Albert Yen, MD
Assistant Professor
Anesthesia
School of Medicine
Dr. Yen practices Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. He is deeply dedicated to providing excellent patient centered care for his patients and their families in the complex perioperative and critical care realms.
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He is also passionate about education and teaching the next generation of medical students, residents, and clinical fellows in both clinical and non clinical environments. Clinically, he is particularly interested in the application of ultrasound in the perioperative and critical care settings, as well as mechanical circulatory support devices and their management.
Awards
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- Education Innovator of the Year, University of Southern California, 2020-2021
- Chief Resident, Columbia University Medical Center, 2017-2018
Education & Training
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- Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Champion Training University of California, San Francisco 06/2022
- Critical Care Medicine University of California, San Francisco 06/2019
- Anesthesiology Columbia University Medical Center 06/2018
- MD Medicine Medical College of Wisconsin 05/2014
- BS Chemical Biology University of California, Berkeley 05/2009
Interests
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- Medical Education
- Ultrasonography
- Anesthesiology
- Critical Care Medicine
Publications (4)
Top publication keywords:
Drug Resistance, BacterialThoraxBase SequencePhylogenyVeinsMolecular Sequence DataRecombination, GeneticChlamydia trachomatisChlamydia InfectionsAnti-Bacterial AgentsRadiographyGenetic EngineeringCatheterization, Central VenousTomography, X-Ray ComputedCentral Venous Catheters
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Clinical trial design during and beyond the pandemic: the I-SPY COVID trial
Nature Medicine 2022 I-SPY COVID Consortium -
Embolic Hypodermic Needle Causing Traumatic Cardiac Tamponade: A Case Report.
Critical care explorations 2019 Yen AF, Homer CM, Mohapatra A, Langnas E, Gomez A, Hendrickson CM -
Central Venous Catheter in the Internal Mammary Vein.
Anesthesiology 2019 House LM, Yen A, Bokoch MP -
In vitro recombinants of antibiotic-resistant Chlamydia trachomatis strains have statistically more breakpoints than clinical recombinants for the same sequenced loci and exhibit selection at unexpected loci.
Journal of bacteriology 2011 Srinivasan T, Bruno WJ, Wan R, Yen A, Duong J, Dean D