Skip to main content

Harvard Health Experts and Contributors

List of Experts

photo of Rebecca Kranz

Rebecca Kranz

Health Writer

Rebecca Kranz is an award-winning freelance medical writer who specializes in breaking down complex medical and scientific concepts into understandable language for health care providers, patients, and the general public. She is also a trilingual medical interpreter working in American Sign Language, Spanish, and English.
Read more about Rebecca Kranz
photo of Anna Krawisz, MD

Anna Krawisz, MD

Contributor

Dr. Anna Krawisz is an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School and a cardiologist and vascular medicine specialist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC). Her research interests include disparities in care for peripheral artery disease and interventional therapies for peripheral artery disease, and a clinical focus on refractory hypertension and vascular medicine. During her fellowship at BIDMC, she served as chief cardiology fellow. She completed her MD at the Stanford University School of Medicine, where she was the recipient of a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Medical Fellows research award.
Read more about Anna Krawisz, MD
photo of Lorrie Kubicek, MT-BC

Lorrie Kubicek, MT-BC

Contributor

Lorrie Kubicek is a board-certified music therapist at Massachusetts General Hospital, co-director of The Katherine A. Gallagher Integrative Therapies Program, and program manager of expressive therapies at MGH Cancer Center and Mass General Hospital for Children. She is a clinical supervisor for the music therapy program at Berklee College of Music, and has authored a chapter on the use of music technology in music therapy interventions with adult cancer patients.
Read more about Lorrie Kubicek, MT-BC
photo of Daniel Kuritzkes, MD

Daniel Kuritzkes, MD

Contributor

Daniel R. Kuritzkes, MD received his BS and MS degrees in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale University, and his MD from Harvard Medical School. He completed his clinical and research training in internal medicine and infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital and was a visiting scientist at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research before joining the faculty at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. Dr. Kuritzkes returned to Harvard Medical School in 2002, where he is now the Harriet Ryan Albee Professor of Medicine and Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Dr. Kuritzkes has published extensively on antiretroviral therapy and drug resistance in HIV-1 infection. He has chaired several multicenter studies of HIV therapy and previously chaired the AIDS Clinical Trials Group. He has served on numerous NIH committees, including as a member of the NIH Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council. He is a former member of the Department of Health and Human Services panel on guidelines for antiretroviral therapy and a past Chair of the HIV Medicine Association Board of Directors. He has been a member of several editorial boards, and serves as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Infectious Diseases. His research interests focus on HIV therapeutics, antiretroviral drug resistance, and HIV eradication.
Read more about Daniel Kuritzkes, MD
Result 26 - 29 of 29
Harvard Health Publishing Logo

Thanks for visiting. Don't miss your FREE special health report Living Longer, Living Well!

PLUS, don’t miss out on your 25% off promo code.

Sign up to get tips for living a healthy lifestyle—You’ll discover powerful, research- backed strategies for health longevity drawn from Harvard Medical School experts—ways to eat for a longer life, build strength and flexibility to stay independent, protect your bones, heart, and brain as you age, and even cultivate the habits linked with “super-agers” who stay sharp and active well into their 80s and 90s—all delivered to your email box FREE.

Harvard Health Publishing Logo

Stay on top of latest health news from Harvard Medical School.

Plus, get a FREE copy of Living Longer, Living Well!.

Harvard Health Publishing Logo

Stay on top of latest health news from Harvard Medical School.

Plus, get a FREE copy of Living Longer, Living Well.