Dr. Nathan Ivan Shapiro MD
Emergency Physician
330 Brookline Ave Cc2-W Boston MA, 02215About
Dr. Nathan Shapiro practices Emergency Medicine in Boston, MA. Dr. Shapiro assesses patients who seek immediate medical attention at any time of day or night. Emergency Medicine Physicians are trained to efficiently work with each patient and situation no matter how acute or life-threatening. Dr. Shapiro examines patients, determines means of testing, diagnoses conditions, and decides the best treatment methods.
Education and Training
Temple Univ Sch of Med, Philadelphia Pa 1996
Temple University School of Medicine 1996
Board Certification
Emergency MedicineAmerican Board of Emergency MedicineABEM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- A blueprint for a sepsis protocol.
- Do emergency department blood cultures change practice in patients with pneumonia?
- Predicting mortality in the intensive care unit: man against machine.
- Charlson Index is associated with one-year mortality in emergency department patients with suspected infection.
- National study of emergency department visits for sepsis, 1992 to 2001.
- Simple triage scoring system predicting death and the need for critical care resources for use during epidemics.
- Surviving sepsis outside the intensive care unit.
- Performance of severity of illness scoring systems in emergency department patients with infection.
- Occult hypoperfusion and mortality in patients with suspected infection.
- Implementing early goal-directed therapy in the emergency setting: the challenges and experiences of translating research innovations into clinical reality in academic and community settings.
- Predicting adverse outcomes in syncope.
- Evaluation of end-tidal carbon dioxide role in predicting elevated SOFA scores and lactic acidosis.
- Anion gap as a screening tool for elevated lactate in patients with an increased risk of developing sepsis in the Emergency Department.
- Statin therapy is associated with decreased mortality in patients with infection.
- Risk factors for death in elderly emergency department patients with suspected infection.
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