Accepting new patients
Bishoy Zakhary, M.D.
Accepting new patients
- Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, School of Medicine
Specialty
- Pulmonary Medicine
Clinical focus
- ARDS (Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome)
- Critical Care
- Respiratory Disease
Locations and contact
I see patients at-
1 OHSU Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Clinic, Marquam Hill
3270 SW Pavilion Loop Suite 320Suite 320Portland, OR 97239
About me
Dr. Bishoy Zakhary is a pulmonary and critical care intensivist who provides tailored treatment plans to patients with:
- Respiratory failure
- Cardiogenic shock
- Septic shock
Dr. Zakhary is the director of the OHSU ECMO program, which supports patients with severe cardio-respiratory failure. In addition, he is the Chair of Education for the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization. He has a variety of publications in critical care and ECMO therapy and has been an invited speaker on these topics throughout the world.
Education and training
-
Degrees
- M.D., 2007, Creighton University School Of Medicine
-
Internship
- New York University School of Medicine
-
Residency
- New York University School of Medicine
-
Fellowship
- New York University School of Medicine
Memberships and associations:
- ELSO Chair of Education
Insurance
Before scheduling an appointment
- Check your network. If you have health insurance, call your company to find out if the OHSU Health location or provider you plan to visit is part of your network.
- Ask what you will pay. Your insurance company can tell you what your costs are likely to be.
If you schedule an appointment and your health insurance does not include OHSU Health, you may have to pay more than if you go to a provider in your insurance network.
Visit our billing and insurance page for more information.
Ratings and reviews
4.8 out of 5
Overall: 4.8 out of 5 (30 Ratings, 13 Reviews)
The patient ratings score is an average of all responses to the question "How likely would you be to recommend this provider to your family and friends (on a scale of 0 to 10)" on our nationally-recognized NRC patient surveys.