I got my start at a Mode, creative agency, in a hybrid designer/developer role, where I worked across a range of industries and built skills I still rely on: building relationships with clients, adapting to different business contexts, and understanding that good design has to serve real strategic goals.
At Transmogrify, I designed meaningful community healthcare projects in collaboration with researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, including a tool that connected food-insecure patients with tailored resources and another that helped people leverage social support to reduce their cancer risk. Seeing what design looks like when it has real stakes motivated me to pursue a position in healthcare tech.
That led me to NeuroFlow, where I've designed SaaS products for healthcare payors and government customers, and apps for patients. As the senior member of the team I oversaw design across four product lines, mentoring junior designers while focusing my individual contributions on our most technically and strategically complex products. I'm particularly proud of my work as lead designer on a web app contracted by the Department of Veteran Affairs that delivers over 3.5 million clinical assessments to 750,000 veterans per year, helping overburdened care providers efficiently collect consistent information about their patients' behavioral health symptoms and monitor for urgent needs.
Lately, I'm focused on embracing a rapidly changing technical landscape while staying grounded in the design craft I've built over 15 years. I'm leaning into AI tools to rethink how I work, building personal projects and custom work utilities that close the gap between design and dev.
Outside of work, I donate my design skills to community-led organizations in Philadelphia, supporting fundraising and advocacy campaigns with high-impact graphics and visual toolkits.