Jesús Treviño, MD, MBA
Credentials: Assistant Professor (CHS)
Address:
Administrative Support:
Colleen Lourigan (clourigan@medicine.wisc.edu)
Clinical information Publications
LEADERSHIP POSITION
Physician Lead, Coding, Billing, and Documentation
EDUCATION
Undergraduate: Rice University
Graduate: MIT Sloan School of Management
Medical School: Harvard Medical School
Residency: Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Dr. Treviño is an emergency medicine physician with interests in healthcare system service operations and injury prevention. He previously served as the director for the George Washington University Center for Injury Prevention & Control, where he partnered with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the District of Columbia Highway Safety Office in the development and implementation of social media public health campaigns to reduce injuries and deaths related to aggressive driving, as well as the DC municipal government for urban firearm injury prevention efforts. In recognition of his expertise in firearm injury research, Dr. Treviño has been invited to the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention to discuss the ways in which the health care sector has taken action to prevent firearm injury.
Prior to becoming a physician, his experiences included: translational research at the MD Anderson Cancer Center, water and energy infrastructure development with Engineers Without Borders USA, operations consulting within the Health Industries Advisory Practice of PricewaterhouseCoopers, and tinkering with healthcare startups.
Dr. Treviño’s research interests include the use of big/complex data sets external to the healthcare system to better understand the behavior and needs of patients and the development of predictive models to inform healthcare service operations for improved performance and patient experiences. Regarding injury prevention, he is studying the role that social media may have in instigating interpersonal conflicts that escalate into urban gun violence, and the impact of acoustic gunshot detection systems on urban firearm injury.