Community Mental Health rotation in her fourth year. She observed the development of a mental health clinic within a recovery oriented clubhouse and traveled to see clients in homeless shelters and tent camps to provide mental health treatment alongside social services. It was during this experience that she saw how she could have a career that brings together her interests in community organizing and public health with stimulating and rewarding clinical work. During residency, she worked at the Connecticut Mental Health Center serving those with chronic mental illness and in the Specialized Treatment for Early Psychosis clinic. She also worked with the Programme for Improving Mental Health Care on a project to pilot integration of mental health with primary care in several districts in Nepal. During these experiences, it became clear to her that in order to create mental health services that meet the needs of community members and health providers at home and abroad, she will need advanced training in Public Psychiatry. She is excited to be Public Psychiatry fellow this year at the UCSF Public Psychiatry Fellowship at SFGH.

Dr. Dawn Sung was born in San Francisco General Hospital to Korean immigrant parents and grew up in the East Bay area. She attended UC Berkeley for her undergraduate studies, where she began volunteering with homeless and mentally ill communities. She was also a health policy intern at the Greenlining Institute, where she advocated for underserved minority communities at the state level. After graduating she volunteered for a year as a Community Appointed Special Advocate (CASA worker) for Alameda County with foster youth in inner-city Oakland. She then attended UC Davis School of Medicine and fell in love with psychiatry while working with ethnic minority community clinics and conducting cross-cultural research in India and Kenya. She pursued her psychiatry residency and child psychiatry fellowship at New York University/Bellevue Hospital. While there she helped to found the Association for Culture and Psychiatry and in the past year both taught and developed a course on cultural issues in child mental health for undergraduates at NYU. Dr. Sung has returned to San Francisco to pursue further training in public psychiatry and systems of care. Her interests are in working with underserved minority youth, adults, and families, community program development, and providing culturally sensitive care.

Dr. Chris White grew up just outside the mighty town of Okanogan in rural Washington State, where he learned to fish and hike from a young age. After graduating high school, he relocated to California and graduated from UC Santa Cruz with a double major in Mathematics and Philosophy. During this time he took a year abroad in New Zealand and traveled throughout Southeastern Asia and really enjoyed himself. He returned home and gained his pre-requisites for medical school at Humboldt State University, where he discovered a passion for extremophilic microorganisms and kinetic sculptures. He raced in the “Kinetic Grand Championship” in Arcata, California, with his good friend. He attended medical school at UC Davis. During this time, he co-directed a student-run clinic focused on providing psychiatric and medical care to Sacramento’s homeless population and hiked the John Muir Trail with his beautiful wife. He is now at San Mateo Behavioral Health and Recovery Services Psychiatry Residency Program. He is an APA Public Psychiatry Fellow and counts himself lucky to be able to care for the underserved in San Mateo County. His interests include tele-psychiatry, hypnosis, hot yoga, group therapy, relational psychodynamic psychotherapy, community psychiatry, and health informatics.

Dr. Keith Wood grew up in Louisville, Kentucky. He attended the University of Kentucky where he engaged in leadership with campus community service organizations and conducted research in organic chemistry. Keith graduated summa cum laude with a B.S. in biology and shortly after entered medical school at the University of Louisville where developed interests in the interaction between mind and body. Upon completion of medical school he entered residency training in psychiatry at Washington University in St. Louis. While at Washington University he became actively involved in medical student education, conducted research examining the relationship between personality characteristics and subjective well being in patients with severe mental illness, and developed an interest in methods of mental healthcare delivery in the outpatient setting. Following residency, Keith completed a Master’s in Population Health Sciences at Washington University to further his knowledge of public health and statistical methods in medicine. His areas of clinical interests include psychopharmacology, consultation-liaison psychiatry, substance use disorders, and public health.

Auditors

Dr. Maithri Ameresekeregrew up in Dubai, Hanoi and Edinburgh before finding her home in New York City. She completed her residency at the Massachusetts General Hospital/McLean Hospital adult psychiatry residency program where she was the administrative chief resident and the public and community psychiatry chief resident. Prior to medical school she completed her undergraduate degree at Stanford University and her M.Sc. from the Harvard School of Public Health. She completed her medical degree at the Tufts University School of Medicine and graduated with research honors relating to academic work on Somali Refugee Women’s Birth Experiences. She also had the unique experiences of teaching at the University of Juba College of Medicine in South Sudan and the E.S. Grant Mental Health Hospital in Liberia fueling her interest in capacity building in resource poor environments. Currently she is working on a research project related to patient-level barriers to accessing mental health services amongst African immigrant communities in Lowell, Massachusetts. She is interested in refugee and immigrant mental health, emergency psychiatry, and health systems improvement to better serve those with serious mental illness both at home and abroad.

Uyen-Khanh Quang-Dang, M.D., M.S., was born in San Jose, CA. She received her B.A. from Harvard College in 2002, graduating cum laude with honors in History and Science. For her summa cum laude undergraduate thesis, she received a grant to conduct field research in Vietnam’s psychiatric hospitals. Dr. Quang-Dang received an M.S. from the Harvard School of Public Health’s Department of Population and International Health in 2005; her graduate thesis focused on creating new gender equality & women’s empowerment indicators for the United Nations Millennium Development Goals that factored in sexual/reproductive health. Dr. Quang-Dang received her M.D. from New York Medical College in 2010, and completed her general adult psychiatry residency training at University of California, San Francisco in June 2014. She received the UCSF Edwin F. Alston Award for Leadership in Psychiatry, which is awarded annually to a PGY-4 resident who is judged to be an outstanding psychiatric physician leader. Dr. Quang-Dang was a founding member of the Cultural Psychiatry Area of Distinction at UCSF, as well as its first graduate.

In 2013-14, Dr. Quang-Dang was Chair of the American Psychiatric Association Leadership Fellowship and a non-voting member of the American Psychiatric Association Board of Trustees. She currently serves on the Board of Directors for the American Psychiatric Association Foundation as well as for VietHope, Inc., an educational nonprofit organization she cofounded in 2002 as an undergraduate. VietHope is celebrating its 13th year and has provided over 5,000 scholarships for disadvantaged students in Vietnam. Her professional interests include geriatric psychiatry, cultural psychiatry, individual, family, and group psychotherapy, and advocacy. More recently, she has become fascinated by the opportunities for advancing the field of psychiatry by promoting the leadership of women and minorities in psychiatry.