Biography
Gregory P. Victorino, M.D. is Professor and Chief of the UCSF East Bay Surgery Program. He is also Chair of the Department of Surgery for Alameda Health System.
Victorino, a highly regarded trauma surgeon, and professor of surgery. Formerly, while the Director of Trauma Services at Highland Hospital, his leadership was crucial to the designation of Highland Hospital, the flagship of Alameda Health System, as a Level 1 Trauma Center serving the East Bay.
Victorino has deep roots in the community with a strong record of clinical outreach. In 2016, he was named Outstanding Physician of the Year by the Alameda Health System. He is also a dedicated teacher and mentor to UCSF-East Bay general surgery residents, and a respected thought leader. His body of professional work includes more than 80 peer-reviewed publications.
Victorino completed his undergraduate degree at UC Berkeley in 1986 and earned his MD at the University of Pittsburgh. He returned to the Bay Area in 1991, completing a general surgery residency at UC Davis-East Bay in 1998, followed by a trauma-critical care fellowship at UC Davis. Soon thereafter, he joined the UCSF Department of Surgery as a faculty member.
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Education
Institution | Degree | Dept or School | End Date |
---|---|---|---|
University of California | Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Champion Training | 2018 |
Board Certifications
- American Board of Surgery, Surgery
- American Board of Surgery, Surgical Critical Care
Clinical Expertise
Ischemia-reperfusion
Microvascular permeability and physiology
Sepsis
Shock
Trauma
In the News
Grants and Funding
- Post-Injury Dysregulation of Lipid Metabolism | NIH | 2007-08-15 - 2013-07-31 | Role: Principal Investigator
Research Interests
- Microvascular permeability and physiology
- Ischemia-reperfusion
- Sepsis
- Shock
- Trauma
Publications
- Cost-utility analysis of prehospital spine immobilization recommendations for penetrating trauma.| | PubMed
- Should uncooperative trauma patients with suspected head injury be intubated?| | PubMed
- Death or dialysis? The risk of dialysis-dependent chronic renal failure after trauma nephrectomy.| | PubMed
- Effect of surgery resident change of shift on trauma resuscitations and outcomes.| | PubMed
- Bedside thoracic ultrasonography of the fourth intercostal space reliably determines safe removal of tube thoracostomy after traumatic injury.| | PubMed
- Pediatric penetrating trauma: the epidemic continues.| | PubMed
- Does gastric volume in trauma patients identify a population at risk for developing pneumonia and poor outcomes?| | PubMed
- The heart of the matter: utility of ultrasound of cardiac activity during traumatic arrest.| | PubMed
- Emergency uncrossmatched transfusion effect on blood type alloantibodies.| | PubMed
- Correlation between IVC dimensions and volume status on CT scan.| | PubMed