Clinical Professor
Emergency Medicine
+1 559 499-6440
Brian Chinnock, MD, RDMS
Research Director, Emergency Medicine, UCSF Fresno
Clinical Professor of Emergency Medicine, UCSF
Director, SJV PRIME Arch, UCSF Fresno
Brian Chinnock, MD, is board certified in Emergency Medicine.
He earned his medical degree at University of Arizona, Tucson. His residency in Emergency Medicine was completed at University of California, San Francisco, Fresno where he served as a chief resident.
Dr. Chinnock has won many teaching awards including Top Resident Teacher and Top Medical Student Teacher at UCSF Fresno Department of Emergency Medicine and Outstanding Faculty Award at Texas Tech Health Sciences Center. He has also won the Faculty Research Award and the Henry J. Kaiser for Excellence in Teaching Award.
Publications
Emergency Department Survey of Vaccination Knowledge, Vaccination Coverage, and Willingness to Receive Vaccines in an Emergency Department Among Underserved Populations - Eight U.S. Cities, April-December, 2024.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report
Evaluation of an Alternative Approach to Managing Diabetic Ketoacidosis: Combination Rapid-Acting and Basal Subcutaneous Insulin (CRABI-DKA).
The Annals of pharmacotherapy
Implementation of a 90-Minute Gonorrhea/Chlamydia Test Decreases Antibiotic Under- and Overtreatment in Female Emergency Department Patients.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Emergency Department Surveillance of Self-Reported Covid-19.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Long COVID Among Undocumented Latino Immigrant Populations in the Emergency Department.
JAMA network open
Long COVID Illness: Disparities in Understanding and Receipt of Care in Emergency Department Populations.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Demystifying Hispanic Versus Latino/a Versus Latinx: Which Do Emergency Department Patients Prefer?
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Effectiveness of a Messenger RNA Vaccine Booster Dose Against Coronavirus Disease 2019 Among US Healthcare Personnel, October 2021-July 2022.
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Ramipril for the Treatment of COVID-19: RAMIC, a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial.
Advances in therapy
Effectiveness of mRNA Covid-19 Vaccine among U.S. Health Care Personnel.
The New England journal of medicine
The Rapid Evaluation of COVID-19 Vaccination in Emergency Departments for Underserved Patients Study.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Interim Estimates of Vaccine Effectiveness of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 Vaccines Among Health Care Personnel - 33 U.S. Sites, January-March 2021.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report
Self-obtained vaginal swabs are not inferior to provider-performed endocervical sampling for emergency department diagnosis of Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis.
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
Emergency physician stressors, concerns, and behavioral changes during COVID-19: A longitudinal study.
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
Academic Emergency Medicine Physicians' Anxiety Levels, Stressors, and Potential Stress Mitigation Measures During the Acceleration Phase of the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
Sensitivity of a bedside reagent strip for the detection of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in ED patients with ascites.
The American journal of emergency medicine
Debriefing: An Expert Panel's How-to Guide.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Irrigation of Cutaneous Abscesses Does Not Improve Treatment Success.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Clinical impression and ascites appearance do not rule out bacterial peritonitis.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Ultrasound-guided reduction of distal radius fractures.
The Journal of emergency medicine
A comparison of GlideScope video laryngoscopy versus direct laryngoscopy intubation in the emergency department.
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
Gram's stain of peritoneal fluid is rarely helpful in the evaluation of the ascites patient.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Peritoneal fluid cultures rarely alter management in patients with ascites.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Physician clinical impression does not rule out spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in patients undergoing emergency department paracentesis.
Annals of Emergency Medicine
Can clear ascitic fluid appearance rule out spontaneous bacterial peritonitis?
The American journal of emergency medicine
Predictors of success in nurse-performed ultrasound-guided cannulation.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Chylothorax: case report and review of the literature.
The Journal of emergency medicine
Clinicopathological conference: multisystem failure in a child.
Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine