two clinicians in a control room reviewing CT scan images on dual monitors while a patient undergoes a scan in a nearby imaging suite visible through the window
Announcement March 1, 2022 2 mins read

Jamie Lee Twist Schroeder, MD, DPhil Joins UCSF Radiology Faculty

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The UC San Francisco Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging is pleased to announce that Jamie Schroeder, MD, Dphil has joined our faculty as an assistant professor of Clinical Radiology in the Cardiac & Pulmonary Imaging starting on March 1, 2022.

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Jamie Lee Twist Schroeder, MD

Prior to joining the faculty, Dr. Schroeder completed a master’s degree in Bioengineering at Stanford University. She earned a DPhil at the University of Oxford from the Department of Physiology, Anatomy, and Genetics as part of the NIH-Oxford-Cambridge Scholars Medical Scientist Training Program. Dr. Schroeder obtained her medical degree from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and completed an internal medicine internship at Sinai Hospital of Baltimore.  Her four-year diagnostic radiology residency was completed at Johns Hopkins Hospital, followed by a one-year fellowship in Cardiac and Pulmonary Imaging at UCSF.  Prior to joining the UCSF Radiology faculty, Dr. Schroeder was a staff physician in the Cardiovascular/Thoracic Imaging section of the Stanford-affiliated Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

Dr. Schroeder was the sole recipient of the 2021 North American Society of Cardiac Imaging (NASCI) Rising Star Fellowship Award and is a past recipient of the RSNA’s Student Travel Award and the American Association for Thoracic Surgery’s Summer Research Scholarship. She has authored peer-reviewed publications in various topics including clinical radiology, cardiovascular disease, and novel imaging technologies. Dr. Schroeder’s recent projects focus on improving clinical decision-making in cardiac imaging and include the development of an unsupervised machine learning pathway to analyze motion-corrected time-course data from myocardial perfusion MRI with the goal of systematizing the diagnostic process.