ANNE GROSSESTREUER, PhD
Director of Epidemiology and Data Science, Center for Resuscitation Science, Department of Emergency Medicine, BIDMC
Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Dr. Anne Grossestreuer, PhD, is a Research Scientist in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and the Director of Epidemiology and Data Science at the Center for Resuscitation Science. She received her doctorate in Epidemiology from the Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Grossestreuer’s research interests center on cardiac arrest, sepsis, and other critical illnesses. She has served as the lead statistician for clinical trials in critical illness and in chronic pain and provides statistical support for a variety of other studies within Emergency Medicine and Critical Care as well as the BIDMC Data Abstraction Core. She was the Principal Investigator on a grant from the American Heart Association, which supported her dissertation research on the association of post-arrest body temperature to neurologic and survival outcomes, and a grant from Harvard Catalyst, which supported research into outcomes after critically ill patients leave the hospital. Dr. Grossestreuer served as a member of the Editorial Board of Resuscitation and is currently on the American Heart Association’s Get with the Guidelines – Resuscitation Adult Research Taskforce. Her research has won awards at the American Heart Association Resuscitation Science Symposium and the European Resuscitation Council Congress. She has additional research training in medical anthropology, in which she received an MSc from the University of Pennsylvania, and experience in health services research as a fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Healthcare Economics and health policy as a fellow at the Center for Emergency Care Policy Research. Dr. Grossestreuer’s research publications can be found here.