Jonathan Levin

Dr. Levin completed his undergraduate studies at Brown University where he obtained a Bachelor of Science in Computational Biology. He obtained his MD from Yale University and completed his residency training at the Boston Combined Residency Program in Pediatrics. He pursued a combined fellowship in Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine and Pediatric Pulmonology. He performed research with the Computational Health Informatics Program and is interested in medical innovation and long-term pulmonary outcomes of premature infants. He is currently an attending neonatologist at Boston Children’s Hospital.

Alejandra Barrero-Castillero

Dr. Barrero-Castillero completed her pediatric residency training at Stanford University with a clinical research scholarly concentration. A native of Mexico City, she obtained her medical degree from the Universidad Anahuac school of medicine and a Master’s in Public Health from Boston University, with a concentration in Biostatistics and International Health. Ale worked on characterizing and assessing psychosocial stressors of infants and families in the NICU with a particular interest in immigrant families. She is currently an attending neonatologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

Julie Thai

Dr. Thai received her undergraduate degree in Biochemistry and her medical degree from the University of Nevada. She completed her pediatric residency training at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, California. She is interested in basic and translational research in nutrition and the microbiome as they pertain to neonatal morbidities. She is currently an attending neonatologist at UCLA Medical Center.

Omri David Soffer

Dr. Omri David Soffer, a native of Israel, graduated summa cum laude from Semmelweis University of Hungary, receiving his medical degree. He completed his pediatric residency training at Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Staten Island University Hospital. He was a clinical fellow at the Harvard Neonatal-Perinatal Fellowship Program and a Bioethics fellow at the Center for Bioethics in Harvard Medical School. His clinical research focused on evaluating the utility of quantitative measurements in infants exposed to neuromuscular blockade. His research and scholarly interests in ethics focus broadly on instilling ethical principles and interpersonal competence and knowledge in medical trainees during counseling to caretakers of critically ill patients. He is currently an attending neonatologist at Children’s Hospital & Medical Center, Omaha.

Emily Herzberg

Dr. Herzberg graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Human Science and Spanish from Georgetown University. She obtained her MD from Georgetown University and completed her pediatric residency training at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she also served as chief resident. Her research focuses on the diagnosis of neonatal encephalopathy and the best early predictors of short- and long-term outcome, and she has a particular interest in EEG. She served as Chief Fellow. When she isn’t at the hospital you can likely find her at her local Pure Barre studio! She is currently an attending neonatologist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Samantha Enstad

Dr. Enstad obtained her undergraduate degree in Microbiology and Cell Science from the University of Florida and her medical degree from the University of Central Florida College of Medicine. She completed a pediatric residency at Northwestern University’s Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago. She is interested in clinical research focusing on the impact of maternal obesity on lactational programming. She is currently an attending neonatologist at Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies.

Patricia Davenport

Dr. Davenport completed her undergraduate studies in Biology and her medical education at the University of Cincinnati. She completed her pediatric residency training at New York University. She currently researches the effects of neonatal thrombocytopenia and platelet transfusion under the mentorship of Dr. Martha Sola-Visner. Dr. Davenport served as Chief Fellow. She is currently an attending neonatologist at Boston Children’s Hospital.

Gaby Cordova Ramos

Dr. Cordova Ramos completed her residency training at the Boston Combined Residency Program in Pediatrics. A native of Peru, she obtained her medical degree from the Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia in Lima. Her fellowship scholarship work focused on the performance of preterm growth references to predict outcomes. She will join the faculty at Boston Medical Center and pursue health services research with a focus on health literacy as it pertains to outcomes of NICU graduates. She is currently an attending neonatologist at Boston Medical Center.

Kristyn Beam

Dr. Beam completed her undergraduate studies in Biology and her medical education at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She completed her pediatric residency training at The Floating Hospital for Children (now Tufts Children’s Hospital) at Tufts Medical Center. During fellowship, she was accepted into the Harvard-wide Pediatric Health Services Fellowship, through which she is obtaining her Masters of Public Health in Quantitative Methods at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Her research interests include using machine learning to improve neonatal outcomes, specifically focused on bronchopulmonary dysplasia, with hopes to expand this technique to other neonatal morbidities throughout her career. She is currently an attending neonatologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.