2025 National Conference
2025 National Conference
Date: March 7-9, 2025
Location: Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC
2025 National Conference Booklet
In recent years, APAMSA National Conferences have embraced a forward-thinking approach while also engaging in a thorough reflection of past experiences. This dual focus has worked to bring our community together in a concerted effort to address healthcare disparities. Given the alarming rise in anti-AANHPI hate crimes and the surge in mental health crises exacerbated by the pandemic, addressing AANHPI mental health has become more critical than ever.
In line with these values, our theme for the 2025 APAMSA National Conference is: “Blossom: Healing Our Communities and Inspiring Transformation.” The stigmatization of mental health issues within AANHPI communities has often led to inadequate support, conflict, and deep hurt. Therefore, it is essential that our conference fosters open dialogue on this subject. We will explore complex issues such as intergenerational trauma, which can perpetuate cycles of mental health challenges and cultural disconnection. We will also address the need for racial healing, recognizing that historical injustices have lasting impacts on our well-being.
Additionally, we will confront the realities of burnout and moral injury, which are increasingly common among healthcare providers and community leaders. By engaging in these discussions, we aim to develop strategies and insights that will empower future healthcare providers to effect meaningful change.
Reminiscent of the iconic cherry blossom trees on Duke’s campus, our goal is to inspire a new generation of AANHPI healthcare trainees to “blossom” into providers who are not only aware of these challenges, but also equipped with the tools and empathy needed to foster transformation within our communities. Through these conversations, we hope to build a stronger, more resilient network capable of addressing both individual and systemic issues related to AANHPI mental health and healthcare equity.
Friday, March 7
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
5:30-6:30pm – Check in
6:00-8:00pm – Anti-Racism Caucus
Saturday, March 8
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
7:30-8:30am – Check in
8:30-9:05am – Welcome Address
9:05-9:50am – Keynote Address
10:00-10:45am – Breakout Session 1
11:00-11:45am – Breakout Session 2
11:45-12:50pm – Lunch, Diversity Mixer
12:00-1:45pm – House of Delegates (HOD) Meeting
1:45-2:45pm – Poster Session
3:00-3:45pm – Breakout Session 3
4:00-4:45pm – Breakout Session 4
5:00-5:30pm – Closing Ceremony, Election Results
7:30-10:00pm – Banquet (Ping Pang Pong)
Sunday, March 9
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
9:00-12:00pm – Transition Meeting for elected leadership
The 2024 APAMSA National Conference has secured discounted accommodations at The Linq Hotel & Experience on The Strip from Friday, March 1, 2024 through Sunday, March 3, 2024. The Linq is a 10 minute drive to the conference venue, the Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building! Shuttle services to the Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building will be provided for those reserving rooms with The Linq the morning of the conference.
The Linq Hotel & Experience: 3535 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109
Discounted housing is available on a first come, first served basis. Please sign up for this discounted housing here. This form also allows the option to request a roommate. Here are the important dates to lookout for:
January 1, 2024: Last date to sign up for Linq housing and/or roommates via the housing form
January 14, 2024: Group confirmations, details, and codes sent
January 31, 2024: Deadline to reserve your room
Cost: average $140/night (for 2 people, +$30 per additional person)
Fees: ~$30
Check out our transportation guide for tips on parking as well as how to commute from the airport to the conference venue, and around The Strip/Downtown!
Want more housing options? Check out our Las Vegas hotel guide for alternatives.
The 2024 APAMSA National Conference has secured discounted flights with United Airlines. Check out the infographic below for instructions on how to make your flight reservation.
2024 APAMSA NC United Airlines Booking Instructions
Abstract submission for the Research Poster Session is open until December 31st, 2023. Sign up here!
– Poster presentations are in-person and after lunch time during the conference (Saturday, March 2nd, 2024).
– Abstracts can be submitted into one of four categories: Basic Science; Translation & Clinical Health; Community Health, Epidemiology, Education, and Policy; and Healthcare Professional and Trainee Wellbeing.
– At least one author will need to be available at all times to give a quick oral presentation and answer questions during this session.
– There will be judges who will be selecting for the most outstanding abstracts in each category during the abstract presentation session.
Please note:
– Abstract approval decisions will be emailed to the corresponding author.
– Upon approval of submission, presenters will need to provide a demonstration of conference ticket purchase to confirm their attendance at this poster session.
– APAMSA unfortunately does not offer any poster printing services.
Feel free to contact research@apamsa.org with any questions!
Nataliyah Tahir
National Conference Logistics Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Eric Chio
National Conference Logistics Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Avery Zhou
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Michelle Zhu
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Kenny Do
National Conference Finance Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Tiffany Chen
National Conference Communications Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Logistics
National Conference Committee Members
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Nataliyah Tahir, Michelle Zheng, Charissa Alo, Eric Chio
Speaker Relations
National Conference Committee Members
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Kim Inciong, Avery Zhou, Michelle Zhu, Leah Yim
Communications
National Conference Committee Member
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Allen Zhang, Tiffany Chen, Claire Ong
Not pictured: Celica Cosme
Finance
National Conference Committee Member
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Gemma Lagasca, Kenny Do, Mira Dani
Thank you to our Sponsors!
For those who are interested in having an exhibitor booth at the National Conference, please contact conference@apamsa.org and CC externalvp@apamsa.org and sponsorship@apamsa.org in your email by January 26th, 2024 so that we can draft a sponsorship contract and create an invoice for you. Thank you for your interest!
2024 APAMSA NC Sponsorship Packet
Check out the National APAMSA Instagram to follow our speaker reveals! We will be introducing new speakers up until the conference!
Vivienne Hau, MD, PhD
Vivienne S. Hau, MD, PhD is a Clinical Assistant Professor with the Kaiser Permanente (KP) Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine and a retina surgeon with the Southern California Permanente Medical Group. She is the Area Vice-Chair of Clinical Research and Director of the largest KP ophthalmology clinical research program focusing on age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy.
Dr. Hau is an openly transgender woman and first-generation Vietnamese boat immigrant. As a medical student she established the University of Arizona APAMSA chapter and later elected Regional Director and 2001 National President. Her chapter was one of the first to involve pre-med students. She is the first LGBTQIA+ elected board member of the American Society of Retina Specialists and currently co-chairs the DEI Committee and started the first LGBTQIA+ ophthalmology mentorship program. She’s an invited national speaker on supporting transgender and non-binary (TGNB) patients and colleagues and spoken to Fortune 500 companies on better supporting their TGNB communities. She was one of the first physicians to have transitioned at KP.
Dr. Hau is a mother to a beautiful 9-year-old daughter and her perfect day is taking her to Disneyland. She also volunteers guiding blind athletes in marathons and does triathlons.
Nolan Kagetsu, MD, FACR
Nolan studied chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After graduating from Albany Medical College (before the creation of APAMSA !), he completed a residency in diagnostic radiology at Mount Sinai West and a fellowship in Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology at NYU. He currently is a diagnostic neuroradiologist at Mount Sinai in New York City. He advises the Mount Sinai APAMSA chapter. Nolan serves on the APAMSA alumni advisory board, the American College of Radiology (ACR) Commission for Women and Diversity, the board of the Association of University Radiologists, the Advisory Committee to the ACGME office of Diversity, and serves on the ACR Council Steering Committee. He has written about unconscious bias, microaggression, and being an upstander. He is a Professor of Radiology and Medical Education at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. He has 2 adult children and lives with his wife in New York City.
Kristine Jan C. Espinoza, PH.D. Candidate
Kristine Jan Cruz Espinoza is a Pinay Ph.D. Candidate studying Higher Education and completing a graduate certificate in Program Evaluation and Assessment at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). Her research interests revolve around race-based higher education policies, currently focusing on Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs; i.e., Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions (AANAPISIs) and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs)) and racial data classifications. As part of her UNLV MSI Student Council initiative, she advocated for the systematic collection of disaggregated race data in the UNLV undergraduate and graduate admissions applications, which went into effect for Fall 2023 admits. She spoke on the importance of disaggregation of race data for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders on Nevada Public Radio’s (KNPR) Exit Spring Mountain podcast. Before graduate study, Kristine worked full-time as the Student Affairs Officer in the UCLA Asian American Studies Department. She was a community college transfer student from Long Beach City College to the University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where she earned her B.A. in Biology, B.A. in Anthropology, and M.Ed. in Educational Administration.
