Dr. Otero is on Doximity
As a Doximity member you'll join over two million verified healthcare professionals in a private, secure network.
- Gain access to free telehealth tools, such as our “call shielding” and one-way patient texting.
- Connect with colleagues in the same hospital or clinic.
- Read the latest clinical news, personalized to your specialty.
Office
Froedtert Hospital
900 N 92nd St
Milwaukee, WI 53226
Summary
- I am dual boarded in Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine. Clinical practice in Urban Tertiary referral hospital with 130,000 ED visits. Involved in undergraduate, medical student and post graduate emergency medicine residency training.
Clinical researcher in the areas of sepsis, critical care states and intersection of emergency medicine and intensive care unit management
Education & Training
- Henry Ford Health/Henry Ford HospitalResidency, Internal Medicine/Emergency Medicine, 1997 - 2002
- Howard University College of MedicineClass of 1997
Certifications & Licensure
- MI State Medical License 1997 - 2026
- WI State Medical License 2021 - 2025
- NC State Medical License 2002 - 2006
- HI State Medical License 2001 - 2002
- American Board of Emergency Medicine Emergency Medicine
Clinical Trials
- Observational Study of Sepsis and Pneumonia to Develop Diagnostic Tests Start of enrollment: 2005 Dec 01
Publications & Presentations
PubMed
- 344 citationsAn Integrated Clinico-Metabolomic Model Improves Prediction of Death in SepsisRaymond J. Langley, Ephraim L. Tsalik, Jennifer C. van Velkinburgh, Seth W. Glickman, Brandon J. Rice
Science Translational Medicine. 2013-07-24 - 103 citationsDisease Progression in Hemodynamically Stable Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With SepsisSeth W. Glickman, Charles B. Cairns, Ronny M. Otero, Christopher W. Woods, Ephraim L. Tsalik
Academic Emergency Medicine. 2010-04-01 - 22 citationsThe utility of head computed tomography in the emergency department evaluation of syncope.Nikhil Goyal, Michael W. Donnino, Ravi Vachhani, Ravi Bajwa, Tabassum Ahmad
Internal and Emergency Medicine. 2006-01-01
Journal Articles
- Effect of Ascorbic Acid, Corticosteroids, and Thiamine on Organ Injury in Septic ShockDavid T Huang, Peter C Hou, Robert L Sherwin, Maureen Chase, Michael N Cocchi, Ronny M Otero, Ayan Sen, JAMA
Authored Content
- Effect of Ascorbic Acid, Corticosteroids, and Thiamine on Organ Injury in Septic ShockAugust 2020
- Effect of Ascorbic Acid, Corticosteroids, and Thiamine on Organ Injury in Septic ShockAugust 2020
- Effect of Ascorbic Acid, Corticosteroids, and Thiamine on Organ Injury in Septic ShockAugust 2020
Viewing the full profile is available to verified healthcare professionals only.
Find your profile and take control of your online presence: