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INFORMATION FOR

    Magna Dias, MD, FAAP

    Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine)
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    Additional Titles

    Regional medical director for pediatric inpatient services, Pediatrics

    Chair of Pediatrics, Bridgeport Hospital, Pediatrics

    About

    Titles

    Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine)

    Regional medical director for pediatric inpatient services, Pediatrics; Chair of Pediatrics, Bridgeport Hospital, Pediatrics

    Biography

    Magna Dias is the Chair of Pediatrics at Bridgeport Hospital and the Regional Medical Director for Inpatient Pediatric Services at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital. In this role, she is working to strengthen the care signature of Yale Children’s across the network. Prior to this role, she worked for CHOP for 20 years in various settings including as medical director at several community pediatric hospitalist programs. She also founded CHOP’s pediatric urgent care network. She is the immediate past president of the Society for Pediatric Urgent Care. She has been a pediatric hospitalist for since 1999.

    Outside the hospital, Magna enjoys spending time with her 2 young adult children and her husband who is also a pediatrician. As a family, they train in Tang Soo Do and are all black belts. She also enjoys cooking, traveling, and reading.

    Appointments

    Other Departments & Organizations

    Education & Training

    Resident
    University of Washington (1999)
    Intern
    Emory University (1997)
    MD
    Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (1996)
    BA
    New York University (1992)

    Research

    Overview

    I began research in medical school where I worked on counseling in lead poisoning in inner city Baltimore as well as outcomes of febrile children with neutropenia. In residency, I worked on a project on immunization hesitancy. Since then I have worked on a variety of QI projects including reducing unnecessary testing and treatment in bronchiolitis, postpartum depression screening in mothers of admitted infants, safe sleep education of admitted infants, BRUE pathway implementation, discharge education for newborn mothers, and simulation for teaching residents emergency preparedness in the community hospital. Since the pandemic, I am also currently involved in projects looking at newborns with maternal COVID exposure as well as a national survey of financial implications of COVID-19 on pediatric hospitalist programs.

    Medical Research Interests

    Pediatrics

    Publications

    2005

    2000

    Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

    • activity

      Society for Pediatric Urgent Care

    • activity

      POPCoRN Network

    • activity

      AAP Community PHM Sub-committee

    • activity

      Emerging Infections in Pediatrics

    • honor

      Faculty Honor Roll

    Clinical Care

    Overview

    Once Magna Dias, MD, decided to become a physician, it didn’t take her long to realize working with children was what she wanted to do.

    “Kids have such positive energy,” says Dr. Dias, who is a pediatric hospitalist (a doctor who exclusively treats hospitalized children). “And if you make an impact in the life of a child and improve their health, it’s going to have such meaningful benefits for the remainder of that child’s life, which is incredibly satisfying.”

    To help put worried families at ease, Dr. Dias says the most important thing she can do is listen. “We really do our best to make sure they know we are addressing any concerns they have,” she says. “The same goes for the child, especially for the kids who are a bit older. We try to include them in the conversations, and make sure they understand what is happening to their bodies.”

    As a hospitalist, Dr. Dias says she enjoys getting to know families. “When you’re in the hospital, the nice thing is that it allows you the time to sit down with the family and take a very detailed history and delve into anything they need, including not just medical issues that may be affecting their health, but social issues," she says.

    Her research focuses on quality improvement. “We look at things that are happening in the hospital that we could be doing a better job with. For example, with asthma care, we might consider educational programs or smoking cessation aids for parents,” she says.

    Dr. Dias is an associate professor of pediatrics at Yale School of Medicine.

    Clinical Specialties

    Pediatrics

    Fact Sheets

    Board Certifications

    • Pediatric Hospital Medicine

      Certification Organization
      AB of Pediatrics
      Original Certification Date
      2019
    • Pediatrics

      Certification Organization
      AB of Pediatrics
      Original Certification Date
      1999

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