Dr. David Kuykendall, MD
David Kuykendall is the current program director for the Kirk Krekorian School of Medicine Family and Community Medicine Residency. He leads the residency that trained him as a resident. Immediately after graduation he signed on as faculty and is now an associate professor with the school of medicine. He enjoys primary care and acute issues and loves medical education and community outreach.
Dr. Bernice Ponce de Leon, DO
Dr. Bernice Ponce de Leon, DO is a board-certified adult psychiatrist who recently completed a Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship at University of Southern California (2021-2023). She earned her BS in Psychology at Duke University, attended medical school at Touro University Nevada, and completed her adult psychiatry residency at University of Nevada Las Vegas. Her journey has been driven by her passion for Asian American mental health, from hosting outreach events to decrease mental health stigma in medical school, to serving as a Diversity Leadership Fellow with the American Psychiatric Association (2020-2022) as a resident/fellow. In her spare time, she enjoys watching Korean variety shows and crocheting.
Dr. Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH
Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH completed her BS in Neuroscience from the University of California, Los Angeles, MD from the Medical College of Wisconsin, and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She completed her Internal Medicine residency at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and is currently a General Internal Medicine fellow at Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital. She has served on her local MCW APAMSA chapter board as well as on the APAMSA National Board, including as National President from 2018-2021. Her research experience ranges from basic neuroscience research and qualitative community surveys to systematic reviews and secondary analyses of large randomized clinical trials. Dr. Wu is passionate about primary care and clinical research in chronic cardiometabolic diseases, especially in addressing health inequities for minority/underrepresented populations.
Dr. Ruey Hu, MD, MPH
Ruey Hu, MD, MPH is a cardiovascular outcomes researcher and third-year fellow in cardiovascular medicine at Yale School of Medicine. He was voted by Yale medical students as outstanding fellow teacher of the year in 2021, voted by Yale medical residents as the Department of Medicine’s 2022 Fellow of the Year, voted by APAMSA medical students as 2023 Alumnus of the Year, and voted by Yale emergency medicine residents as the 2023 Consultant of the Year. Originally from Canada, Dr Hu served as national president of APAMSA 2016-2018. He completed his AB at Princeton University, MD and residency at Vanderbilt University, and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, where he was inducted into the Delta Omega Public Health Honor Society. A metabolomics researcher, he is a two-time winner of the NKF National Young Investigators’ Forum. His research has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and Annals of Internal Medicine. His tool for guideline directed medical therapy, GDMT.org, has been recognized by the American Heart Association and is used by clinicians in 70 countries. He is an active peer reviewer for cardiology and nephrology journals and serves on the intern selection committee of the Yale internal medicine residency program.
Dr. Francisco S. Sy, MD, MS, DrPH
Dr. Francisco Sy is Professor & Chair, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at UNLV School of Public Health. He is the Principal Investigator of Mountain West Clinical & Translational Research Infrastructure Network, funded by NIH/NIGMS. He is the Editor of AIDS Education and Prevention- An Interdisciplinary Journal since 1988. His research expertise include infectious disease epidemiology and health disparities research. Dr. Sy worked as a Senior Health Scientist Administrator at NIH National Institutes on Minority Health and Health Disparities Health for 12 years. At Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, he was a Senior Health Scientist in the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention for 4 years. He was a member of the CDC SARS Outbreak Investigation Team in 2003. Dr. Sy was an Associate Professor of Epidemiology at University of South Carolina School of Public Health for 15 years. Dr. Sy earned his Doctor of Public Health degree in Immunology & Infectious Diseases in 1984 from Johns Hopkins School of Public Health; and Master of Science in Tropical Public Health in 1981 from Harvard School of Public Health. He obtained his MD in 1975 & BS Pre-Med in 1970 from University of the Philippines.
Dr. B U.K. Li, MD
Dr. B U.K. Li is an Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW). He completed his A.B. (religion) at Princeton University, M.D. and internal medicine internship at Kansas University, and pediatric residency, chief residency, and gastroenterology fellowship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Over his career, he investigated the intestinal transport of carnitine, developed a 27-hour medical student diversity curriculum and a 3-year curriculum for 78 pediatric subspecialty fellows, studied the mechanisms of cyclic vomiting syndrome, and established the first interdisciplinary Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS) Program that treated national and international referrals. He was elected the first minority President (2008-2010) of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN.org). He published over 160 articles and chapters and gave 80 Grand Rounds and international presentations. He chaired or co-chaired the Clinical Guidelines task force on the Diagnosis and Treatment of CVS in Children (2008), on the Diagnosis and Treatment of CVS in Adults (2019) and the ongoing pediatric update (2023). He co-edited the Fellows’ Concise Review of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition and serves as a Section Editor of Pediatric Gastroenterology for UpToDate. He received the Outstanding Clinical Teacher Award at the University of Wisconsin, three Diversity Awards from The Ohio State University, the MCW President’s Diversity and Inclusion Award (2018) and two career achievement awards in pediatric gastroenterology – the Murray Davidson Award (2012) and the inaugural Master Educator Award (2018). Dr. Li co-founded the Asian American Student Association at Princeton (1970) and the national Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA.org) in 1995 and continues on the advisory board. He has spoken to regional APAMSA Chapters and National Conferences and received APAMSA’s 10 th Anniversary Service and 25 th Anniversary Mentor Awards.
Dr. Kevin Riutzel, DO
Born in South Korea and raised in the greater Los Angeles area, Kevin Riutzel is a family physician currently working in the heart of LA’s Koreatown. The clinic he works at is a federally-qualified health center primarily serving local AAPI communities, many of whom are the 1st generation in their families to immigrate to the U.S. He has served in several roles for APAMSA including National President for three terms as well as National Pre-med Director, Region XII Director, and local chapter president. He finished his undergraduate studies at UC San Diego and graduate studies at Columbia University. After graduating from Touro University Nevada, he completed his training in family medicine at UC Irvine with a focus on integrative medicine. He served as one of the chief residents while at UC Irvine. Kevin takes a particular interest in mental health and culturally-sensitive nutritional counseling in AAPI communities along with providing an integrative and holistic approach to the care he offers to the communities he serves. He is not burned out, and he enjoys his job.
Dr. Hieu Pham, MD, MSPH, AAHIVS, FAAFP
Hieu Pham, MD, MSPH, AAHIVS, FAAFP (he/him) works at International Community Health Services (ICHS) in Seattle, WA as a Family Medicine Physician. ICHS is the biggest healthcare provider to AANHPI in Washington state. He provides full spectrum primary and obstetrical care to all patients, and serves as the in-house HIV specialist and gender affirming care subject expert. Additionally, Dr. Pham directs the ICHS Family Medicine Residency, a site of the larger Swedish Cherry Hill Family Medicine Residency (SCHFMR). As an immigrant, queer physician of color, Dr. Pham is particularly interested in immigrant and refugee health, LGBTQIA+ health, and mentoring the next generation of physicians of color. His other clinical interests include health equity, anti-racist framework in medicine, chronic hepatitis B, obstetrical and gynecological health, and diabetes. Dr. Pham was born in Saigon, Vietnam and was raised in Queens, New York. He did his undergrad at Columbia, Master’s at Johns Hopkins, and medical degree at Rush Medical College, where he was involved with APAMSA national board. He completed his residency in Family Medicine at SCHFMR, where he was also chief resident. Outside of work, Dr. Pham enjoys bouldering, reading, traveling, camping, board games, mixology, and cooking the food of his motherland. He is always in search for the best bún bò huế.
Dr. Winston Wong, MD, MS, FAAFP
A graduate of the UCSF School of Medicine, Dr. Winston Wong, MD, MS, FAAFP, is the Chair and acting CEO of the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). Dr. Wong was a founding member of NCAPIP when it was established in 2007 to provide a national voice for API physicians to advocate for health equity on behalf of their communities. Dr. Wong has served in national leadership roles in the U.S. Public Health Service and Kaiser Permanente, where he led population management efforts to address health disparities and to support Kaiser’s commitment to safety net providers. Dr. Wong has ongoing roles at the National Academy of Medicine, and in health philanthropy including the CDC Foundation and Grantmakers in Health. He is also a Scholar-in-Residence at the Kaiser Permanente UCLA Center for Health Equity. He was featured as a “Face of Public Health” in the American Journal of Public Health, and received the Community Hero Award from Asian Health Services based in Oakland, California.
