Dr. Priya Anand, MD, FACP
Internal Medicine Physician
Board-certified internist translating clinical evidence into precise, actionable health calculators for patients and clinicians alike.
Dr. Priya Anand is a board-certified internist at Massachusetts General Hospital and a Clinical Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School, where she has spent nearly two decades working at the intersection of preventive care and quantitative clinical assessment. Her clinical practice centers on helping patients understand what their numbers actually mean, from BMI and body fat percentage to cardiovascular risk scores, and translating those figures into concrete decisions about screening, lifestyle change, and referral. She has contributed to hospital-wide initiatives on early metabolic syndrome identification and serves on the MGH primary care quality committee.
Her research and quality-improvement work has focused on the accuracy of widely used anthropometric indices and the ways that population-derived equations can mislead clinicians when applied without appropriate context. That skepticism shapes how she approaches every calculator she authors or reviews: she traces each formula to its source validation studies, checks the population demographics those studies used, and flags where a tool's assumptions break down at the edges, for example, where standard BMI thresholds perform poorly in South Asian or highly muscular patients. Her peer-reviewed work has appeared in the Journal of General Internal Medicine and Annals of Internal Medicine.
At OnlyCalculators, Dr. Anand stewards the site's body metrics and general cardiovascular health screening tools. She reviews the underlying equations against current ACC/AHA and USPSTF guidelines, ensures that reference ranges and interpretive language reflect the latest evidence, and adds clinical context that helps users apply results responsibly rather than in isolation. Clinicians in training at BIDMC and MGH have used her annotated calculation guides as supplementary teaching material in their ambulatory medicine rotations.
“Every calculator she publishes is traced back to its primary validation cohort, stress-tested at boundary inputs, and annotated with the clinical conditions under which its output should be interpreted with caution.”