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INFORMATION FOR

    Matthew Grossman, MD

    Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine)
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    Additional Titles

    Vice Chair for Quality, Department of Pediatrics

    Quality and Safety Officer, Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital

    About

    Titles

    Professor of Pediatrics (Hospital Medicine)

    Vice Chair for Quality, Department of Pediatrics; Quality and Safety Officer, Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital

    Biography

    Matthew Grossman M.D. graduated from SUNY Stony Brook School of Medicine in 2003 and completed his pediatric residency at Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital (YNHCH) in 2006. He is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Yale School of Medicine and a pediatric hospitalist.He has been the quality and safety officer for YNHCH since 2013 and his team was awarded both the 2015 and 2017 National Pediatric Quality Award form the Children’s Hospital Association.

    Appointments

    Other Departments & Organizations

    Education & Training

    Resident
    Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital (2006)
    MD
    SUNY at Stonybrook (2003)

    Research

    Overview

    Medical Research Interests

    Diagnosis; Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation; Hyperbilirubinemia, Neonatal; Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome; Quality Assurance, Health Care

    Research at a Glance

    Yale Co-Authors

    Frequent collaborators of Matthew Grossman's published research.

    Publications

    2024

    2022

    2021

    Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

    • honor

      Pediatric Hospital Medicine National Quality and Patient Safety Award

    • honor

      Norman J. Siegel Faculty Award

    • honor

      Children's Hospital Association Pediatric Quality Award, Overall Winner

    • honor

      Children's Hospital National Quality and Patient Safety Award, Overall Winner

    • honor

      The Alvan Feinstein Award

    Clinical Care

    Overview

    As a pediatric hospitalist (a physician who only treats children admitted to the hospital), Matthew Grossman, MD, helps families during their most vulnerable moments.

    “Kids are relying on you to get them better, and working with their families is great,” Dr. Grossman says. “They are coming to you with their children, their most prized possession, and being able to help them is truly rewarding.”

    The field of pediatric hospital medicine is a relatively new subspecialty, but the need for it is great, Dr. Grossman says. In the past, community pediatricians visited their hospitalized patients.

    “We still have some pediatricians who do that, but the benefit of having pediatric hospitalists is that inpatient and outpatient care are really quite different,” he explains. “If you are an outpatient doc, you’re spending maybe just 5 percent of your time treating inpatients. Inpatient care has become complex, and it makes sense to have a group of doctors who focus on that, are used to coordinating with various hospital specialists, and dealing with the diseases we see routinely.”

    Dr. Grossman is the quality and safety officer at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital and in 2015 and 2017, teams he led were awarded the National Pediatric Quality Award from the Children’s Hospital Association. In 2017, he received Yale Medicine’s Excellence in Quality and Safety Award for his approach to caring for infants going through withdrawal after being born to opioid-addicted mothers.

    Dr. Grossman’s technique, which is being replicated around the country, recognized that the traditional approach of separating babies from mothers and placing them in the high-stimulation neonatal intensive care unit (and treating them with morphine), was not in the best interest of the baby—or mother. He paired mother and child together in calm settings and urged frequent feedings, comforting, and swaddling.

    “Before, babies would stay in the hospital for three or four weeks, but now it’s more like five or six days. And we use way less medication,” says Dr. Grossman, who is also an assistant professor of pediatrics at Yale School of Medicine. “It’s been dramatic. The bonding between the mother and child is the treatment.”

    Clinical Specialties

    Pediatrics; Pediatric Critical Care Medicine

    Get In Touch

    Contacts

    Academic Office Number
    Clinic Fax Number
    Mailing Address

    Pediatric Critical Care Medicine

    PO Box 208064

    New Haven, CT 06520-8064

    United States

    Administrative Support

    Locations

    • Patient Care Locations

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