Matthew Eisenberg, MD, MPH

Director of Safety, Division of Emergency Medicine, Director of Critical Care, Division of Emergency Medicine; Associate Physician in Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School
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Matthew Eisenberg, MD, MPH

Matthew Eisenberg, MD, MPH

Director of Safety, Division of Emergency Medicine, Director of Critical Care, Division of Emergency Medicine; Associate Physician in Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Medical Services

Languages
English
Education
Medical School
Harvard Medical School
2006
Boston
MA
Internship
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2007
Boston
MA
Residency
Boston Combined Residency Program (BCRP)
2009
Boston
MA
Residency
Chief Resident
Boston Children's Hospital
2010
Boston
MA
Fellowship
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Boston Children's Hospital
2013
Boston
MA
Certifications
American Board of Pediatrics (General)
American Board of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine)

Publications

Association between Child Opportunity Index and paediatric sepsis recognition and treatment in a large quality improvement collaborative: a retrospective cohort study. View Abstract
Comparing Screening Tools for Predicting Phoenix Criteria Sepsis and Septic Shock Among Children. View Abstract
Development of a Reference Standard to Assign Bacterial Versus Viral Infection Etiology Using an All-inclusive Methodology for Comparison of Novel Diagnostic Tool Performance. View Abstract
Epinephrine vs Norepinephrine as Initial Treatment in Children With Septic Shock. View Abstract
Medications for Opioid Use Disorder After Entering Residential Treatment: Evidence From Louisiana Medicaid. View Abstract
Development of a New Screening Tool for Pediatric Septic Shock. View Abstract
Pediatric Phoenix Sepsis Score Validation Challenges in Low-Resource Settings and in the Emergency Department. View Abstract
Delays to Antibiotics in the Emergency Department and Risk of Mortality in Children With Sepsis. View Abstract
Characteristics and Outcomes of Culture-Positive and Culture-Negative Pediatric Sepsis. View Abstract
A Temperature- and Age-Adjusted Shock Index for Emergency Department Identification of Pediatric Sepsis. View Abstract
Improving Discharge Safety in a Pediatric Emergency Department. View Abstract
Pediatric Emergency Department Sepsis Screening Tool Accuracy During the COVID-19 Pandemic. View Abstract
Reducing Pediatric Emergency Department Prescription Errors. View Abstract
Association Between the First-Hour Intravenous Fluid Volume and Mortality in Pediatric Septic Shock. View Abstract
Prediction of the Development of Severe Sepsis Among Children With Intestinal Failure and Fever Presenting to the Emergency Department. View Abstract
Pediatric sepsis survival in pediatric and general emergency departments. View Abstract
Utility of specific laboratory biomarkers to predict severe sepsis in pediatric patients with SIRS. View Abstract
Pediatric sepsis screening in US hospitals. View Abstract
Prediction of patient disposition: comparison of computer and human approaches and a proposed synthesis. View Abstract
Use of the C-MAC Macintosh 0 Blade for Intubation of Infants in the Emergency Department. View Abstract
Gastroenteritis Care in the US and Canada: Can Comparative Analysis Improve Resource Use? View Abstract
Outcomes of Patients with Sepsis in a Pediatric Emergency Department after Automated Sepsis Screening. View Abstract
Exclusion of SARS-COV-2 From Two Maine Overnight Camps July-August 2020. View Abstract
Comparison of Manual and Automated Sepsis Screening Tools in a Pediatric Emergency Department. View Abstract
Effect of a Sepsis Screening Algorithm on Care of Children with False-Positive Sepsis Alerts. View Abstract
Pediatric critical procedures in the emergency department. View Abstract
Reduction in Resources and Cost for Gastroenteritis Through Implementation of Dehydration Pathway. View Abstract
Performance of an Automated Screening Algorithm for Early Detection of Pediatric Severe Sepsis. View Abstract
Predictors of Overdose Death Among High-Risk Emergency Department Patients With Substance-Related Encounters: A Data Linkage Cohort Study. View Abstract
Improving Efficiency and Communication around Sedated Fracture Reductions in a Pediatric Emergency Department. View Abstract
A method to identify pediatric high-risk diagnoses missed in the emergency department. View Abstract
Acute concussion: making the diagnosis and state of the art management. View Abstract
Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infection among Children with Intestinal Failure Presenting to the Emergency Department with Fever. View Abstract
Reducing Time to Antibiotics in Children With Intestinal Failure, Central Venous Line, and Fever. View Abstract
Comparison Between Direct and Video-assisted Laryngoscopy for Intubations in a Pediatric Emergency Department. View Abstract
Health information exchange policies of 11 diverse health systems and the associated impact on volume of exchange. View Abstract
Duration and course of post-concussive symptoms. View Abstract
Serum biomarkers predict acute symptom burden in children after concussion: a preliminary study. View Abstract
Time interval between concussions and symptom duration. View Abstract
Cardiac troponin T as a screening test for myocarditis in children. View Abstract