top of page
Screen Shot 2024-08-17 at 11.30.54 AM.png

ABOUT ME

Born and raised in Thailand, Dr. Natty Oranicha Jumreornvong is a Stanford educated physician practicing across Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx through the Mount Sinai Healthcare System.

​

ACADEMIC​

Her research at Harvard, Cornell, Stanford, Mount Sinai and MIT on technology, rehabilitation and diversity had resulted in over 400 citations, including research ranking among the top 1% in the entire field of Clinical Medicine for their respective years of publication. It had been referenced in the policy guidelines of The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Humans during the International Disability Alliance meeting to emphasize the intensified inequalities, especially concerning gender and disability. She serves on the Mount Sinai Diversity Council and is the Mount Sinai Healthcare Systems Wellbeing Trainee Co-chair. She's an editorial board member for Pain Physician, the official journal of American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, as well as a peer reviewer for multiple journals in rehabilitation and medical technology. 

 

TECHNOLOGY

She has experience co-developing a Cardinal Ventures winning EHR software company for developing countries. She's currently developing an AI assisted multi lingual virtual reality interventional pain program and pain management software available in 20+ languages with feasibility trial sites across multiple continents.

​

FILM and TV 

She received screenwriting scholarships from UCB and Sundance Collab. She serves as a media consultant for USC Health, Hollywood and Society, which provides consultations for medical TV shows such as Grey's Anatomy, the Good Doctor, Chicago Med and more. She's also an executive producer of an upcoming a mini series on physician trainee wellbeing.

​

WRITING

Her writings have been published on the New York Times, Washington Post and NY Daily. Her work had been covered by New York Times, Guardian, China Daily, Washington Post, LA Times, NBC, CBS, ABC, Thai PBS, and more.

 

She lives with a dog and a cat in New York City. She is also a Brazilian jiu jitsu practitioner. ​

Learn More
91de8b32-39de-45da-bfb8-7d893e4c0329.JPG

WRITING PORTFOLIO

Selected perspective pieces

Image by National Cancer Institute

September 2020

Academic Medicine Journal

Chinese Medicine Herbs

December 2019

The Apothecary is a creative arts magazine dedicated, but not limited to, the gravity of health, illness, and healing.

HOPESwebsitelogo_edited_edited_edited_edited.jpg

2015-2018

I co-led HOPES, a student-run project at Stanford University dedicated to making scientific information about Huntington’s disease (HD) more readily accessible to patients and the public. 

MEDIA

New-York-Times-Logo8x6_0.png

NEW YORK TIMES

As a Doctor, I’ve Worked Tirelessly Through the Pandemic. That Hasn’t Stopped the Hate.

‘We’re not taught to speak out’: Asian Americans find their voice amid rise in hate

download.png
default_800x450-1.jpg

Rallies Against Asian Hate

cbs-this-morning-relaunch.jpg

Anti-Asian Hate Crimes

US sees huge rise in anti-Asian hate crime since pandemic began

C4_News Logo_Landscape.jpg
politico.jpg

The myth about women and the Covid-19 vaccine that won’t die

AAPI Health Care Workers Fight COVID-19 & Racism

unnamed.jpg
Screen Shot 2021-04-27 at 5.25.23 PM.png

Medical Student Overcomes Trauma from Anti-Asian Attack

New Stanford graduate is empowering people with disabilities in Thailand

thailand_natty.jpg
gothamist-use.jpg

'White Coats Don’t Protect Us:' Asian Health Care Workers Speak Out Against Rise In Hate Crimes

Enduring Racial Slurs and an Assault, Medical Student Oranicha Jumreornvong Speaks Out Against Asian Hate

Anti_Asian_Hate_2_800_500.jpg

CONTACT

Please get in touch to find out more about me and my work.

Thanks for submitting!

©2021 by Natty Oranicha Jumreornvong. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page