Dr. Aakash Shah, MD
Dr. Aakash Shah is a practicing emergency room doctor who helped treat the earliest confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New Jersey. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Shah has founded several programs to promote community health. Most recently, Dr. Shah founded Healing the Vote which helped recruit, train, and mobilize over 250 pre-health students to assist over 3,500 New Jerseyans to vote over the course of six weeks. He has also served as an advisor to the US Secretary of Health and Human Services and multiple federal, state, and local policymakers. Dr. Shah obtained his MD from Harvard Medical School, his MBA and MSc in Comparative Social Policy from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, and his BA and BS from Ursinus College. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Centenary University.
Dr. John T. Pham, DO
Dr. John T. Pham is the Dean and Chief Academic Officer of the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathic Medicine. He formerly served as Vice Dean of Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific Northwest in Lebanon, Oregon. He is an Associate Professor of Family Medicine and has a passion for teaching and inspiring the next generation of osteopathic physicians. Dr. Pham settled in Portland, Oregon with his parent and younger brother after emigrating from Vietnam in 1975. He is the eldest of three sons and the first in his family to attend medical school. Dr. Pham attended Oregon State University, where he majored in Biology and minored in Chemistry. After graduating from Oregon State University, he left the state for the first time since arriving in Oregon to attend medical school at Des Moines University in Iowa. Dr. Pham completed his residency in family medicine at the Eastmoreland Hospital. After graduating from residency, Dr. Pham was an ambitious and eager physician. His ambition and motivation to give back to his community was embedded in his fiber. He became an entrepreneur and opened a solo practice clinic in Portland, where he practiced for more than 9 years prior to joining WesternU in 2011. Being fluent in Vietnamese, Dr. Pham’s practice served a large number of first- and second-generation Vietnamese. Throughout his time in private practice, Dr. Pham mentored countless numbers of medical students and pre-med students at his clinic. Dr. Pham has been recognized for mentoring both locally and nationally. These acknowledgements have earned him D.O. of the Year from the State Association in 2010 and Mentor of the Year from the AOA in 2007. His love of teaching led him to Western University COMP-Northwest, where he began educating as an Assistant Professor of Family Medicine for the inaugural class in 2011. When the opportunity arose for him to give back to the community and train future compassionate and competent physicians, he did not hesitate. He now brings his passion for education and mentoring to the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathic Medicine as Dean.
Dr. Jhemon Lee, MD
Dr. Lee is a private practice radiologist in Los Alamitos, CA. He was one of the original student organizers that helped lead to the formation of APAMSA in 1995, and has helped lead APAMSA’s Advisory Board ever since. He is a board member of the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). He is president of the Orange County chapter of OCA – Asian Pacific American Advocates, and has previously held many roles in the National Association of Asian American Professionals (NAAAP), including National President, President of its Chicago chapter, and co-chair of its 2008 National Convention. He is also the Medical Advisor for the Diagnostic Medical Sonography programs at Platt College. Dr. Lee received his bachelor’s degree in Engineering Sciences at Harvard University and obtained his medical degree from the University of Maryland. He completed his residency in diagnostic radiology at the University of Chicago, where he was chief resident, and a fellowship in abdominal imaging at Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston. On the side, Jhemon writes and performs sketch comedy with the Asian American comedy group “No MSG Added,” and he and his wife previously performed improv comedy for years with groups such as Cold Tofu, Los Angeles’ longest running API improv troupe.
Dr. Sandhya Wahi-Gururaj, MD, MPH
Dr. Sandhya Wahi-Gururaj is a board-certified general internist and professor of internal medicine. Dr. Wahi has been in medical education for over 20 years across the continuum. She held multiple roles including program director for 12 years at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR), now known as the Kirk Kerkorian SOM of at UNLV internal medicine residency program. Dr. Wahi has a keen interest in physician professional development and well-being, and among other activities she regularly presents faculty development sessions at the national level. . She is the Governor of the Nevada Chapter American College of Physician (ACP), a Well-being Champion Emeritus, and was the program planning chair for 11 years. In addition, she is an active board member of the Nevada Physician Wellness Coalition. Dr. Wahi is a recipient of multiple awards including the NV ACP’s Chapter Laureate Award, Woman Physician of the Year, and is a member of the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. She is a graduate of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the Boston University School of Public Health. She completed her internal medicine residency, chief residency, and general internal medicine fellowship at the Boston University Medical Center.
Dr. Marcus Kawika Iwane, MD
Dr. Marcus Kawika Iwane was born and raised in Hawaii on the island of Oahu. He earned his medical degree from the University of Hawaii, John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) in 2010. He continued his training at the University of Hawaii Internal Medicine Residency Program and is board certified in internal medicine. He belongs to the American College of Physicians, Hawaii Chapter and serves as president of ‘Ahahui ‘o nā Kauka, the Association of Native Hawaiian Physicians. In 2014, Dr. Iwane joined Hawaii Permanente Medical Group, where he practices internal medicine. He is the chief of the Kaiser Permanente West Oahu Medical Office at Kapolei, known as Kīpukaoha, where he leads a collective effort with community organizations to create innovative programs and partnerships that promote Native Hawaiian health and healing. He serves as clinical faculty for JABSOM, the Kaiser Permanente Bernard Tyson School of Medicine and the Kaiser Permanente Hawaii Internal Medicine Residency Program. In 2018, Dr. Iwane was named to Pacific Business News’ 40 Under 40 list of exceptional leaders. Most recently, he was recognized on the peer-nominated list Best Doctors in America® and received the 2021 Kaiser Permanente David Lawrence Community Service Award. In 2023, Dr. Iwane completed the Climate and Health Equity Fellowship through the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health.
Jennifer Young, MPA
Jennifer serves as the Director of Community Engagement at the Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine where she also lectures on health policy, social determinants of health, health systems science and population health. She attended the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and graduated with a Bachelor in Political Science. After 20 years in healthcare she obtained a Masters in Public Affairs with a concentration in health policy from Indiana University. Currently she is pursuing a doctorate in public policy and her research focuses on identifying and addressing social needs in primary care settings.
Susan Choi
Susan has been associated with Be The Match since 2014, as the Director of Asians for Miracle Marrow Matches (A3M), a network partner organization based in Los Angeles and dedicated to engage and enroll potential donors from communities of color. Susan joined Be the Match in 2022 and currently serves as the Manager of Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Partnerships and Patient Engagement. In this role, Susan manages community and collegiate partnerships with the goal of increasing aware of Be the Match’s mission and diversifying the registry. Susan also leads the Patient Engagement Program and organizes collaborative efforts with patients and the Be the Match recruitment team to explore and support recruitment opportunities.
Susan Choi is originally from Hong Kong and raised in Southern California. She holds a Master of Science degree in Environmental Health Science and Policy from the University of California, Irvine. She is a busy mom of three and could be found in a gym on weekends watching her boys’ basketball games.
Never been to Las Vegas, Nevada before? Come explore our city! Known as the city that never sleeps, there’s plenty of activities to do here and plenty of yummy food!
Check out our Exploring Vegas Guide (with clickable links) for ideas on how to make the most of your time here.
We’re excited to announce that applications for the 2024-2025 National Board are now open.
We’re calling for candidates to apply by Sunday, February 18th, 2024 @ 8:59pm PST/11:59pm EST. If you are looking for opportunities to join the national leadership at our organization, this is your chance! You can find more information about how to run for the 2024-2025 National Board by visiting https://www.apamsa.org/elections/.
The annual APAMSA National Board Election is held every year during the week of the National Conference, and is an opportunity for APAMSA student members across the nation to get involved in the organization’s leadership.
Election Day: Saturday, March 2nd, 2024
Applications Deadline: Sunday, February 18th, 2024 @ 8:59pm PST/11:59pm EST
Contact Us
Questions? Email us at conference@apamsa.org.
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2024 National Conference
Blooming in the Desert
Date: March 1-3, 2024
Location: Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine, 625 Shadow Ln, Las Vegas, NV 89106
Registration Details:
House of Delegates Registration – CLOSED
Banquet Tickets – CLOSED
Ticket Waitlist – CLOSED
Ticket Refund Request – CLOSED
Conference Tickets – SOLD OUT
Research Abstract Submission – CLOSED
Discounted Housing Form & Roommate Match – CLOSED
Hello everyone! On behalf of Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine, we’re so happy to welcome you to Las Vegas for APAMSA’s 30th Annual National Conference!
