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Dr. Mundi graduated Cum Laude from the University of California, San Diego with a double major in Psychology and Chemistry. He obtained a Medical Doctorate from the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. Dr. Mundi completed a residency program in Internal Medicine followed by a fellowship in Endocrinology at the Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center. After completing his fellowship, he joined the Mayo Clinic Division of Endocrinology as an NIH training grant fellow with a research focus in fatty acid metabolism and obesity. Dr. Mundi subsequently joined the clinical staff at Mayo Clinic as a consultant in the Division of Endocrinology Nutrition core group. His clinical focus is malnutrition as well as nutrition support in home and inpatient settings with a special interest in support of patients on parenteral and enteral nutrition.
Dr. Mundi is currently a Professor of Medicine and holds the leadership positions of Inpatient Nutrition Core Group Chair, Medical Director of Clinical Nutrition and is also Medical and Science Advisor for the Oley Foundation. He is also the medical director of the Home Enteral Nutrition program and the associate program director of the Home Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition program. Within the HPEN program, Dr. Mundi takes a very active role in research with the goal of continuing to improve the quality of nutrition support and clinical outcomes.
As the President and Chief Financial Officer, Austin oversees the logistics side of Nutrishare’s operations — finance, nationwide shipping, human resources, and IT — making sure that the people and systems are in place to ensure the time sensitive delivery of home TPN to Nutrishare’s patients.
Originally a biomedical engineering major, with the plan of going to medical school to become a physician like his father, Austin’s career took a different path when he discovered his love of business and finance at Yale where he played for the 2006 Ivy League championship football team.
After transitioning to business, Austin began his career working for mission-driven private investment firms — American Infrastructure Funds investing in transportation, healthcare, and agriculture sectors, and Sidewalk Infrastructure Partners, and Alphabet spinout building next generation infrastructure platforms.
A California native, Austin moved east to attend graduate school at Harvard Business School, where he met his business partner, Stephen. Outside of Nutrishare, Austin and his wife, Laura, stay busy with four kids, spending time outdoors, skiing, boating, hiking, and playing sports.
As the President and Chief Operating Officer, Stephen leads Nutrishare’s clinical operations, patient experience, and sales and marketing initiatives.
With a long history in healthcare, born out of his passion for a purpose-driven career, Stephen was drawn to Nutrishare for the unique opportunity to lead a company that works so closely with patients on their healthcare journeys.
Before joining Nutrishare, Stephen was on the healthcare team for McKinsey & Company, a global management consulting firm. Prior to that, Stephen developed care and retention strategies for DaVita, a Fortune 500 provider of dialysis services.
Like Nutrishare’s patients, Stephen has lived all over the US, but now resides close to the company’s headquarters in Sacramento, California, with his family.
When he’s not taking care of his Nutrishare family, Stephen loves adventures with his wife and young children, and enjoys skiing, hiking, cooking, reading, and sports. Stephen is a graduate of Brigham Young University, and has an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, where he first met Austin.
Shirley Paski is a staff gastroenterologist at Cleveland Clinic specializing in small bowel diseases and nutrition, including nutrition support. She works with a multidisciplinary team to optimize the lives of patients and their caregivers through personalized, innovative, and holistic care.
Kishore Iyer is director of adult and pediatric intestinal rehabilitation and transplantation at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, Professor of Surgery, Pediatrics and Global Health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Transplant Surgery Fellowship Program Director in the Recanati Miller Transplant Institute at Mount Sinai. Kishore trained in general surgery and pediatric surgery in the UK developing an early interest in short bowel syndrome and the use of intestinal lengthening procedures. He pursued research at the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children and Institute of Child Health in London, winning the 1996 British Association of Pediatric Surgeons Prize for his pioneering work identifying phytosterols in soy-based lipid emulsions as a potential cause for parenteral nutrition-associated liver disease in patients with intestinal failure.
Kishore trained in transplant surgery at Chicago and Omaha and was responsible for establishing and directing the intestinal rehabilitation program, the first of its kind nationally, in Omaha, before moving to Chicago to establish and direct the intestinal transplantation and rehabilitation program at Northwestern University/Children’s Memorial Hospital. Kishore is a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England (FRCS) and a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons (FACS). Kishore recently completed a Master of Science (MSc) in Evaluation of Health Interventions and Outcomes in the Department of Health Policy at the London, School of Economics in the UK. Kishore has served on several committees of UNOS (United network for Organ Sharing) and is also a past member of the Board of Trustees of the Oley Foundation.