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Lauren Marlowe, MD, FAAP

Lauren Marlowe, MD, FAAP

Lauren Marlowe, MD, FAAP

Lauren Marlowe, MD, FAAP, is a CHOP pediatric hospitalist and Quality Champion of the Pediatric Inpatient Program at Virtua Health.

Areas of expertise: Pediatric hospital medicine


215-590-2164

About Lauren Marlowe

Titles

Pediatric Hospitalist

Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Certifications

Pediatrics – American Board of Pediatrics

Awards and Honors

2012, Penn Pearl Medical Student Teaching Award
2009, Clinical Prize in Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
2005-2009, Twenty-First Century (Gamble) Scholarship, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

Leadership and Memberships

Memberships in Professional Organizations

2009-present, American Academy of Pediatrics
2013-present, Section of Hospital Medicine

Editorial and Academic Positions

Academic and Institutional Committees 

2018-present, Rotation Site Director, CHOP Pediatric Hospital Medicine Fellows Community Hospitalist Rotation, CHOP at Virtua
2016-present, Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Champion, CHOP at Virtua
2014-present, Continuing Medical Education Committee
2014-present, Rotation Site Director, CHOP Community Hospitalist Individualized Educational Unit (IEU) for Senior Residents, CHOP at Virtua
2014-present, Course Co-Director, CHOP at Virtua Spring and Fall Educational Symposiums
2013-present, Course Director, CHOP Network Hospitalist Grand Rounds

Education & training

Medical Degree

MD - Perelman School of Medicine at University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

Internship

Pediatrics - Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

Residency

Pediatrics - Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA (Chief Resident)

Team affiliations

View fewer all team affiliations View all all team affiliations

Publications

Publications

2019

Mittal S, Marlowe L, et al (2019). Successful Use of Quality Improvement Methodology to Reduce Inpatient Length of Stay in Bronchiolitis Through Judicious Use of Intermittent Pulse Oximetry. Hospital Pediatrics 9(2); 73-78.

Mittal S, Marlowe L, Elliot D, Gifford D, Ritenour K, Topol H (2019). Index of Suspicion: Two Preschoolers with Fever. Pediatrics in Review 40 (4); 197-201.

2014

Yan C, Laguna BA, Marlowe LE, Keller MD, Treat JR (2014). Herpes Zoster duplex  bilateralis in an immunocompetent adolescent boy: a case report and literature  review.  Pediatr Dermatology 31(3); 341-4.

2010

Marlowe L, Mistry RD, Coffin S, Leckerman KH, McGowan KL, Dai D, Bell LM, Zaoutis T (2010). Blood culture contamination rates after skin antisepsis with chlorhexidine gluconate versus povidone-iodine in a pediatric emergency department. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 31(2):171-6

2009

Thompson A, Davis DH, Dominguez TE, Schultz S, Marlowe L, Huh JW, Helfaer MA (2009). Association of Rapid Head Growth in Children Following Tracheostomy Tube Placement. Journal of Pediatric Health Care. 23(5):298-302

2006

Marlowe L, Peila R, Benke KS, Hardy J, White LR, Launer LJ, Myers A (2006). Insulin-Degrading Enzyme Haplotypes Affect Insulin Levels but Not Dementia Risk.  Neurodegenerative Diseases 3 (6):320-326.

Editorials, Reviews, Chapters

2017

Friedlaender E and Marlowe L. “Interosseous Infusions,”  Comprehensive Pediatric Hospital Medicine, 2nd Edition. 2017.

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