Sara Schutzman, MD

Senior Physician in Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics (Part-time), Harvard Medical School
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Sara Schutzman, MD

Sara Schutzman, MD

Senior Physician in Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics (Part-time), Harvard Medical School

Medical Services

Languages
English
Education
Medical School
Yale University School of Medicine
1985
New Haven
CT
Internship
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
1986
Philadelphia
PA
Residency
Pediatrics
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
1988
Philadelphia
PA
Fellowship
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Boston Children's Hospital
1990
Boston
MA
Certifications
American Board of Pediatrics (General)
American Board of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine)

Publications

Adolescent With a Boating Injury. View Abstract
Emergency Department Evaluation of Young Infants With Head Injury. View Abstract
Determination, categorization, and hierarchy of content for a pediatric emergency medicine curriculum designed for emergency medicine residents. View Abstract
Alternative care sites and resident exposure in pediatric emergency medicine: Who, what, and where. View Abstract
Pediatric Traumatic Injury Emergency Department Visits and Management in US Children's Hospitals From 2010 to 2019. View Abstract
The Infant Scalp Score: A Validated Tool to Stratify Risk of Traumatic Brain Injury in Infants With Isolated Scalp Hematoma. View Abstract
Use of Ondansetron for Vomiting After Head Trauma: Does It Mask Clinically Significant Traumatic Brain Injury? View Abstract
Motor Vehicle Crash Fatalities in States With Primary Versus Secondary Seat Belt Laws: A Time-Series Analysis. View Abstract
Risk of traumatic brain injuries in children younger than 24 months with isolated scalp hematomas. View Abstract
Isolated skull fractures: trends in management in US pediatric emergency departments. View Abstract
Booster seat laws and fatalities in children 4 to 7 years of age. View Abstract
Pediatric head injury. View Abstract
Pediatric traumatic brain injury and radiation risks: a clinical decision analysis. View Abstract
No longer a "nursemaid's" elbow: mechanisms, caregivers, and prevention. View Abstract
Factors associated with the use of cervical spine computed tomography imaging in pediatric trauma patients. View Abstract
Validation of a clinical score to predict skull fracture in head-injured infants. View Abstract
Neuroimaging for pediatric head trauma: do patient and hospital characteristics influence who gets imaged? View Abstract
Skull radiograph interpretation of children younger than two years: how good are pediatric emergency physicians? View Abstract
Role of oblique radiographs in blunt pediatric cervical spine injury. View Abstract
Closed head injury in children. View Abstract
Gender differences in rates of unintentional head injury in the first 3 months of life. View Abstract
Evaluation and management of children younger than two years old with apparently minor head trauma: proposed guidelines. View Abstract
Clinical significance of scalp abnormalities in asymptomatic head-injured infants. View Abstract
Role of flexion-extension radiographs in blunt pediatric cervical spine injury. View Abstract
Pediatric minor head trauma. View Abstract
Clinical indicators of intracranial injury in head-injured infants. View Abstract
Head trauma in children younger than 2 years: are there predictors for complications? View Abstract
Occult intracranial injury in infants. View Abstract
Infants with isolated skull fracture: what are their clinical characteristics, and do they require hospitalization? View Abstract
Comparison of oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate and intramuscular meperidine, promethazine, and chlorpromazine for conscious sedation of children undergoing laceration repair. View Abstract
Prospective study of recurrent radial head subluxation. View Abstract
Upper-extremity impairment in young children. View Abstract
Oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate for premedication of children undergoing laceration repair. View Abstract
A comparison of intranasal sufentanil and midazolam to intramuscular meperidine, promethazine, and chlorpromazine for conscious sedation in children. View Abstract
Epidural hematomas in children. View Abstract
Bacteremia with otitis media. View Abstract