Current Fellows
Dana Anderson, MD
Carrie Barth
Carrie Barth is a Physician Assistant at the University of Chicago. She graduated with her BS degree in microbiology at the University of California, Santa Barbara and her MHS at Duke University. She has been a Physician Assistant in oncology, HIV, and thoracic surgery. She currently leads the Lung Cancer Screening Program at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include patient autonomy around screening, diagnosis and treatment in current medical paradigm.
Melissa Bendayan, MD, MSc
Melissa is a fourth year neurology resident at the University of Chicago. Prior to residency, she attended undergrad and graduate school in Montreal, Canada, and medical school in Tel Aviv. After residency, she will be pursuing a fellowship in Neuro-Oncology in New York.
Nitya Beriwal, MD
Nitya is a pediatric neurology resident physician at the University of Chicago. She will be pursuing an epilepsy fellowship after her residency. Her interest lies in exploring the genotypic associations of epilepsy. She is passionate about exploring the ethical, legal, and social implications of the care of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders and genetic epilepsies.
She aims to work on exploring the ethical considerations surrounding discussions about Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP), which involve balancing the potential benefits of informing patients and families with the potential harms of causing anxiety or distress. She is also interested in examining the broader consequences of genetic testing and research, beyond the purely scientific aspects, with a specific focus on the ethical considerations surrounding whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing.
Jay Carlson, PhD
Jay Carlson is a full-time Clinical Ethics Fellow at The MacLean Center. His interests center around epistemological dimensions of clinical decision-making, how healthcare organizations manage providers’ moral distress, and the tension between healthcare as a business and virtuous medical practice.
Dr. Carlson holds a Ph.D. in philosophy from Loyola University-Chicago, an M.A. in philosophy from the University of Houston, and a B.A. in philosophy from Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Previously, he was a Visiting Assistant Professor of philosophy at Lake Forest College. He has also taught philosophy at Loyola University, McHenry County College, and the Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth.
Neeraj Chhabra, MD, MSCR
Neeraj Chhabra, MD, MSCR is an emergency physician, medical toxicologist, and clinical researcher at the University of Illinois Chicago. His research focuses on the use of data science and machine learning to improve the medical care of patients with substance use disorders. He is interested in the ethical considerations of medical care for the poisoned patient and fairness in the use of machine learning tools for clinical decision support.
Ellen Cohn
Ursula Francis, JD, PhD, MSc
Ursula Francis is a full-time Clinical Ethics Fellow at The MacLean Center. Her research interests include narrative ethics and the medical humanities, neuroethics, contested illness and ambiguity in medicine, and clinical decision-making in the context of vulnerable populations.
Dr. Francis attended college and law school at The University of Chicago. She holds a Ph.D. in Classics from Columbia University and a Master’s in Bioethics from Harvard Medical School.
Sangrag Ganguli, MD
Sangrag is a general surgery resident at the University of Chicago. He is from Chicago and went to Cornell University for undergrad, studying microbiology. He then received a master’s degree in Immunology at Harvard University prior to medical school at George Washington University. Sangrag is interested in transplant and hepatobiliary surgery. His research interest includes liver and pancreatic surgery outcomes. He is also interested in ethics of organ allocation and living donation consent process.
Megan Hsu, MD
Megan Hsu is an Orthopaedic Oncologist at the University of Iowa. She recently completed her Orthopaedic Oncology fellowship at the University of Chicago. She grew up in Rochester, IN and holds a BA from the University of Notre Dame, where she developed an interest in philosophy in the Program of Liberal Studies. She received her MD from Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine and then completed her Orthopaedic Surgery Residency at Johns Hopkins.
Her research interests include shared decision making, pediatric assent, effects of electronic medical record release of biopsy and imaging results, ethical implementation of AI, and narrative ethics. She aspires to teach medical humanities and use what she learns during the MacLean fellowship to contribute to the Program in Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Iowa.
Caleb Kitcho, MD
Caleb Kitcho is originally from Buffalo, New York. He completed his undergraduate studies at Canisius College and earned his medical degree from the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo. He went on to complete a residency in pediatrics and a fellowship in pediatric critical care medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, where he now serves as a Clinical Instructor.
His academic interests center on ethical dilemmas at the end of life, particularly in the care of children with profound cognitive disabilities, as well as exploring the complex dynamics between physicians and hospital attorneys in high-stakes decision-making.
Alex Lois, MD, MS
Alex Lois is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Surgery at the University of Chicago. He joined the UCM Faculty after completing his General Surgery Residency and Advanced GI Minimally Invasive/Foregut Surgery Fellowship at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA. Dr. Lois uses a combination of advanced laparoscopic, robotic-assisted and open techniques to address gastrointestinal disorders and abdominal wall reconstruction. He strives engage patients in thoughtful shared decision-making to ensure treatment decisions align with his patients’ goals and values.
Through the MacLean Fellowship, Dr. Lois hopes to further explore his interests in informed consent and shared decision-making. This work will strive to not only strengthen his clinical practice but also to improve these processes for patients and physicians alike.
Collin Olen-Thomas, MA, MATS
Collin earned his BA in sociology and Spanish from Hope College, his MATS in religion and society from Princeton Theological Seminary, and his MA in bioethics from the Ohio State University. He completed his chaplaincy residency at the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center before working as a trauma chaplain at OSU. Collin is working on his doctorate in bioethics at Loyola, with the ultimate goal of becoming a clinical ethicist. His research interests broadly focus on the intersection of religion and medicine, namely with death and dying, decision-making, and conscientious practice.
