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People List

  • Rachel Shing, MD

    Boston Medical Center Department of Emergency Medicine

    Dr. Rachel Shing is an Emergency Medicine physician with fellowship training in Emergency Clinical Ultrasound and Global Health from Boston Medical Center. Dr. Shing completed her residency at the University of California in Los Angeles. Her research interests include point of care ultrasound use in resource limited settings and using novel technology to facilitate POCUS education to build POCUS user capacity. She has extensive experience teaching point of care ultrasound internationally and has taught in Haiti, Ghana, Namibia and South Africa. Her current work is focused on using teleultrasound for POCUS training of doctors working at district hospitals in Northern Namibia in order to increase acccess to diagnostic imaging for patients.

  • Gregory P. Wu, MD FAAEM FACEP

    Albany Medical Center

    Gregory Wu, MD FAAEM FACEP is an associate professor of Emergency Medicine and Internal MedicineAlbany Medical Center, where he splits his time as an emergency physician and medical intensivist. He is active teaching faculty within the Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine residencies, as well as the Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine fellowship. He regularly lectures nationally on critical care topics such as post-intubation care, laryngoscope and RSI techniques, septic shock, DKA, and others. In his administrative roles at Albany Medical Center he serves as the associate program director for the Resuscitation and Emergency Critical Care Care fellowship, as well as the Clerkship Director for Critical Care at Albany Medical College.

  • Peter R. Chai, MD, MMS

    Brigham and Women's Hospital

    Dr. Peter R Chai is an associate professor of emergency medicine and medical toxicology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School, and affiliate research scholar at the Koch Institute for Integrated Cancer Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and The Fenway Institute. He is also research faculty at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. Dr. Chai’s lab conducts translational research surrounding the development and implementation of technological solutions that detect and respond to changes in disease. He has been primarily interested in leveraging ingestible, injectable and smartphone-based sensors to understand medication adherence in HIV research as well as substance use disorders. These body sensor systems function as an architecture upon with Dr. Chai and his team develop context-aware, personalized behavioral support tools to improve engagement in care and medication adherence.

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