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Andrew Goodwin, M.D., MSCR, Research Profile

Dee W. Ford, M.D., MSCRAndrew Goodwin, M.D., MSCR

Professor
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Allergy, and Sleep Medicine

Research Type: Clinical and Translational


Andy Goodwin, M.D., MSCR, is a Professor of Medicine and the Section Chief of Critical Care. As a strong advocate for team science, he has successfully built and collaborated with multidisciplinary research teams to pursue high impact investigation focused on improving the outcomes of critical illness. He currently leads the division’s ICU clinical trials program which focuses on multicenter late phase trials in sepsis and respiratory failure including collaboration with the PETAL, ACTIV and STRIVE networks as well as industry collaborations on pharmaceutical and monitoring device studies. Additionally, he investigates novel ways that EHR systems and data can be used in clinical investigation. This involves several lines of investigation including the use of clinical decision support systems to drive adherence of ICU best practices and the use of machine learning to facilitate clinical trial execution. He has mentored pre-doctoral students, residents, post-doctoral fellows and junior faculty and is a recipient of the Department of Medicine’s Research Faculty Mentor of the Year Award.

Additionally, Dr. Goodwin supports research both locally and internationally. He leads the Resources and Services Module of MUSC’s Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA). This module includes a broad array of research infrastructure such as the MUSC Nexus research lab and clinic, biostatistics and research design support, research coordination, digital health solutions and regulatory knowledge and support among other services. He also runs the Clinical Trialist Training Program at MUSC which provides resource support and targeted training to early career faculty members interested in developing a career as a clinical trialist. He has served on the American Thoracic Society critical care programming committee and the ATS Scientific Grant Review Committee and helped develop the ATS early career apprenticeship program.

Dr. Goodwin received his Bachelor of Science in Bioengineering from Syracuse University and his M.D. from SUNY Stony Brook. He completed is internal medicine residency training at Massachusetts General Hospital and his pulmonary and critical care fellowship training in the Harvard Combined Program. He joined the faculty at MUSC in 2011.

Publications

PubMed