Dr. Estevan Yepez, D.O., is a medical doctor at Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center (PVHMC). He attended Chapman University, where he double-majored in Religious Studies and Political Science, before earning his medical degree from the Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences in Yakima, Washington. Prior to his medical training, Dr. Yepez gained diverse, community-focused experience working with the Mental Health Association of Orange County, AIDS United, and serving as an EMT.
Dr. Estevan Yepez, D.O., is a medical doctor at Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center (PVHMC). He attended Chapman University, where he double-majored in Religious Studies and Political Science, before earning his medical degree from the Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences in Yakima, Washington. Prior to his medical training, Dr. Yepez gained diverse, community-focused experience working with the Mental Health Association of Orange County, AIDS United, and serving as an EMT.
Dr. Estevan Yepez, D.O., proudly calls Santa Ana, California, home. He attended Chapman University, where he double-majored in Religious Studies and Political Science, before earning his medical degree from the Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences in Yakima, Washington. Prior to his medical training, Dr. Yepez gained diverse, community-focused experience working with the Mental Health Association of Orange County, AIDS United, and serving as an EMT.
Dr. Yepez chose Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center (PVHMC) for its diverse and supportive environment. He is highly passionate about providing community-oriented care, with a strong focus on underserved and Latino populations. Health equity, patient advocacy, and building deep trust with his patients are the cornerstones of his practice.
Outside of medicine, Dr. Yepez enjoys playing guitar and spending quality time with his wife, Anna, and their three sons, Bruce, Max, and Vincenzo. In the future, he hopes to practice full-spectrum family medicine within a community health clinic setting.
He navigates his practice and life by the best piece of advice he ever received: “Meet people where they are, not where you expect them to be.”
