CurrentTeam

LISA C. ZABA

Lisa Zaba M.D. Ph.D., is a Clinical Associate Professor of Dermatology, and is a translational immunologist interested in individualizing cancer care based on the immunologic and genomic characteristics of a patient’s tumor. She also specializes in autoimmune and inflammatory sequelae of cancer therapeutics and treatments.

HANNAH KIM

Clinical Research Coordinator 2

Hannah recently worked as a Senior Clinical Research Coordinator for the University of California, San Francisco. Prior to that, Hannah held a position with the Stone Research Foundation, and has earned a Bachelor’s degree in Athletic Training from Baylor University. In Hannah’s personal time, favorite activities include running, cooking/baking, and listening to music. 

JESUTOFUNMI OMIYE

Jesutofunmi Omiye is currently a postdoc in AI-dermatology at Stanford. His research interests border on the nexus of artificial intelligence and policy to improve dermatology care, and healthcare more broadly. He received his MS in Health Policy at Stanford where he studied the utility of machine learning algorithms in clinical settings, computer vision models in surgery, and evaluated how macroeconomic policies influence mortality.

Tofunmi received his medical degree from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria where he was a Federal Government and Shell University Scholar. As a medical student, he served as the chair of a pan-African health conference where he worked with the WHO, and Gates Foundation. His work has been featured in top national and international news media including The Guardian.

Also, he is the co-founder of The Ganglion Initiative, a non-profit that has provided educational and career empowerment schemes to over 8,000 students in Nigeria. In his spare time, he enjoys traveling, soccer, tennis, studying the financial markets, and music.

tomiye@stanford.edu

MARLAYNA HARRIS

Life Science Research Professional

Marlayna graduated from the College of Wooster where she received a bachelor's degree in Biochemistry & Molecular Biology and completed a thesis focusing on creating a Boolean model of crosstalk between senescence and epithelial to mesenchymal transition. Marlayna was given the opportunity to present this research over the summer at the NetBioMed 2021 Conference. Marlayna enjoys playing video games with friends, watching movies, and doing puzzles.

Marlayna@stanford.edu

ALEC ESCHOLZ

Alec is originally from Vermont and stayed in the northeast while completing his undergraduate studies at Dartmouth College. He graduated in 2019 with a B.S in Biology concentrated in human biology. While at Dartmouth he also performed research and was a member of the Varsity Track and Field team running the hurdles. His undergraduate research focused on molecular docking and the applications of computational analyses to model interactions between small molecules and proteins that could be ideal targets for novel drugs. After graduating he moved on to be a Research Assistant in the Media and Health Behaviors Lab at Dartmouth where he investigated how children’s eating habits are affected by the media and food advertising they are exposed to. In his free time, he enjoys the outdoors by running, biking, reading a good book in a hammock, and playing basketball.

eschholz@stanford.edu

GABRIEL MOLINA

Gabriel is currently a 2nd year Dermatology resident at Stanford. After growing up in Florida, he spent ten years in the Boston area, where he attended college and medical school at Harvard. While in medical school, he dedicated a research year to investigating the cutaneous toxicities of immune checkpoint inhibitors. His clinical and research interests include supportive dermato-oncology and complex medical dermatology.

gemolina@stanford.edu

NOLAN MALONEY

Nolan grew up in Naperville, Illinois before attending the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy for high school. He earned a degree in Molecular Biochemistry & Biophysics from Yale, and subsequently graduated from medical school at UCLA. He then completed his internship in internal medicine at Kaiser Permanente, Los Angeles Medical Center, before joining the dermatology residency program at Stanford. Nolan’s interests in dermatology are broad, but he particularly enjoys cutaneous oncology, and hopes to shape both his clinical practice and academic interests around improving the care and lives of patients with skin cancer or other malignancies. Outside of medicine, Nolan is passionate about ice cream and matcha lattes, and enjoys tennis, table tennis, and hiking.

nmaloney@stanford.edu