Division Faculty


Faculty Profile:

Daniel Hagg, MD

Clinical Instructor,
Division of Pulmonary and Critical
Care Medicine, OHSU
E-mail: haggda@ohsu.edu













Degrees:
  • BS – Biomedical Engineering, Summa Cum Laude, Boston University, Boston, MA 1995
  • MD – University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, TX, 2000


Residency:

  • Internal Medicine- Oregon Health & Science University. 2000-2003


Fellowship:

  • Critical Care Medicine - Oregon Health & Science University, 2003-2005


Research Interest:

  • Diagnosis of sepsis including: blood markers, refinement of clinical diagnostic criteria and outcome prediction,
  • Improving data collection in the ICU with a focus on quality improvement initiatives


Clinical Interest:

  • Sepsis, necrotizing fasciitis, improving pain control, improving nutrition during critical illness, physical therapy and sleep improvement in the ICU


Representative Publications:

  • Koon HB, Severy P, Hagg DS, Hill T, Jones AG, Waldmann TA, Junghans RP. Daclizumab treatment of CD25 positive leukemia. Submitted December 2003, Blood.

  • Hagg DS, Junghans RP. Measurement and biological correlates of antibody bioactivity during antibody immunotherapies. Journal of Immunological Methods. 219(1-2):7-21;1998 Oct 1.


Biosketch:

Dr. Hagg attended Boston University, studying Biomedical Engineering. Graduated Summa Cum laude and was accepted to the combined engineering/ medical degree program (ENGMEDIC). He deferred medical school admission for one year and worked in the Biotherapeutics Development Lab at the then New England Deaconness Medical Center. His work focused on new techniques of gene transfer in T cells and antibody immunotherapies for cancer

Dr. Hagg started medical School at Boston University but transferred to UT Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, TX. Completing his medical degree in 2000, Dr. Hagg then moved to Portland to complete residency and fellowship at OHSU.

His current Research interests include inflammatory markers of sepsis, with several ongoing projects looking at the nature and diagnostic accuracy of the biphasic aPTT waveform in sepsis.

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