Professor, Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Dr. Goldstein is an emergency physician who specializes in neurologic emergencies. He received both his M.D. and Ph.D. from the University of Connecticut in 2000, and completed his residency at the Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency in 2005. He then completed a research fellowship in Vascular and Critical Care Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham & Women’s Hospital. He is currently the Co-Director of the Center for Neurologic Emergencies in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, a Professor of Emergency Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and the MGH Endowed Chair in Emergency Medicine Research.
He is a Fellow of the Neurocritical Care Society, the American Heart Association, the American College of Emergency Physicians, and the American Academy of Emergency Medicine.
Dr. Goldstein manages clinical research program integrating neurology, hematology, neurocritical care, and emergency medicine. He has been continually NIH funded since 2009, and receives funding from foundations and industry, and consults for multiple pharmaceutical and biotech companies on drug development and clinical trial management.
He currently serves as the hub PI for the New England SIREN group, an NIH funded national network that performs large phase III clinical trials in emergency and critical care (published in journals such as NEJM and Lancet).
He has served as an invited speaker at many national and international forums, and has published approximately 200 peer reviewed articles in journals such as Stroke, Neurology, and Lancet, and works, and over 40 reviews and book chapters. He is a member of the Writing Group for the AHA Guidelines on Intracerebral Hemorrhage, and a writer for ENLS (Emergency Neurologic Life Support, an international effort led by the Neurocritical Care Society). He is a co- Editor of the textbook Neurologic Emergencies, and directs a CME course on Neurologic Emergencies (the largest of its kind) that draws over 150 participants from across the world annually.