ucsf logo

Veronica Yank, MD

Internal Medicine
ucsf logo

Veronica Yank, MD

Internal Medicine

On this page

About me

Dr. Veronica Yank is an internal medicine specialist who provides primary care.

Areas of Yank's research include Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, chronic kidney disease, diabetes and family caregiving. She examines the role of primary care in preventing and managing chronic conditions, particularly those associated with health disparities, an elevated risk of heart disease or a heavy burden of family caregiving. She has particular expertise in behavioral change and self-management support for patients and families, use of technology and marketing strategies, and the effective translation of research findings into practice. She collaborates on research endeavors with experts in physical activity and nutrition, caregiver and family dynamics, medical anthropology, social work, medical advertising, health systems operations, and biostatistics and implementation science.

Yank earned her medical degree from UCSF. She completed a residency in internal medicine at the University of Washington and a research fellowship in chronic disease prevention at Stanford University School of Medicine.

In her free time, Yank enjoys having dance parties and reading aloud with her two daughters and husband. Their dachshund loves getting in on the fun.

Education & training

Board certification

  • Internal Medicine, American Board of Internal Medicine

Residency

  • Internal Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine

Internship

  • Internal Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine

Degree

  • MD, UCSF School of Medicine

My expertise

Please check with your health insurance plan regarding coverage for this type of care. Not all providers at UCSF Health are covered by every insurance plan.

For informational purposes only, a link to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Open Payments web page is provided here. The federal Physician Payments Sunshine Act requires that detailed information about payment and other payments of value worth over ten dollars ($10) from manufacturers of drugs, medical devices, and biologics to physicians and teaching hospitals be made available to the public.