OUR PEOPLE

Anita Hargrave, MD

Assistant Professor
School of Medicine
4150 Clement Street, #M1480A
San Francisco, CA 94121
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Education and Training

University of Rochester,Rochester, NY, BA, Magna Cum Laude - 06/2010 Health and Society

University of California San Francisco,San Francisco, CA, Clinical and Translational Fellow - 06/2016 Clinical Research

University of California San Francisco,San Francisco, CA, MD with Honors Thesis - 06/2017 Doctor of Medicine

University of California San Francisco,San Francisco, CA, Residency - 6/2020 Internal Medicine

University of California San Francisco,San Francisco, CA, MAS - 6/2022 Clinical Research

Awards and Honors

Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society, University of Rochester, 2010

Irene Bush Steinbock Award, University of Rochester, 2010

Fannie Bigelow Award, University of Rochester, 2010

Fulbright Scholar - Ecuador, Fulbright Commission in Ecuador, 2010-2011

Phi Beta Kappa Scholarship for Study in Europe, University of Rochester, 2011-2012

MacKenzie Foundation Scholarship for General Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, 2015

Gold Headed Cane Society, University of California, San Francisco, 2017

Alpha Omega Alpha, Peer-Elected House Officer, University of California, San Francisco, 2017

Jeffrey Weingarten Award, University of California, San Francisco, 2019

SGIM Annual Meeting Best Oral Abstract Presentation in Women's Health, Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM), 2021

BIRCWH K12 Scholar Awardee, UCSF-Kaiser Permanente Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women’s Health (BIRCWH), 2022

SGIM VA Partnered Research Program, Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM) and VA HSR&D, 2023
Overview
Dr. Hargrave is a general internist who is committed to a career in patient-oriented research aimed at improving health outcomes for people who have experienced trauma through identifying and addressing gaps in care using implementation science strategies. As a fellow in the National Clinicians Scholars Program (NCSP) she used qualitative and quantitative methods to characterize the impact of trauma and interpersonal violence on health and health equity. This work included evaluating the association between trauma and PTSD with cardiovascular disease (CVD). CVD is the leading cause of death and disability for women in the U.S. and yet, many women have inadequate control of traditional CVD risk factors. As a BIRCWH K-12 Scholar, Dr. Hargrave will evaluate the impact of trauma and other patient and system-level characteristics on treatment patterns and prevalence of CVD risk factors. Dr. Hargrave is also a faculty member of the Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative (BHHI), where her work focuses on analyzing the intersection of violence and homelessness in the California Statewide Study of Homelessness. She is also leading the COMPASS Study through the Center to Advance Trauma Informed Health Care (CTHC), which is a qualitative analysis of communication and relationship building between providers and their patients who have histories of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and adult traumas.