Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Sarah Donaldson: Blasting cells & blazing trails 1. Early life and training: the power of sponsorship Sarah S. Donaldson was born in Portland, Oregon on April 20, 1939. For as long as she can remember, her mother stressed the importance of hardwork and education.1 As a child, her mother would often tell her “in

  2. Dr. Sarah Donaldson. Dr. Hayes interviews Dr. Sarah Donaldson and her pioneering work in pediatric radiation oncology.

  3. Sarah S. Donaldson is the Catharine and Howard Avery Professor Emerita in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Stanford University School of Medicine. She also served as Associate Director of the residency program at Stanford’s Department of Radiation Oncology and Chief of the Radiation Oncology service at the Packard Children’s Hospital ...

  4. Dr. Sarah Donaldson begins her interviews by talking about her early life growing up in Portland, Oregon in the years during and after WWII. She describes her work during high school as a candy striper and nurse’s aide, and her later decision to study nursing at the University of Oregon.

  5. She was one of just six women in her class at Harvard Medical School before training and joining the faculty in radiation oncology at Stanford University where she recently completed 52 continuous years as a member of the Stanford community.

  6. Sarah S. Donaldson, MD, FACR is the Catharine and Howard Avery Professor at Stanford University School of Medicine and Director of the Mentoring Program in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Stanford.

  7. Sarah S. Donaldson is the Catharine and Howard Avery Professor in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Stanford University School of Medicine. She is also Associate Director of the residency program at Stanford’s Department of Radiation Oncology and Chief of the Radiation Oncology service at the Packard Children’s Hospital in Stanford ...