Meghan Brooks Lane-Fall

Assistant Professor
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine 
Pennsylvania State University
United States of America

Biography

Dr. Meghan Brooks Lane-Fall is working as an Assistant Professor of Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care at The University of Pennsylvania Health System. She is also working as Attending Anesthesiologist, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Attending Anesthesiologist, Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; Member, Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics; Senior Fellow, Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics; Co-Director, Center for Perioperative Outcomes Research and Transformation, Penn Anesthesiology and Critical Care. She received her MD (Medicine) from Yale University School of Medicine, 2006. Her research interests include: I am a critical care anesthesiologist and health services researcher whose scholarly focus is improving clinical outcomes for patients experiencing life-threatening illness. Within this broad area, I am particularly interested in improving healthcare provider communication at times of transition or handoff across sites of care. I employ implementation and dissemination research strategies to develop evidence about effective communication strategies that incorporate human factors principles and that support clinician workflow.

Research Intrest

improving healthcare provider communication at times of transition or handoff across sites of care. I employ implementation and dissemination research strategies to develop evidence about effective communication strategies that incorporate human factors principles and that support clinician workflow.

List of Publications
Gutsche J, Mikkelsen M, McCarthy F, Miano T, Lane-Fall M, et al. (2017) Veno-Venous Extracorporeal Life Support in Hemodynamically Unstable Patients With ARDS. Anesthesia and Analgesia 124: 846-48
Lane-Fall M, Miano T, Aysola J, Augoustides J, (2017) Diversity in the Emerging Critical Care Workforce: Analysis of Demographic Trends in Critical Care Fellows from 2004-2014. Critical Care Medicine 45: 822-827
Barry M, Hochman B, Lane-Fall M, Zappile D, Holena D, et al. (2017) Leveraging telemedicine infrastructure to monitor operating room to intensive care unit handoffs. Academic Medicine 92: 7