In recent years, APAMSA National Conference themes have centered around boldly imagining the future and thoughtfully examining the past in order to bring our community together around the common goal of addressing healthcare disparities. Now we ask: How do we sustainably solve these challenges by employing the strengths that already exist within our communities and unify these efforts? This year, our theme is “Blooming in the Desert: Resilience, Adaptation, and Growth.” We want to emphasize mobilizing existing activism and local stakeholders to collaboratively and creatively meet these goals amid both seasons of monsoons and droughts. This theme is rooted in our chapter’s unique experience as a group of medical students at a young but eager university that was established to serve a rapidly growing city with ever changing needs. As we continue to learn how to “bloom” in these early stages to serve our own community, we recognize that countless communities across the country are doing the same. 2024 APAMSA National Conference is an opportunity for us to learn from each others’ experiences to shape AANHPI health across the country.
We’ve worked hard to bring in a variety of speakers who will graciously educate, inspire, and empower us to effect change and become better future community leaders.
We hope you will enjoy your time here building life-long connections, learning from each other, and exploring the City that Never Sleeps.
~ Nataliyah Tahir, Tiffany Chen, Eric Chio, Avery Zhou, Michelle Zhu, Kenny Do
2024 APAMSA National Conference Directors
Friday, March 1
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
5:30-6:30pm – Check in
6:00-8:00pm – Anti-Racism Caucus
Saturday, March 2
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
7:30-8:30am – Check in
8:30-9:05am – Welcome Address
9:05-9:50am – Keynote Address
10:00-10:45am – Breakout Session 1
11:00-11:45am – Breakout Session 2
11:45-12:50pm – Lunch, Diversity Mixer
12:00-1:45pm – House of Delegates (HOD) Meeting
1:45-2:45pm – Poster Session
3:00-3:45pm – Breakout Session 3
4:00-4:45pm – Breakout Session 4
5:00-5:30pm – Closing Ceremony, Election Results
7:30-10:00pm – Banquet (Ping Pang Pong)
Sunday, March 3
Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building, 625 Shadow Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89106
9:00-12:00pm – Transition Meeting for elected leadership
The 2024 APAMSA National Conference has secured discounted accommodations at The Linq Hotel & Experience on The Strip from Friday, March 1, 2024 through Sunday, March 3, 2024. The Linq is a 10 minute drive to the conference venue, the Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building! Shuttle services to the Kirk Kerkorian Medical Education Building will be provided for those reserving rooms with The Linq the morning of the conference.
The Linq Hotel & Experience: 3535 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109
Discounted housing is available on a first come, first served basis. Please sign up for this discounted housing here. This form also allows the option to request a roommate. Here are the important dates to lookout for:
January 1, 2024: Last date to sign up for Linq housing and/or roommates via the housing form
January 14, 2024: Group confirmations, details, and codes sent
January 31, 2024: Deadline to reserve your room
Cost: average $140/night (for 2 people, +$30 per additional person)
Fees: ~$30
Check out our transportation guide for tips on parking as well as how to commute from the airport to the conference venue, and around The Strip/Downtown!
Want more housing options? Check out our Las Vegas hotel guide for alternatives.
The 2024 APAMSA National Conference has secured discounted flights with United Airlines. Check out the infographic below for instructions on how to make your flight reservation.
2024 APAMSA NC United Airlines Booking Instructions
Abstract submission for the Research Poster Session is open until December 31st, 2023. Sign up here!
– Poster presentations are in-person and after lunch time during the conference (Saturday, March 2nd, 2024).
– Abstracts can be submitted into one of four categories: Basic Science; Translation & Clinical Health; Community Health, Epidemiology, Education, and Policy; and Healthcare Professional and Trainee Wellbeing.
– At least one author will need to be available at all times to give a quick oral presentation and answer questions during this session.
– There will be judges who will be selecting for the most outstanding abstracts in each category during the abstract presentation session.
Please note:
– Abstract approval decisions will be emailed to the corresponding author.
– Upon approval of submission, presenters will need to provide a demonstration of conference ticket purchase to confirm their attendance at this poster session.
– APAMSA unfortunately does not offer any poster printing services.
Feel free to contact research@apamsa.org with any questions!
Nataliyah Tahir
National Conference Logistics Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Eric Chio
National Conference Logistics Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Avery Zhou
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Michelle Zhu
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Kenny Do
National Conference Finance Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Tiffany Chen
National Conference Communications Director
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Logistics
National Conference Committee Members
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Nataliyah Tahir, Michelle Zheng, Charissa Alo, Eric Chio
Speaker Relations
National Conference Committee Members
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Kim Inciong, Avery Zhou, Michelle Zhu, Leah Yim
Communications
National Conference Committee Member
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Allen Zhang, Tiffany Chen, Claire Ong
Not pictured: Celica Cosme
Finance
National Conference Committee Member
Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
From left to right: Gemma Lagasca, Kenny Do, Mira Dani
Thank you to our Sponsors!
For those who are interested in having an exhibitor booth at the National Conference, please contact conference@apamsa.org and CC externalvp@apamsa.org and sponsorship@apamsa.org in your email by January 26th, 2024 so that we can draft a sponsorship contract and create an invoice for you. Thank you for your interest!
2024 APAMSA NC Sponsorship Packet
Check out the National APAMSA Instagram to follow our speaker reveals! We will be introducing new speakers up until the conference!
Vivienne Hau, MD, PhD
Vivienne S. Hau, MD, PhD is a Clinical Assistant Professor with the Kaiser Permanente (KP) Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine and a retina surgeon with the Southern California Permanente Medical Group. She is the Area Vice-Chair of Clinical Research and Director of the largest KP ophthalmology clinical research program focusing on age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy.
Dr. Hau is an openly transgender woman and first-generation Vietnamese boat immigrant. As a medical student she established the University of Arizona APAMSA chapter and later elected Regional Director and 2001 National President. Her chapter was one of the first to involve pre-med students. She is the first LGBTQIA+ elected board member of the American Society of Retina Specialists and currently co-chairs the DEI Committee and started the first LGBTQIA+ ophthalmology mentorship program. She’s an invited national speaker on supporting transgender and non-binary (TGNB) patients and colleagues and spoken to Fortune 500 companies on better supporting their TGNB communities. She was one of the first physicians to have transitioned at KP.
Dr. Hau is a mother to a beautiful 9-year-old daughter and her perfect day is taking her to Disneyland. She also volunteers guiding blind athletes in marathons and does triathlons.
Nolan Kagetsu, MD, FACR
Nolan studied chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After graduating from Albany Medical College (before the creation of APAMSA !), he completed a residency in diagnostic radiology at Mount Sinai West and a fellowship in Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology at NYU. He currently is a diagnostic neuroradiologist at Mount Sinai in New York City. He advises the Mount Sinai APAMSA chapter. Nolan serves on the APAMSA alumni advisory board, the American College of Radiology (ACR) Commission for Women and Diversity, the board of the Association of University Radiologists, the Advisory Committee to the ACGME office of Diversity, and serves on the ACR Council Steering Committee. He has written about unconscious bias, microaggression, and being an upstander. He is a Professor of Radiology and Medical Education at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. He has 2 adult children and lives with his wife in New York City.
Kristine Jan C. Espinoza, PH.D. Candidate
Kristine Jan Cruz Espinoza is a Pinay Ph.D. Candidate studying Higher Education and completing a graduate certificate in Program Evaluation and Assessment at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). Her research interests revolve around race-based higher education policies, currently focusing on Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs; i.e., Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions (AANAPISIs) and Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs)) and racial data classifications. As part of her UNLV MSI Student Council initiative, she advocated for the systematic collection of disaggregated race data in the UNLV undergraduate and graduate admissions applications, which went into effect for Fall 2023 admits. She spoke on the importance of disaggregation of race data for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders on Nevada Public Radio’s (KNPR) Exit Spring Mountain podcast. Before graduate study, Kristine worked full-time as the Student Affairs Officer in the UCLA Asian American Studies Department. She was a community college transfer student from Long Beach City College to the University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where she earned her B.A. in Biology, B.A. in Anthropology, and M.Ed. in Educational Administration.
Dr. David Kuykendall, MD
David Kuykendall is the current program director for the Kirk Krekorian School of Medicine Family and Community Medicine Residency. He leads the residency that trained him as a resident. Immediately after graduation he signed on as faculty and is now an associate professor with the school of medicine. He enjoys primary care and acute issues and loves medical education and community outreach.
