Carl Baum, MD, MSc
Professor of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine) and of Emergency MedicineCards
About
Titles
Professor of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine) and of Emergency Medicine
Biography
Carl Baum, MD, FAAP, FACMT, is board-certified in Pediatric Emergency Medicine and in Medical Toxicology, and has over 30 years' experience in both subspecialties. He serves as attending physician in the Pediatric Emergency Department, and as Director of the state-funded Lead Poisoning and Regional Treatment Center. Nationally, Dr. Baum currently serves the following organizations:
• Executive Committee, Council on Children and Disasters, American Academy of Pediatrics
• National Biodefense Science Board, Administration for Strategic Preparedness & Response, US Department of Health and Human Services
• Therapeutic Use Exemption Committee, US Anti-Doping Agency
In addition, he is a member of the International Society for Children's Health and the Environment.
Appointments
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
ProfessorPrimaryEmergency Medicine
ProfessorSecondary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Fellow
- Boston Children's Hospital (1996)
- Intern & Resident
- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (1993)
- MD
- University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (1990)
- MSc
- Brown University, Geological Sciences (1983)
- AB
- Dartmouth College, Earth Sciences (1981)
Research
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Clinical Care
Overview
Carl R. Baum, MD, FAAP, FACMT, is a professor of pediatrics and of emergency medicine at the Yale School of Medicine. He treats pediatric emergency patients at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital and also specializes in medical toxicology, which includes the care of children with lead poisoning.
Dr. Baum says he enjoys the variety of his work in the Pediatric Emergency Department. “Every week I see something that I’ve never seen before,” he says. “We encounter everything under the sun. It’s the front door to the hospital.”
He was drawn to toxicology and environmental health because of the many ways exposure to hazardous materials such as lead (which is naturally occurring but can end up in deteriorated paint dust) can affect people of all ages and every organ system.
Dr. Baum is director of the Yale Regional Lead Treatment Center, which sees children referred from primary care providers for evaluation and management of lead poisoning. The center offers inpatient and outpatient treatment, as needed, as well as support from a social worker. “There is a renewed interest in pediatric lead poisoning, which most children in the United States get from their homes from paint dust that contains lead,” Dr. Baum says. “We teach parents about exposure routes and how to protect children from further exposure if they’re already in—as we say—a lead-infested house. Ultimately, the best solution is not to move into a house that has lead paint at all, if possible.”
In 2019, Dr. Baum was named medical director of a five-year, federally funded $12.5 million grant to address pediatric environmental health. Nationally, he also serves as a member of the executive committee of the Council on Children and Disasters (American Academy of Pediatrics), Medical Toxicology Sub-board (American Board of Pediatrics and American Board of Emergency Medicine), and the National Biodefense Science Board (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services).
Clinical Specialties
Fact Sheets
Lead Poisoning (in Children)
Learn More on Yale MedicineInfluenza (Flu)
Learn More on Yale MedicineMeningitis
Learn More on Yale MedicinePreventing Infections in the NICU
Learn More on Yale Medicine
Board Certifications
Medical Toxicology
- Certification Organization
- AB of Pediatrics
- Original Certification Date
- 1998
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Certification Organization
- AB of Pediatrics
- Original Certification Date
- 1996
Yale Medicine News
News & Links
News
- July 23, 2024Source: Yahoo
Just How Worried Do You Need to Be About Lead in Everyday Items?
- August 01, 2023Source: NBC News
Child nicotine poisonings rise as e-cig sales surge
- July 26, 2023
2022-23 Department of Pediatrics Faculty Awards
- March 28, 2022Source: Medium
Health care providers: Expand HUSKY to undocumented immigrants