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INFORMATION FOR

    Kristen Harris Nwanyanwu, MD, MBA, MHS

    she/her/hers
    Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science
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    Additional Titles

    Associate Director of Community Engaged Research and Participant Recruitment, Yale Center for Clinical Investigation (YCCI)

    About

    Titles

    Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science

    Associate Director of Community Engaged Research and Participant Recruitment, Yale Center for Clinical Investigation (YCCI)

    Biography

    Dr. Kristen Nwanyanwu graduated with highest honors from the University of Michigan. Her degrees in African-American Studies and Biochemistry became the foundation for her career as a health disparities researcher. At the University of Pennsylvania, she earned her medical degree and MBA from the Wharton School. She is a board-certified ophthalmologist and a practicing vitreoretinal surgeon. She completed residency at the University of Michigan and vitreoretinal surgery fellowship at the Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary at the University of Illinois at Chicago. After joining the Yale faculty, she was selected for the YCCI Junior Faculty Scholars Program through which she completed her Master of Health Science. She is currently the PI for the NIH-funded Sight-Saving Engagement and Evaluation in New Haven (SEEN) Program, a multi-method approach to identifying and addressing health disparities in diabetic retinopathy. She has lectured nationally on health disparities, access to care, and the surgical management of diabetic retinopathy.

    Appointments

    • Biomedical Informatics & Data Science

      Associate Professor on Term
      Secondary

    Other Departments & Organizations

    Education & Training

    MHS
    Yale University, Health Science (2020)
    Vitreoretinal Surgery Fellowship
    Illinois Eye and Ear Infirmary, University of Illinois at Chicago (2015)
    Ophthalmology Residency
    Kellogg Eye Center, University of Michigan (2013)
    Transitional Internship
    Albert Einstein Medical Center (2010)
    MD
    University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (2009)
    MBA
    The Wharton School (2009)

    Research

    Research at a Glance

    Yale Co-Authors

    Frequent collaborators of Kristen Harris Nwanyanwu's published research.

    Publications

    2024

    2023

    2022

    2020

    2019

    Clinical Trials

    Current Trials

    Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

    • activity

      Eye Health Advisory Group

    • activity

      Eradicate TRD

    • activity

      Fireside Chat with Howard Forman

    • activity

      Eradicate TRD: A multi-method approach to decreasing preventable blindness from diabetes-related eye disease

    • activity

      Sight-Saving Engagement and Evaluation in New Haven (SEEN) Program Identifies and Addresses Adverse Social Determinants in Individuals at High Risk for Blindness

    Clinical Care

    Overview

    Kristen Nwanyanwu, MD, is an ophthalmologist who specializes in vitreoretinal surgery, which treats the vitreous, or gel-like substance that helps the eye maintain its round shape. She often treats patients with eye problems related to trauma, diabetes and age-related macular degeneration.

    “Eye surgery is very delicate surgery,” Dr. Nwanyanwu says. “I often describe the surgeries I do as separating tissue paper underwater with tweezers, so people can get an idea of how fine my movements need to be. We take instruments that are the size of needles—and lasers, and other things—and use them to manipulate the tissue.”

    Dr. Nwanyanwu knew she wanted to be a doctor as a child. As a teenager, she helped her brother manage his care after he developed a brain tumor. In medical school, she saw the many ways eye problems can impact a patient’s life. “It could be something as small as, ‘When I'm reading, I miss a few letters,’" she says, explaining that this is a symptom of a macular hole that actually does take a small piece out of the central vision. “Or it could be something as large as, “’I used to be able to see, then two days ago I saw flashing lights and now I don't see anything.’" The latter can be retinal detachment, meaning the lining or film in the retina that has come down like wallpaper and is no longer sending visual information to the brain. Dr. Nwanyanwu now performs surgery for both of these conditions.

    An assistant professor of ophthalmology and visual science at Yale School of Medicine, Dr. Nwanyanwu enjoys working the Yale Eye Center because she has quick access to colleagues who often provide valuable input for her cases. “And there is a warmth here,” she says. “We all work together very well. I know the glaucoma specialists, the ocular oncologists, the uveitis specialist, the cornea team. When I’m talking to a patient about what's happening with their eye, I might go out into the hall and see four different kinds of eye doctors. We also meet regularly to talk about our complex cases. I think that is the best way to do things, and it leads to high quality care.”

    Clinical Specialties

    Ophthalmology

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    Events

    Mar 202521Friday