|
Dr. Marc Safran is the Associate Chief of Sports Medicine and Fellowship Director of Sports Medicine, Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Stanford University. Dr. Safran specializes in Sports Medicine and arthroscopic and ligament reconstructive surgery on the shoulder, elbow, hip, and knee. He is a diplomat at the American Board of Orthopedic Surgery and member of such prestigious societies such as: The American Orthopedic Society for Sports Medicine, the ACL Study Group, the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Society, the Paradicus Society, the Multicenter of Arthroscopic Hip Surgery Outcomes Research Network, the Multicenter Orthopedic Outcomes Network, and the Society of Tennis Medicine and Science in addition to the American College of Sports Medicine.
Dr. Safran’s practice focuses on arthroscopic management of hip problems as well as articular cartilage regeneration, shoulder surgery, and athletic shoulder and elbow problems. He is actively involved in research in these areas.
Dr. Safran graduated from the University of California, Berkeley; he received his medical degree from Duke University; he completed his residency at the University of California, Los Angeles and a Sports Medicine and Shoulder Surgery Fellowship at the University of Pittsburgh. He has served as a team physician for many collegiate teams since 1993, in addition to being actively involved with professional tennis and as a consultant for the NBA Players Association. Dr. Safran has authored or co-authored more than 75 scientific articles, 40 book chapters, and three books on sports medicine as it relates to the shoulder, elbow, knee, and hip as well as tennis injuries and biomechanics cartilage research. Prior to coming to Stanford in the Spring of 2007, Dr. Safran has been in different practices, including being the Chief of Sports Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, where he also served as a team physician for the University of California, Berkeley. He is on the editorial board of many journals, including the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
|