Dr. Bernice Ponce de Leon, DO
Dr. Bernice Ponce de Leon, DO is a board-certified adult psychiatrist who recently completed a Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Fellowship at University of Southern California (2021-2023). She earned her BS in Psychology at Duke University, attended medical school at Touro University Nevada, and completed her adult psychiatry residency at University of Nevada Las Vegas. Her journey has been driven by her passion for Asian American mental health, from hosting outreach events to decrease mental health stigma in medical school, to serving as a Diversity Leadership Fellow with the American Psychiatric Association (2020-2022) as a resident/fellow. In her spare time, she enjoys watching Korean variety shows and crocheting.
Dr. Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH
Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH completed her BS in Neuroscience from the University of California, Los Angeles, MD from the Medical College of Wisconsin, and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She completed her Internal Medicine residency at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and is currently a General Internal Medicine fellow at Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital. She has served on her local MCW APAMSA chapter board as well as on the APAMSA National Board, including as National President from 2018-2021. Her research experience ranges from basic neuroscience research and qualitative community surveys to systematic reviews and secondary analyses of large randomized clinical trials. Dr. Wu is passionate about primary care and clinical research in chronic cardiometabolic diseases, especially in addressing health inequities for minority/underrepresented populations.
Dr. Ruey Hu, MD, MPH
Ruey Hu, MD, MPH is a cardiovascular outcomes researcher and third-year fellow in cardiovascular medicine at Yale School of Medicine. He was voted by Yale medical students as outstanding fellow teacher of the year in 2021, voted by Yale medical residents as the Department of Medicine’s 2022 Fellow of the Year, voted by APAMSA medical students as 2023 Alumnus of the Year, and voted by Yale emergency medicine residents as the 2023 Consultant of the Year. Originally from Canada, Dr Hu served as national president of APAMSA 2016-2018. He completed his AB at Princeton University, MD and residency at Vanderbilt University, and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, where he was inducted into the Delta Omega Public Health Honor Society. A metabolomics researcher, he is a two-time winner of the NKF National Young Investigators’ Forum. His research has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and Annals of Internal Medicine. His tool for guideline directed medical therapy, GDMT.org, has been recognized by the American Heart Association and is used by clinicians in 70 countries. He is an active peer reviewer for cardiology and nephrology journals and serves on the intern selection committee of the Yale internal medicine residency program.
Dr. Francisco S. Sy, MD, MS, DrPH
Dr. Francisco Sy is Professor & Chair, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at UNLV School of Public Health. He is the Principal Investigator of Mountain West Clinical & Translational Research Infrastructure Network, funded by NIH/NIGMS. He is the Editor of AIDS Education and Prevention- An Interdisciplinary Journal since 1988. His research expertise include infectious disease epidemiology and health disparities research. Dr. Sy worked as a Senior Health Scientist Administrator at NIH National Institutes on Minority Health and Health Disparities Health for 12 years. At Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, he was a Senior Health Scientist in the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention for 4 years. He was a member of the CDC SARS Outbreak Investigation Team in 2003. Dr. Sy was an Associate Professor of Epidemiology at University of South Carolina School of Public Health for 15 years. Dr. Sy earned his Doctor of Public Health degree in Immunology & Infectious Diseases in 1984 from Johns Hopkins School of Public Health; and Master of Science in Tropical Public Health in 1981 from Harvard School of Public Health. He obtained his MD in 1975 & BS Pre-Med in 1970 from University of the Philippines.
Dr. B U.K. Li, MD
Dr. B U.K. Li is an Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW). He completed his A.B. (religion) at Princeton University, M.D. and internal medicine internship at Kansas University, and pediatric residency, chief residency, and gastroenterology fellowship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Over his career, he investigated the intestinal transport of carnitine, developed a 27-hour medical student diversity curriculum and a 3-year curriculum for 78 pediatric subspecialty fellows, studied the mechanisms of cyclic vomiting syndrome, and established the first interdisciplinary Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS) Program that treated national and international referrals. He was elected the first minority President (2008-2010) of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN.org). He published over 160 articles and chapters and gave 80 Grand Rounds and international presentations. He chaired or co-chaired the Clinical Guidelines task force on the Diagnosis and Treatment of CVS in Children (2008), on the Diagnosis and Treatment of CVS in Adults (2019) and the ongoing pediatric update (2023). He co-edited the Fellows’ Concise Review of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition and serves as a Section Editor of Pediatric Gastroenterology for UpToDate. He received the Outstanding Clinical Teacher Award at the University of Wisconsin, three Diversity Awards from The Ohio State University, the MCW President’s Diversity and Inclusion Award (2018) and two career achievement awards in pediatric gastroenterology – the Murray Davidson Award (2012) and the inaugural Master Educator Award (2018). Dr. Li co-founded the Asian American Student Association at Princeton (1970) and the national Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA.org) in 1995 and continues on the advisory board. He has spoken to regional APAMSA Chapters and National Conferences and received APAMSA’s 10 th Anniversary Service and 25 th Anniversary Mentor Awards.
Dr. Kevin Riutzel, DO
Born in South Korea and raised in the greater Los Angeles area, Kevin Riutzel is a family physician currently working in the heart of LA’s Koreatown. The clinic he works at is a federally-qualified health center primarily serving local AAPI communities, many of whom are the 1st generation in their families to immigrate to the U.S. He has served in several roles for APAMSA including National President for three terms as well as National Pre-med Director, Region XII Director, and local chapter president. He finished his undergraduate studies at UC San Diego and graduate studies at Columbia University. After graduating from Touro University Nevada, he completed his training in family medicine at UC Irvine with a focus on integrative medicine. He served as one of the chief residents while at UC Irvine. Kevin takes a particular interest in mental health and culturally-sensitive nutritional counseling in AAPI communities along with providing an integrative and holistic approach to the care he offers to the communities he serves. He is not burned out, and he enjoys his job.
Dr. Hieu Pham, MD, MSPH, AAHIVS, FAAFP
Hieu Pham, MD, MSPH, AAHIVS, FAAFP (he/him) works at International Community Health Services (ICHS) in Seattle, WA as a Family Medicine Physician. ICHS is the biggest healthcare provider to AANHPI in Washington state. He provides full spectrum primary and obstetrical care to all patients, and serves as the in-house HIV specialist and gender affirming care subject expert. Additionally, Dr. Pham directs the ICHS Family Medicine Residency, a site of the larger Swedish Cherry Hill Family Medicine Residency (SCHFMR). As an immigrant, queer physician of color, Dr. Pham is particularly interested in immigrant and refugee health, LGBTQIA+ health, and mentoring the next generation of physicians of color. His other clinical interests include health equity, anti-racist framework in medicine, chronic hepatitis B, obstetrical and gynecological health, and diabetes. Dr. Pham was born in Saigon, Vietnam and was raised in Queens, New York. He did his undergrad at Columbia, Master’s at Johns Hopkins, and medical degree at Rush Medical College, where he was involved with APAMSA national board. He completed his residency in Family Medicine at SCHFMR, where he was also chief resident. Outside of work, Dr. Pham enjoys bouldering, reading, traveling, camping, board games, mixology, and cooking the food of his motherland. He is always in search for the best bún bò huế.
Dr. Winston Wong, MD, MS, FAAFP
A graduate of the UCSF School of Medicine, Dr. Winston Wong, MD, MS, FAAFP, is the Chair and acting CEO of the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). Dr. Wong was a founding member of NCAPIP when it was established in 2007 to provide a national voice for API physicians to advocate for health equity on behalf of their communities. Dr. Wong has served in national leadership roles in the U.S. Public Health Service and Kaiser Permanente, where he led population management efforts to address health disparities and to support Kaiser’s commitment to safety net providers. Dr. Wong has ongoing roles at the National Academy of Medicine, and in health philanthropy including the CDC Foundation and Grantmakers in Health. He is also a Scholar-in-Residence at the Kaiser Permanente UCLA Center for Health Equity. He was featured as a “Face of Public Health” in the American Journal of Public Health, and received the Community Hero Award from Asian Health Services based in Oakland, California.
Dr. Aakash Shah, MD
Dr. Aakash Shah is a practicing emergency room doctor who helped treat the earliest confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New Jersey. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Shah has founded several programs to promote community health. Most recently, Dr. Shah founded Healing the Vote which helped recruit, train, and mobilize over 250 pre-health students to assist over 3,500 New Jerseyans to vote over the course of six weeks. He has also served as an advisor to the US Secretary of Health and Human Services and multiple federal, state, and local policymakers. Dr. Shah obtained his MD from Harvard Medical School, his MBA and MSc in Comparative Social Policy from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, and his BA and BS from Ursinus College. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Centenary University.
