Antonio Riera, MD
Associate Professor of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine)Cards
About
Titles
Associate Professor of Pediatrics (Emergency Medicine)
Director, Pediatric Emergency Ultrasound; Director, Pediatric Emergency Ultrasound Fellowship, Pediatric Emergency Medicine; Director, INSPIRAR Project
Biography
Why POCUS?
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) serves as a pivotal diagnostic tool, offering immediate visualization of pathology that empowers healthcare professionals to deliver smarter, faster, safer, and better care to our patients. POCUS also helps steer medicine towards a more patient-centered approach, harnessing technology not to distance clinicians from patients but to fortify that vital connection. Many of the parallel technologies of our era work to pull us away from the bedside. Think about electronic medical records and how much time clinicians spend in front of a computer screen. Think about artificial intelligence and its implications on the doctor-patient relationship. POCUS promotes the opposite behavior. It connects the clinician to the patient, encourages more time spent at the bedside, and honors the art in medicine. The clinical science of POCUS is the transformative technology of our lifetime that fulfills our desire to make better decisions and promotes a more precise approach to the nuanced care of complex and undifferentiated patients. This is why we POCUS.
Dr. Riera is s an Education Co-Chair for the P2 Network:
Antonio Riera completed pediatric residency at Weill Cornell-New York Presbyterian Hospital and a fellowship in pediatric emergency medicine at Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital. He is currently an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the Yale University School of Medicine, and an Attending Physician at Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital. Dr. Riera’s clinical and research interests include the use of point-of-care ultrasonography to improve health care outcomes in children and the relationship between language, communication and health care wellbeing for Latino children and their caregivers.
Appointments
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
Associate Professor on TermPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Fellow
- Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital (2010)
- Resident
- New York Presbyterian Hospital - Weill Cornell (2007)
- MD
- Boston University School of Medicine (2004)
- BA
- Princeton University, Economics (2000)
Research
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Clinical Care
Overview
Antonia Riera, MD, is an attending physician at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital specializing in emergency medicine. He says his daily motivation comes from promoting the “safety and well being of children every day.”
“Our doctors in Yale Medicine Pediatric Emergency are leaders in clinical, academic and research arenas,” Dr. Riera says. “We as a team have resuscitated patients who have been treated in the hospital with excellent outcomes. That is most rewarding—helping families, providing the best pediatric emergency care, and guiding children and caregivers through stressful situations.”
Dr. Riera’s clinical and research interests include the use of bedside ultrasonography to improve outcomes in children, and the relationship between language, communication and asthma care disparities for Latino children. He is an assistant professor of pediatrics (emergency medicine) and of emergency medicine at Yale School of Medicine.
Clinical Specialties
Board Certifications
Pediatric Emergency Medicine
- Certification Organization
- AB of Pediatrics
- Latest Certification Date
- 2011
- Original Certification Date
- 2011
Pediatrics
- Certification Organization
- AB of Pediatrics
- Latest Certification Date
- 2015
- Original Certification Date
- 2007
News & Links
Media
News
- October 21, 2024Source: Doximity
Pediatric POCUS Education in Santo Domingo, DR.
- October 18, 2024Source: ACEP
The Perils of Abandoning the Pediatric FAST Exam
- April 12, 2024
POCUS Workshop Educates and Empowers Doctors
- September 09, 2020Source: Pediatric Emergency Care
Ultrasonographic Measurements of Pediatric Chest Wall Thickness and Implications for Needle Decompression of Tension Pneumothorax