Robert Fogerty, MD, MPH, SFHM
Associate Clinical Professor, General Internal MedicineAbout
Titles
Associate Clinical Professor, General Internal Medicine
Positions outside Yale
Senior Medical Director, Clinical Leadership, Yale New Haven Hospital, Yale New Haven Hospital
Biography
After receiving his Bachelor’s degree in Economics from Boston College, Robert L. Fogerty received his MD and MPH degrees from Northwestern University and completed training in Internal Medicine at Yale New Haven Hospital. In 2011, he joined the Yale faculty as a founding member of the Academic Hospitalist Program. His academic interests include safety and quality of care in the inpatient setting and cost-effective care. Publications include the Journal of Hospital Medicine, JAMA Internal Medicine, and The New England Journal of Medicine. He is also the co-founder & Past-President of the Society of Hospital Medicine Connecticut Chapter, faculty in the High Value Practice Academic Alliance (HVPAA) training programs, and a founding member of the Hospital Capacity Management Consortium. In his current role as Senior Medical Director, Clinical Leadership, Dr. Fogerty works to support medical directors across multiple clinical specialties at Yale New Haven Hospital.
Appointments
General Internal Medicine
Associate Clinical ProfessorPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Internship & Residency
- Yale-New Haven Hospital (2011)
- MD
- Northwestern University The Feinberg School of Med (2008)
- MPH
- Northwestern University The Feinberg School of Med (2008)
- BA
- Boston College, Economics (2002)
Research
Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News
News
- June 12, 2019Source: Beckers Hospital Review
How Yale physicians turned a conference room into a pop-up flu clinic in 4 days
- June 10, 2019
Pop-up clinical space? Yale researchers report solution to a surge in flu cases
- January 21, 2019Source: emDOCS.net
Pain Profiles: Subcutaneous Opioids & Culture Change
- May 15, 2018Source: Healthcare Finance
Why hospitals should take a good look at how opioids are being administered to patients