Biography
Elizabeth M. Lancaster, MD is a Vascular Surgery Fellow at the University of California, San Francisco. She completed her General Surgery Residency training at UCSF in 2022. During her research years, she completed a two-year fellowship in health quality and safety under the mentorship of Dr. Liza Wick. Elizabeth's research interests include improving multimodal pain management and reducing opioid use in surgical patients.
Education
Institution | Degree | Dept or School | End Date |
---|---|---|---|
University of California, San Francisco | General Surgery Residency | 2022 | |
University of California, San Francisco | MAS | Clinical Research | 2020 |
University of California, Los Angeles | MD | 2015 |
Clinical Interests
Vascular Surgery
In the News
November, 20, 2024 | UCSF Department of Surgery
November, 13, 2020 | UCSF General Surgery Residency Program
May, 15, 2019 | UCSF Resident Research Program
Research Interests
Clinical outcomes in vascular surgery patients
Resident Education
Research Pathways
Publications
MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 43
- A "just in time" educational intervention for opioid overprescribing in dialysis access surgery.| | PubMed
- Electronic health record intervention to increase use of NSAIDs as analgesia for hospitalised patients: a cluster randomised controlled study.| | PubMed
- Optimizing Uptake of Multimodal Pain Management After Surgery Using the Electronic Health Record.| | PubMed
- Decreasing prevalence of centers meeting the Society for Vascular Surgery abdominal aortic aneurysm guidelines in the United States.| | PubMed
- Update of T-branch use from the US Aortic Research Consortium.| | PubMed
- A behavioral intervention to promote use of multimodal pain medication for hospitalized patients: A randomized controlled trial.| | PubMed
- Structured discharge documentation reduces sex-based disparities in statin prescription in vascular surgery patients.| | PubMed
- Open revascularization approach is associated with healing and ambulation after transmetatarsal amputation in patients with chronic limb threatening ischemia.| | PubMed
- Capturing the complexity of open abdominal aortic surgery in the endovascular era.| | PubMed
- Limb-based patency as a measure of effective revascularization for chronic limb-threatening ischemia.| | PubMed