Elizabeth Onishchenko, MD
Lizzy attended medical school at the University of Missouri-Kansas City where she completed a 6-year B.A./M.D. program. She then returned back home to Chicago to complete her pediatric residency at Advocate Children’s Hospital-Park Ridge. She is currently entering her third year of NICU fellowship at the University of Chicago.
Her research interests include new technology development and innovation within the NICU with a budding interest in artificial intelligence in the clinical care setting and its ethical implications.
Akshay Patke, MD
Akshay earned his BS in chemistry and psychology from the University of Minnesota, his MD from Chicago Medical School at Rosalind Franklin University, and is now a current psychiatry resident at the University of Chicago. He has had an interest in ethics and philosophy since undergrad with previously running a philosophy student group and later working in research ethics and oversight at the University of Minnesota Department of Psychiatry. His clinical interests are in psychotherapy, addiction, and community mental health.
Andrew Schmitz, MDiv
Andrew is an active duty Army major in the Chaplain Corps and currently a PhD student in Ethics at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He received his BA in Philosophy and Religion from Olivet Nazarene University. He is the incoming bioethicist for the United States Army Medical Center of Excellence in San Antonio, Texas, where he will hold appointments as a bioethics instructor for both the Army-Baylor Graduate Program in Health and Business Administration and the University of Nebraska Medical Center’s Interservice Physician Assistant Program. Through the MacLean fellowship, Andrew hopes to conduct ethics research through the lens of natural law and its intersection with military medicine.
Angela M. Trejo, DBe, MSN, BSN, RN
Angela holds a Doctorate in Bioethics from Loyola University Chicago. She is a registered nurse with professional experience in nursing education, risk management, patient safety, and organ transplantation. Her scholarly interests focus on the ethics of medical aid in dying, transplant ethics, the role of the nurse in ethical discourse, and end-of-life care ethics for incarcerated populations.
Chao Wang, MD
Chao earned her MD from Tongji Medical College and completed her residency in HPB surgery at Tongji Hospital. She is currently a postdoctoral scholar at The University of Chicago, where her research focuses on transplantation immunology. Her diverse experiences have inspired her to reflect on healthcare education, cultural differences, and the personal development of medical professionals. Beyond the OR and lab, Chao is passionate about peer mentoring and promoting lifelong learning. Her long-term goal is to return to China as an HPB surgeon, integrating clinical excellence with scientific research. She is particularly interested in the ethical dimensions of surgery, healthcare policy, and advancing patient-centered clinical research to improve outcomes and shape the future of surgical practice.
Senior Fellows
Kylie Callier, MD
Kylie is currently a General Surgery Resident and ECMO Fellow at University of Chicago Medicine. Originally from Houston Texas, she loves all sports and her pets (one dog and two cats). Kylie is working towards becoming a Pediatric Surgeon.
Through the MacLean fellowship, Kylie hopes to gain the tools to tackle ethical dilemmas in her career. She is particularly interested in topics in pediatric trauma and pediatric ECMO.
Andrew Folkerts, MD
Andrew received his BS in Physics and Biochemisty at Calvin College, his MD from Loma Linda University and now is a general surgery resident at the University of Chicago where he will continue in his clinical training this coming July. When he finishes residency, he will serve in the United States Army as a general surgeon. He has completed research with Dr. Shakhsheer on the ethics of anxiety as an indication for surgery and plans to continue to conduct ethics research in surgery, global health, end of life, and military ethics in the future.
Charlotte Harrington, MD
Charlotte attended Duke for her undergraduate studies and earned her medical degree from Tufts. She is currently a general surgery resident at the University of Chicago. Over the past year, her research has focused on strengthening the informed consent process to better support patient autonomy and the doctor patient relationship. She has also contributed to projects aimed at improving ethics consultation practices by developing a tracking system for Maclean Center ethics consults and offered commentary on the ethical use of animals in surgical training. Charlotte will dedicate another year to this research before returning to her clinical duties as a surgical resident.
Andrea Liu, MD
Andrea grew up in North Carolina and went to UNC for undergrad, studying biology, psychology, and English. She then worked as a clinical researcher for a few years before moving to New York for medical school. Andrea is currently a general surgery resident at University of Chicago Medicine with an interest in specializing in transplant surgery.
Andrea has taken an interest in medical ethics since she was a medical student. Her interests in ethics pertain to the allocation of scarce resources, shared decision making, and equitable access to care in transplant medicine.
Jacob Schulman, MD, MHPE
Jacob attended school at Washington University in St. Louis and medical school at Rush Medical College. In December, he graduated with his Master’s of Health Professions Education from UIC. For his fellowship research, he collaborated with Dr. Hannah Kotler at Johns Hopkins to study end-of-life conversation training at US pediatric emergency medicine fellowships. Jacob is a pediatric chief resident at UChicago while applying for a pediatric emergency medicine fellowship position.
Hanna Vollbrecht, MD
Hanna attended college at the University of Minnesota, followed by medical school at the University of Chicago. She trained in Internal Medicine Residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and is currently in her second year of Pulmonary & Critical Care fellowship at the University of Chicago. During her fellowship, she has been working on research focused on surrogate decision making in the ICU for patients with out of hospital cardiac arrest. Next year, she will be on a T32 research training grant at U of C in the department of Pulmonary & Critical Care, working full time on this research project.