Bruce Ginier
After earning his M.D. from West Virginia University, Bruce Ginier fulfilled his internship and preliminary year at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, Ohio. At the 1988 St. Thomas Center Scientific Paper Assembly, Bruce Ginier delivered his award-winning presentation, "Unilateral Psoas Muscle Atrophy in Patients with Lumbar Disc Herniation." He then moved to Sacramento to begin his residency at University of California, Davis Medical Center. He continued working there on a clinical appointment basis until 1998, concurrently employed on Stanford University’s Visiting Clinical Faculty and Saint Agnes Medical Center’s Radiology Department. As Section Chief of Neuroradiology, Bruce Ginier served at Saint Agnes until 2005. Now based in Fresno, California, Bruce Ginier is an on-staff radiologist at the 50,000 square foot, state-of-the-art California Imaging Institute facility.
Bruce Ginier has co-authored several medical articles, such as "Synchronous Primary Brain Tumors: Neurocytoma and Medulloblastoma" and "Percutaneous Cholecystostomy for Management of Acute Cholecystitis in Pregnancy." As a Senior Member of the American Society of Neuroradiology, Bruce Ginier has served as a speaker at conferences in Chicago, Illinois, and Nashville, Tennessee. Bruce Ginier has also lectured at symposiums organized by Stanford University, the Charleston Area Medical Center Research Day Assembly, and the Western Regional Neuroradiology Society.
At the Holy Spirit Church, Bruce Ginier is a devoted member of the parish council. In this capacity, he cooperates with other church leaders to provide management for the church and its congregation. Along with the Holy Spirit Men’s Club, Bruce Ginier has participated in many charitable events. Not only a certified radiologist, Bruce Ginier has earned licenses in piloting and open water scuba diving. He and Alisa, his wife of 15 years, are also expert winemakers. The couple co-owns and manages an independent award-winning microwinery located in the Sierra foothills. They are the parents of a twin boy and girl, both 12 years old.