Health Policy & Management
The UCLA CTSI TL1 Translational Science Postdoctoral Fellowship
The UCLA CTSI TL1 Translational Science Postdoctoral Fellowship is awarded to physicians and nurses who are pursuing training in the Department of Health Policy and Management in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. Fellows receive mentored training to ensure the translational nature of their dissertation projects. The goal of the fellowship is to provide postdoctoral fellows with the investigative skills to create new knowledge about health services.
TL1 Translational Science Postdoctoral Fellows receive an annual stipend commensurate with their NRSA PGY level, as well as funding for tuition/fees and training-related travel. The fellowships are renewable for up to two years in 12-month increments, contingent on satisfactory degree progress.

Jesus Torres, MD, MPH
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Emergency Medicine
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Jesus Torres is a current National Clinician Scholars Program (NCSP) fellow at UCLA. During residency at UCSF in Emergency Medicine, he conducted research and published on the effects of policy on health disparities of immigrant patients presenting to the emergency department. He obtained an MPH from Harvard University in quantitative methods and has a broad experience in infectious disease clinical trials. His research interests includes immigrant health and policy and clinical studies in emergency medicine.

Iheanacho Obinnaya Emeruwa, MD, MBA
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Iheanacho Obinnaya Emeruwa ("Obi") is a Specialty Training and Advanced Research (STAR) Fellow in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at UCLA. He holds a bachelor's degree in biomedical sciences and engineering from Harvard University, and completed the joint MD-MBA program at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and Columbia Business School, where he was recognized as a Botwinick Scholar and a Forbes Future Healthcare Leader. Dr. Emeruwa completed his internal medicine residency and chief residency at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital / Columbia University Medical Center and is a diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine. He is an inaugural Biodesign Innovation Fellow at UCLA Health and a PhD candidate in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Fielding School of Public Health at UCLA. Dr. Emeruwa is interested in identifying large-scale opportunities for implementing quality-changing technologies and workflows in healthcare.

Jacob Quinton, MD, MPH
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Internal Medicine
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Jacob Quinton is a primary care internist with an interest in increasing value, access and equity in US health care. He completed his medical training at LSU New Orleans School of Medicine, where as an Albert Schweitzer Fellow he led programs to improve reproductive health education in New Orleans public schools, and with an interest in health disparities founded and led the first ‘Student Hotspotting’ program in New Orleans. He trained at Yale New Haven Hospital in their Internal Medicine / Primary Care program with his outpatient clinic at the West Haven VA Center of Excellence (COE). His research during residency compared risk indexes for hospitalization and mortality at use in the VA which won the Hopkins GIM Housestaff Research Award in Population Health. Dr. Quinton’s current research interests include high-needs high-cost care, social determinants of health, payment model redesign and health reforms to achieve universal access.

David Richards, MD, MA
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Pediatrics
UCLA
Background:
Dr. David Richards completed his residency in Pediatrics at Ronald Reagan Medical Center, UCLA. He completed his undergraduate education at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, a Masters of Art in Teaching from American University, and his medical degree from the University of Virginia School of Medicine. During his time in medical school, he was the winner of the Department of Pediatrics award for student research. He was also named the 2014 Jefferson Public Citizen Awardee, during which he was funded to mentor a group of undergraduate and nursing students to design, implement, and evaluate a community health worker training program in Limpopo, South Africa. Dr. Richards’ research interests include school-based health centers, climate change and health, and adverse childhood experiences related to housing, lived environment, and neighborhood characteristics.

Kia Skrine Jeffers, PhD, RN, PHN
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Nursing
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Kia Skrine Jeffers is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the UCLA National Clinician Scholars Program in the David Geffen School of Medicine Department of General Internal Medicine/Health Services Research and UCLA School of Nursing. Dr. Skrine Jeffers earned her undergraduate degree in Broadcast Journalism from North Carolina A&T State University, and her Master’s and doctoral degrees in Nursing from UCLA. She is a practicing community-based nurse. Her research focuses on the impact of intersecting psycho-, bio-, behavioral and life course experiences on type 2 diabetes risks among African American seniors; diabetes prevention and self-management interventions; and, healthcare policies that impact equity and access for underresourced populations.

Angela Venegas-Murillo, MD, MPH, MS
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Pediatrics
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Angela Venegas-Murillo completed her residency in Social Pediatrics at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore. She earned her undergraduate degree with a major in psychobiology and minor in Spanish from UCLA. She obtained her medical degree from Stanford University and MPH in Epidemiology from UC Berkeley. During medical school, Dr. Venegas-Murillo went to Oaxaca, Mexico where she helped performed a needs assessment, and conducted a resource and hazard mapping study to understand local health issues. She later collaborated with a local community organization in Central California to better understand the plight of accessing interpretation services by indigenous Mexican migrants. During residency, she turned her focus on access to confidential care by urban adolescents and local advocacy for fair chance hiring. As a fellow, she would like to focus on developing effective methods of reducing violence and recidivism among youth in impoverished communities. In particular, she would like to study the effectiveness of juvenile justice re-entry programs and assess the needs of the community for improved access to mental health services before and after a conviction.

Russell Buhr, MD
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine
UCLA
Background: Dr. Buhr graduated with honors with a Bachelor of Arts in molecular biology from Azusa Pacific University in 2006 and completed his Doctor of Medicine degree at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of California in 2010. He completed a residency in internal medicine at Georgetown University Hospital in 2013, serving as chief resident at the DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center the following year before starting a fellowship in pulmonary & critical care medicine in 2014 at UCLA, which he will complete in 2017. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine in Internal Medicine and Pulmonary Disease. Dr. Buhr began his PhD in health policy and management in 2015. He research focuses on the social, demographic, and administrative factors that affect hospitalization and readmission in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), both in the UCLA health system and using national claims data.

Shaw Natsui, MD, MPA
Health Policy & Management Fellow
Emergency Medicine
UCLA
Background:
Dr. Shaw Natsui is an emergency medicine physician with an interest in urban health, public policy, and the use of data science to improve clinical care and population health. He trained at the Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency Program at Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women's Hospital. During residency, his research focused on acute stroke care for non-English-preferring patients, predictive analytics and machine learning approaches to improving diagnosis, and the ED patient experience. He also helped organize collaborative efforts to improve the ED care for vulnerable patients, particularly those facing housing insecurity. Dr. Natsui is interested in improving the quality of acute care delivery and access to care for limited-resource populations. He plans to focus on the implementation science of leveraging health services research to inform and lead multidisciplinary interventions and policies on the local, state, and national levels.