Dr. John T. Pham, DO
Dr. John T. Pham is the Dean and Chief Academic Officer of the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathic Medicine. He formerly served as Vice Dean of Western University of Health Sciences College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific Northwest in Lebanon, Oregon. He is an Associate Professor of Family Medicine and has a passion for teaching and inspiring the next generation of osteopathic physicians. Dr. Pham settled in Portland, Oregon with his parent and younger brother after emigrating from Vietnam in 1975. He is the eldest of three sons and the first in his family to attend medical school. Dr. Pham attended Oregon State University, where he majored in Biology and minored in Chemistry. After graduating from Oregon State University, he left the state for the first time since arriving in Oregon to attend medical school at Des Moines University in Iowa. Dr. Pham completed his residency in family medicine at the Eastmoreland Hospital. After graduating from residency, Dr. Pham was an ambitious and eager physician. His ambition and motivation to give back to his community was embedded in his fiber. He became an entrepreneur and opened a solo practice clinic in Portland, where he practiced for more than 9 years prior to joining WesternU in 2011. Being fluent in Vietnamese, Dr. Pham’s practice served a large number of first- and second-generation Vietnamese. Throughout his time in private practice, Dr. Pham mentored countless numbers of medical students and pre-med students at his clinic. Dr. Pham has been recognized for mentoring both locally and nationally. These acknowledgements have earned him D.O. of the Year from the State Association in 2010 and Mentor of the Year from the AOA in 2007. His love of teaching led him to Western University COMP-Northwest, where he began educating as an Assistant Professor of Family Medicine for the inaugural class in 2011. When the opportunity arose for him to give back to the community and train future compassionate and competent physicians, he did not hesitate. He now brings his passion for education and mentoring to the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathic Medicine as Dean.
Dr. Jhemon Lee, MD
Dr. Lee is a private practice radiologist in Los Alamitos, CA. He was one of the original student organizers that helped lead to the formation of APAMSA in 1995, and has helped lead APAMSA’s Advisory Board ever since. He is a board member of the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). He is president of the Orange County chapter of OCA – Asian Pacific American Advocates, and has previously held many roles in the National Association of Asian American Professionals (NAAAP), including National President, President of its Chicago chapter, and co-chair of its 2008 National Convention. He is also the Medical Advisor for the Diagnostic Medical Sonography programs at Platt College. Dr. Lee received his bachelor’s degree in Engineering Sciences at Harvard University and obtained his medical degree from the University of Maryland. He completed his residency in diagnostic radiology at the University of Chicago, where he was chief resident, and a fellowship in abdominal imaging at Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston. On the side, Jhemon writes and performs sketch comedy with the Asian American comedy group “No MSG Added,” and he and his wife previously performed improv comedy for years with groups such as Cold Tofu, Los Angeles’ longest running API improv troupe.
Dr. Sandhya Wahi-Gururaj, MD, MPH
Dr. Sandhya Wahi-Gururaj is a board-certified general internist and professor of internal medicine. Dr. Wahi has been in medical education for over 20 years across the continuum. She held multiple roles including program director for 12 years at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR), now known as the Kirk Kerkorian SOM of at UNLV internal medicine residency program. Dr. Wahi has a keen interest in physician professional development and well-being, and among other activities she regularly presents faculty development sessions at the national level. . She is the Governor of the Nevada Chapter American College of Physician (ACP), a Well-being Champion Emeritus, and was the program planning chair for 11 years. In addition, she is an active board member of the Nevada Physician Wellness Coalition. Dr. Wahi is a recipient of multiple awards including the NV ACP’s Chapter Laureate Award, Woman Physician of the Year, and is a member of the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. She is a graduate of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the Boston University School of Public Health. She completed her internal medicine residency, chief residency, and general internal medicine fellowship at the Boston University Medical Center.
Dr. Marcus Kawika Iwane, MD
Dr. Marcus Kawika Iwane was born and raised in Hawaii on the island of Oahu. He earned his medical degree from the University of Hawaii, John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) in 2010. He continued his training at the University of Hawaii Internal Medicine Residency Program and is board certified in internal medicine. He belongs to the American College of Physicians, Hawaii Chapter and serves as president of ‘Ahahui ‘o nā Kauka, the Association of Native Hawaiian Physicians. In 2014, Dr. Iwane joined Hawaii Permanente Medical Group, where he practices internal medicine. He is the chief of the Kaiser Permanente West Oahu Medical Office at Kapolei, known as Kīpukaoha, where he leads a collective effort with community organizations to create innovative programs and partnerships that promote Native Hawaiian health and healing. He serves as clinical faculty for JABSOM, the Kaiser Permanente Bernard Tyson School of Medicine and the Kaiser Permanente Hawaii Internal Medicine Residency Program. In 2018, Dr. Iwane was named to Pacific Business News’ 40 Under 40 list of exceptional leaders. Most recently, he was recognized on the peer-nominated list Best Doctors in America® and received the 2021 Kaiser Permanente David Lawrence Community Service Award. In 2023, Dr. Iwane completed the Climate and Health Equity Fellowship through the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health.
Jennifer Young, MPA
Jennifer serves as the Director of Community Engagement at the Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine where she also lectures on health policy, social determinants of health, health systems science and population health. She attended the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and graduated with a Bachelor in Political Science. After 20 years in healthcare she obtained a Masters in Public Affairs with a concentration in health policy from Indiana University. Currently she is pursuing a doctorate in public policy and her research focuses on identifying and addressing social needs in primary care settings.
Susan Choi
Susan has been associated with Be The Match since 2014, as the Director of Asians for Miracle Marrow Matches (A3M), a network partner organization based in Los Angeles and dedicated to engage and enroll potential donors from communities of color. Susan joined Be the Match in 2022 and currently serves as the Manager of Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Partnerships and Patient Engagement. In this role, Susan manages community and collegiate partnerships with the goal of increasing aware of Be the Match’s mission and diversifying the registry. Susan also leads the Patient Engagement Program and organizes collaborative efforts with patients and the Be the Match recruitment team to explore and support recruitment opportunities.
Susan Choi is originally from Hong Kong and raised in Southern California. She holds a Master of Science degree in Environmental Health Science and Policy from the University of California, Irvine. She is a busy mom of three and could be found in a gym on weekends watching her boys’ basketball games.
Never been to Las Vegas, Nevada before? Come explore our city! Known as the city that never sleeps, there’s plenty of activities to do here and plenty of yummy food!
Check out our Exploring Vegas Guide (with clickable links) for ideas on how to make the most of your time here.
We’re excited to announce that applications for the 2024-2025 National Board are now open.
We’re calling for candidates to apply by Sunday, February 18th, 2024 @ 8:59pm PST/11:59pm EST. If you are looking for opportunities to join the national leadership at our organization, this is your chance! You can find more information about how to run for the 2024-2025 National Board by visiting https://www.apamsa.org/elections/.
The annual APAMSA National Board Election is held every year during the week of the National Conference, and is an opportunity for APAMSA student members across the nation to get involved in the organization’s leadership.
Election Day: Saturday, March 2nd, 2024
Applications Deadline: Sunday, February 18th, 2024 @ 8:59pm PST/11:59pm EST
Contact Us
Questions? Email us at conference@apamsa.org.
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2023 National Conference
RENEWAL : Out of the Flames, Into the Future
Date: March 3-5, 2023
Location: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon (2730 S Moody Ave, Portland, OR 97201)
Registration Details:
Early-Bird Registration – CLOSEDGeneral Registration – CLOSED
Purchase your tickets via Eventbrite – CLOSED, Banquet tickets SOLD OUT
House of Delegates Registration
Want to Apply for Travel Subsidy? – CLOSED
Submit a Research Poster – CLOSED
Hello everyone! On behalf of Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), we’re so happy to welcome you to Portland and to APAMSA’s 29th Annual National Conference!
This year, our theme is ‘Renewal: Out of the Flames, Into the Future’. With the spread of COVID-19 came isolation, fear, economic hardship, outright violence against our most vulnerable community members, and an exacerbation of anti-Asian hate towards our communities. However, these are not new to us– AANHPI from all walks of life have had a long, difficult history in America and we have prevailed thus far. We have done this through banding together as a community, through keeping our hope and history alive, and celebrating who we are together. Our next steps forward must be together, with an awareness of what our communities are experiencing now and have experienced in the past, giving each other hope as we renew our sense of community, in order to trek on into the coming years.
