Medicine Grand Rounds: Defining Refugee Health: Research, Practice, and Communities in Crisis

When:
January 30, 2019 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am
2019-01-30T08:00:00-08:00
2019-01-30T09:00:00-08:00
Where:
Alway M106
Cooper Lane
Palo Alto
CA 94304
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Talia Ochoa
Medicine Grand Rounds: Defining Refugee Health: Research, Practice, and Communities in Crisis @ Alway M106 | Palo Alto | California | United States

Presenter: Fatima Karaki, MD

Assistant Professor of Medicine, UCSF

Fatima Karaki, M.D., is an assistant professor at the University of California, San Francisco, Division of Hospital Medicine. She obtained her medical degree from the University of Michigan and completed her internship and residency at Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Karaki cares for adult inpatients on the hospital medicine service and resident inpatient service at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.

Karaki is the founder and director of the Refugee and Asylum seeker Health Initiative (RAHI) at UCSF, which aims to foster academic activity, research, education, and community awareness in refugee health. Her academic and clinical interest is in refugee and asylum seeker health, with a focus on the Syrian refugee crisis in the Middle East. She is a founding member of the North American Society of Refugee Healthcare Providers. She is a member of the UCSF Global Health Sciences Faculty Affiliation Program and the Global Health Core.

Karaki collaborates with experts at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and University of California, Berkeley, to advance refugee health research and education in the academic field. She has provided emergency medical relief to patients in refugee camps and slums throughout Europe, the Middle East and India. She has volunteered and performed research in Beirut, Lebanon; Lesvos, Greece; and along the Balkan route in Europe, in the context of the Syrian refugee crisis. She has also worked and done research in Bangladesh in the context of the Rohingya refugee crisis. Dr. Karaki is a leader in the refugee awareness movement in the Bay Area.

Karaki is passionate about clinical teaching, diversity in medicine, and physician well-being. She is enrolled in the Clinical Teaching Certificate program at UCSF and is a member of the Residency Diversity Committee. She has taught Social and Behavioral Sciences, Foundations of Patient Care, and serves as a Clinical Microsystems Clerkship preceptor in the Bridges curriculum, in addition to teaching on inpatient wards. She is also developing curriculum on Middle Eastern refugee health for graduate students and residents in collaboration with UC Berkeley. Her work includes developing novel programs to increase physician well-being and caregiver support at UCSF, and she serves as a Schwartz rounds steering committee member at ZSFG.