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EMERGE: Enabling Medical Research Growth in Emergency Medicine
Scholars
The EMERGE Steering Committee is pleased to announce the selection of Penn’s EMERGE K12 Scholars who will begin their training in July 2013.
Mucio Kit Delgado MD, MS
Dr. Delgado is currently an Instructor, Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Division of Emergency Medicine. His research interests are in health services research with a particular interest in improving accuracy and resource efficiency of triage and disposition decisions for patients with potential critical illness in the prehospital and emergency department setting.
Daniel Holena, MD
Dr. Holena is currently Assistant Professor in Surgery, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. He is interested in the study of post-traumatic acute lung injury.
Tiffani Johnson, MD (MS anticipated in May 2013)
Dr. Johnson is currently a RAND-University of Pittsburgh Scholar and a Pediatric Emergency Medicine Fellow at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh. She is interested in addressing racial/ethnic disparities in pediatric emergency care, youth violence prevention, and medication safety.
Scholars 2012
Fran Balamuth MD, PhD
Dr. Balamuth completed her undergraduate work at Brown University in 1995. She then went on to complete the MD/PhD program at the Yale University School of Medicine in 2005. Her PhD research in Immunobiology involved understanding the molecular mechanisms of T cell differentiation. She then completed both her residency in Pediatrics and fellowship in Pediatric Emergency Medicine at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP). Beginning in July 2012, she will be an Attending Physician in the Division of Emergency Medicine at CHOP and an Instructor in Pediatrics at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Balamuth’s current research interests involve improving early identification of patients with sepsis in the emergency department through both clinical factors and biomarker development. She is currently working with a multi-disciplinary team to build a comprehensive clinical database of patients at CHOP with sepsis spectrum illness. She plans to collect and analyze biologic specimens from these patients in order to investigate RNA expression patterns and protein expression which may help to predict severity of illness. This information will be used subsequently to develop novel diagnostic testing in the emergency department setting, and may ultimately lead to the development of a clinical decision rule involving both clinical and biologic factors which will lead to more tailored and effective therapies for sepsis spectrum illness