We’ve invited an impressive array of speakers who are working to improve the lives of our AANHPI patients and give a voice to our communities. From advanced care planning to founding Stop AAPI Hate, they are excited to share their experiences and wisdom with us and engage with us as well.
Have fun learning, making memories, getting fired up to be the next generation of AANHPI health care leaders, and enjoying this city we Conference Directors call home! Thank you for attending!
~ Joyce Kim, Aliah Mehkri, Hannah Moon, Michelle Santo Domingo, Ashley Tam
2023 APAMSA National Conference Directors
Friday March 3
6:00-8:00pm – Anti-Racism Caucus
Robertson Life Sciences Building (2730 S Moody Ave), Room 3002
Saturday March 4
Address: Robertson Life Sciences Building (2730 S Moody Ave)
7:30-8:30am – Registration/Check In
RLSB Atrium
8:30-9:00am – Welcome & Founders’ Address
RLSB 1A001
9:00-9:45am – Keynote Address (Dr. Russell Jeung)
RLSB 1A001
10:20-11:05am – Breakout Session 1
- Making a Mountain Out of Molehills: Characterizing AANHPI Medical Students’ Experiences with Racial Microaggression (Lindy Zhang, MD)
- AANHPI Cancer Disparities and Impact of Cancer Care Delivery During the COVID-19 Pandemic (Robert Hsu, MD)
- Rooted to Rise: My Search for Meaning in Medicine (Hieu Pham, MD, MSPH)
- OHSU Premed Admissions Presentation (PreMed session)
- Succeeding in Research as a Medical Student: Building your Mentorship Team (Ruey Hu, MD, MPH and Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH)
- Blueprint Sponsor Session
11:15-12:00pm – Breakout Session 2
- Intersectional Sexism and Racism Experienced by Asian American Women in the Healthcare Professions (Qian Leng, MD)
- Healing Our Family (Kevin Riutzel, DO)
- Intergenerational Acculturation Gap in Refugee Communities (Dalia Baadarani, PhD)
- Alumni Panel
- Ultrasound Workshop
- Health Equity in Action: Optimal Interventions to Systemic Drivers of Racial Health Inequities (Pfizer)
12:00-12:50pm – Lunch, Diversity Mixer
RLSB Atrium
11:50-1:45pm – House of Delegates (HOD) Meeting
RLSB 1A001
1:45-2:45pm – Poster Session
RLSB Atrium
3:00-3:45pm – Breakout Session 3
- Kidney Health Disparities in Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders in the US (Kalani Raphael, MD)
- Bridging the Generational Gap Between Faculty and Student (Enjae Jung, MD and Rhusheet Patel, MD)
- Leadership Committee Fireside Chat
- Med Student Panel – “Ask Me Anything” (PreMed session)
- Diversifying the Be the Match Registry – Bringing Hope to AANHPI Patients (BeTheMatch)
4:00-4:45pm – Breakout Session 4
- Social Media and Medicine: Risks, Opportunities, and Your Future (Don Dizon, MD)
- Educational Profiling (Bias) of Asian American Medical Students on the Wards (B Li, MD)
- Fostering Belonging and Equity with Allyship Skills (Sunny Nakae, MD)
- Suture Workshop
- Navigating through Cross-Cultural Diversity and Challenges while Caring for Seriously Ill Patients (Eriko Onishi, MD and Hong Lee, PhD)
5:00-5:30pm – CAMS Sponsor Session, Closing Ceremony, Election Results
RLSB 1A001
7:00-9:30pm – Banquet @ Past Lives catered by Duck House (purchase tickets via Eventbrite and visit the Eventbrite for more details!)
Sunday March 5
9:00-12:00pm – Transition Meeting (for elected leadership)
Check out the National APAMSA Instagram to follow our speaker reveals! We will be introducing new speakers up until the conference!
Russell Jeung, PhD
Professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University, Dr. Russell Jeung is an author of books and articles on race and religion. In March 2020, Dr. Jeung co-founded Stop AAPI Hate with Chinese for Affirmative Action and the AAPI Equity Alliance. It tracks incidents of COVID-19 discrimination to develop policy interventions and long-term solutions to racism. Dr. Jeung has been named as one of the TIME 100 Most Influential Persons, as well as the Bloomberg 50 and Politico 40 most impactful persons.
B Li, MD
Dr. Li is an Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin. He received his A.B. degree in religion at Princeton University and M.D. degree and medicine internship at Kansas University, and completed his pediatric residency, chief residency, and fellowship in gastroenterology and nutrition at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Dr. Li co-founded the Asian American Student Association at Princeton (1971) and the national Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association in 1995 and continues to serve as the faculty advisor to the MCW and University of Wisconsin APAMSA Chapters, and national APAMSA.
Jhemon Lee, MD
Dr. Lee received his bachelor’s degree in Engineering Sciences at Harvard University and obtained his medical degree from the University of Maryland. He completed his residency in diagnostic radiology at the University of Chicago and a fellowship in abdominal imaging at Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston. Dr. Lee is a private practice radiologist in Los Alamitos, CA. He was one of the original student organizers that helped lead to the formation of APAMSA in 1995, and has helped lead APAMSA’s Advisory Board ever since. He is a board member of the National Council of Asian Pacific Islander Physicians (NCAPIP). He is president of the Orange County chapter of OCA – Asian Pacific American Advocates.
Dalia Baadarani, PhD
Dalia Baadarani, is a Clinical Director with the Intercultural Psychiatric Program at OHSU. She is a mental health professional with 10 years of experience in private practice and community service specializing in providing comprehensive care to the refugee and immigrant communities. Her research interests include ways to promote emotional health by using alternative approaches to trauma recovery and the intersection of religion and cultural identity conflict.
Don Dizon, MD
Don S. Dizon is a Professor of Medicine and Professor of Surgery at Brown University. He is a medical oncologist specializing in pelvic malignancies, survivorship particularly as it pertains to sexual health for men and women with cancer, and social media. He grew up on the Pacific Island of Guam, and completed undergraduate and medical school at the University of Rochester in New York. He trained in Internal Medicine at Yale New-Haven Hospital and completed a fellowship in Medical Oncology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in NYC. Dr. Dizon is a founding member of the Collaboration for Outcomes Using Social Media in Oncology and is active on many platforms, including Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok. Follow him @drdonsdizon.
Robert Hsu, MD
Robert Hsu, MD is an Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine at University of Southern California. He received his MD at Tulane University in New Orleans, LA and did Internal Medicine residency at University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital followed by Hematology/Oncology fellowship at the University of Southern California. He served on APAMSA’s National Board for 4 years from 2012-2016 including serving as National Vice President and served as the local chapter president at Tulane. Currently at USC, Dr. Hsu’s focus is on lung and head and neck cancer with an interest in cancer disparities across all solid tumor types with a special interest in APIA cancer disparities.
Ruey Hu, MD, MPH
Dr Ruey Hu is a cardiovascular outcomes researcher and fellow in cardiovascular medicine at Yale School of Medicine. Originally from Canada, Dr Hu, served as national president of APAMSA 2016-2018. He completed his AB at Princeton University, MD and residency at Vanderbilt University, and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, where he was inducted into the Delta Omega Public Health Honor Society. His teaching materials, available at www.rueyhu.com/MedEd, attract clinicians and students internationally. He is an active peer reviewer for cardiology and nephrology journals and serves on the Chinese American Medical Society’s program committee, APAMSA’s alumni advisory board, and Yale’s IM residency intern selection committee.
Enjae Jung, MD
Dr. Enjae Jung is a vascular surgeon and associate professor of surgery in the Division of Vascular Surgery in the OHSU School of Medicine. She sees patients at the Portland VA Medical Center, where she is a staff surgeon. Dr. Jung focuses on a range of vascular surgical problems. She earned her medical degree at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. She completed her residency in general surgery and a fellowship in vascular surgery at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis.
Hong Lee, PhD
Hong Lee, PhD HEC-C is the Medical Ethicist at Salem Health. He grew up in San Francisco and discovered his passion for ethics while completing his BA in philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. Hong then went on to complete his PhD in Philosophy at Bowling Green State University in Ohio and a fellowship in Clinical and Organizational Ethics at the University of Toronto’s Joint Centre for Bioethics. He has been providing clinical ethics services to Salem Health since 2013. His current research interests include decisional capacity, medical futility, moral distress, and surrogate decision making.
Qian Leng, MD
Dr. Qian Liya Leng (she/her) is currently a health services research fellow at the Portland VA. She researches ways to improve how health care is provided to patients as well as boosting the emotional wellbeing of providers. Her areas of interest include health disparities, inclusion, substance use disorders, and mindfulness. She is a certified yoga and meditation teacher. Qian completed a combined MD/MPH degree at Harvard University and internal medicine residency at Oregon Health & Science University. Her clinical work lies in hospital medicine at the VA and Legacy Health.
Sunny Nakae, PhD
Dr. Nakae is the Senior Associate Dean for Equity, Inclusion, Diversity, and Partnership, and Associate Professor of Medical Education at the California University of Science and Medicine. Dr. Nakae completed a BS and MSW at the University of Utah, and a PhD in Higher Education at Loyola University Chicago. Dr. Nakae works with national organizations to increase access and equity in higher education for undocumented, underrepresented, minoritized, and marginalized students, trainees, and practitioners. Dr. Nakae is dedicated to improving inclusive institutional excellence through co-liberatory equity practice.
Eriko Onishi, MD
Eriko Onishi, MD, MCR graduated from Tsukuba School of Medicine in Japan and came to the US for Family Medicine residency training in Terre Haute, Indiana. She practiced Family Medicine in the Indiana community setting until she joined OHSU FM department in October of 2011. Dr. Onishi is interested in research in the areas of Advance Care planning, communication skills with seriously ill, and pain and opioids. She is working to incorporate her clinical experience into her research, aimed at improving the health care system to provide better care.
Rhusheet Patel, MD
Dr. Rhusheet Patel joined the Division of Vascular Surgery at OHSU in 2022. He was previously at UT Southwestern Medical Center where he was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Surgery. He treats the full spectrum of vascular disease, including carotid stenosis, aortic aneurysmal and occlusive disease, and venous insufficiency. He specializes in limb salvage in patients with peripheral arterial disease, using both minimally invasive and open surgical techniques. Dr. Patel earned his medical degree at the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine and completed an integrated residency in vascular surgery at the University of California Los Angeles Medical Center.
Hieu Pham, MD
Hieu Pham (he/him), MD, MSPH, AAHIVS, currently works at International Community Health Services (ICHS) in Seattle WA. He provides full spectrum primary care to all patients as a family physician and serves as the in-house HIV specialist and gender affirming care subject expert. As an immigrant, queer physician of color, Dr. Pham is particularly interested in immigrant and refugee health, care for the LGBTQIA+ population, and mentoring the next generation of physicians of color. Dr. Pham was born in Saigon, Vietnam and was raised in Queens, New York. He did his undergrad studies in New York, graduate studies in Baltimore, and medical school in Chicago where he was involved with APAMSA national board. He completed his residency in Family Medicine at Swedish Cherry Hill Family Medicine Residency (Seattle).
Kalani Raphael, MD
Dr. Kalani Raphael is a Native Hawaiian, born and raised in Honolulu, Hawai’I, and an adult nephrologist and Professor of Medicine at University of Utah Health and VA Salt Lake City Health Care System. Dr. Raphael is the only Native Hawaiian nephrologist in academics and feels a strong responsibility to improve kidney health in the NHPI population. He is a community advocate more generally and is a clinical advisor to the Oregon Pacific Islander Coalition and the Utah Pacific Islander Health Coalition, particularly in areas of policy surrounding COVID-19. Dr. Raphael is known as an international expert in metabolic acidosis in CKD and has current research projects that are funded by NIH and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Kevin Riutzel, DO
Born in South Korea and raised in the greater LA area, Kevin Riutzel is a family physician currently working in Los Angeles, CA. The clinic he works at is a federally-qualified health center in LA’s Koreatown primarily serving local AAPI communities, many of whom are the 1st generation in their families to immigrate to the U.S. He has served in several roles for APAMSA including National President for three terms as well as National Pre-med Director, Region XII Director, and local chapter president. He finished his undergraduate studies at UC San Diego and graduate studies at Columbia University. After graduating from Touro University Nevada, he completed his training in family medicine at UC Irvine with a focus on integrative medicine. He served as one of the chief residents while at UC Irvine.
Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH
Yingfei Wu, MD, MPH graduated with a major in Neuroscience from the University of California, Los Angeles, earned her MD from Medical College of Wisconsin and MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is currently completing her Internal Medicine residency at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. She served on her local APAMSA chapter board at the Medical College of Wisconsin and on the National Board, including as National President from 2018-2021. Dr. Wu is passionate about primary care and clinical research in chronic diseases, especially for minority/underrepresented populations. She will be starting a clinical research fellowship in General Internal Medicine in 2023.
Lindy Zhang, MD
Lindy Zhang, MD is Pediatric Hematology/Oncology clinical and research fellow at the combined Johns Hopkins Hospital/National Institutes of Health program and a Ph.D. candidate in the Cellular and Molecular Medicine program at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She completed her Bachelor of Science in biochemistry at the University of Michigan and her medical degree at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. She is passionate about medical education and diversity, equity, and inclusion. She is an active member of the APAMSA Alumni Advisory Board and is invested in mentorship, promoting scholarship among Asian American medical students, and increasing their diversity within academics.
The 2023 APAMSA National Conference has secured discounted accommodations at Hyatt House Portland/Downtown from Friday March 3, 2023 through Sunday March 5, 2023. Hyatt House is only a 7 minute walk from the conference venue, the Robertson Life Sciences Building!
Hyatt House Portland/Downtown: 2080 S River Dr, Portland, OR 97201
Discounted housing is available on a first come, first served basis. Sign ups for this discounted housing is linked on our registration form. Here are the important dates to lookout for:
December 16, 2022: Last date to secure a spot at Hyatt House via the registration form
January 6, 2023: Group confirmations, details, and codes sent
January 13, 2023: Deadline to reserve your room
Cost: $155/night (for 2 people / $10 + additional person)
Fees: typically around 16%
Check out our transportation guide for tips on parking as well as how to commute from the airport, to the conference venue, and around the OHSU campus!
Abstract submission is now CLOSED for our Research Poster Session
– Poster presentations are in-person and tentatively after lunch time during the conference (Saturday, Mar 4th, 2023).
– We welcome submission of any topic related to medicine, healthcare, or trainee wellbeing!
– At least one author will need to be available at all times to give a quick oral presentation and answer questions during this session.
– Posters will be evaluated by our judging committee which includes residents, APAMSA alumni, and other attendings/professors.
*NEW* Poster Printing Subsidies!!!
– Paying APAMSA members are now eligible for reimbursement up to $30 for poster printing purposes. This is first come first serve as funding allows.
Please note:
– Abstract approval decisions will be emailed to the corresponding author
– Upon approval of submission, presenters will need to provide a demonstration of conference ticket purchase to confirm their attendance at this poster session
– APAMSA unfortunately does not offer any poster printing services; however official members are eligible for reimbursement (see above)
Feel free to contact research@apamsa.org with any questions!
Joyce Kim
National Conference Logistics Director
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Aliah Mehkri
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Hannah Moon
National Conference Finance Director
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Michelle Santo Domingo
National Conference Speaker Relations Director
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Ashley Tam
National Conference Communications Director
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Laureen Chan
External Affairs Vice President
SUNY Downstate College of Medicine
Xiaoyu Cai
Fundraising & Events Director
University of Virginia School of Medicine
Andy Lai
Sponsorship Co-Director
Saint George’s University School of Medicine
Zhang Hong Tan
Sponsorship Co-Director
The Ohio State University College of Medicine
Fountane Chan
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Rachel David
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Lillian Huang
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Joyce Kim
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Lisa Kumasaka
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Chelsea Lin
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Marissa Mayeda
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Angie Nguyen
National Conference Committee Member
The Catlin Gabel School
Lori Sun
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Anushka Tiwari
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Naomi Tsai
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Kristin Zebrowski
National Conference Committee Member
Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine
Interested in joining the APAMSA National Board? Please refer to the 2023 National Board Elections site for all information regarding elections!
Election Day: Saturday, March 4th 2023
Applications Deadline: Monday, February 20th 2023 @ 8:59pm PST/11:59pm EST
Never been to Portland, Oregon before? Come explore our city! Portland is known for coffee, donuts, beer, food cart pods, and more!
Check out our Exploring Portland Travel Guide (with clickable links) for ideas on how to make the most of your time here.
Looking for a quick coffee and donuts before you arrive for the conference? Oracle Coffee Company and Blue Star Donuts is a 10 minute walk from the conference venue. A Starbucks Coffee is also located within the conference venue.
Contact Us
Questions? Email us at conference@apamsa.org.
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