This is unpublished

Nina
Kim
MD, MSc

Clinical Informatics
Education
Leadership & Management
Mentorship
Policy
Quality Improvement and Patient Safety
Research
Pinned
Academic
Professor, Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Bio

Dr. H. Nina Kim is a Professor of Medicine in the Division of Allergy & Infectious Diseases and Adjunct Professor of Health Systems & Population Health at the University of Washington (UW). She received her medical degree at the University of California San Francisco and earned a masters of science in epidemiology at the UW School of Public Health. Dr. Kim completed her training in internal medicine and infectious disease at the University of Washington. She serves as the Director of the Translational Research sub-core of the UW/Fred Hutchinson Center for AIDS Research and is the Associate Editor of Hepatitis C Online, a CDC-sponsored web-based curriculum. She founded and leads the AID Research Collaboratory (link: https://sites.uw.edu/hyangkim/53-2/), a UW initiative to foster patient-centered clinical investigation and facilitate health services research leveraging the electronic medical record. Her work to date has focused on liver-related comorbidity (viral hepatitis, end-stage liver disease and liver cancer) in people living with HIV.

HEALTH SYSTEMS-RELATED ACTIVITIES

Clinical Informatics

Education

  • Graduate Medical Education
  • Continuing Medical Education
  • Leadership

Leadership and Management

  • Director of ARC

Mentorship

  • Education
  • Clinical Informatics
  • Research
  • Quality Improvement and Patient Safety

Policy

  • National – Professional Society: Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • National – Other: Hep B Foundation

Quality Improvement and Patient Safety

  • Focus Area: Infectious Diseases, General Medicine
  • Care Setting: All
  • QI Work: Interrupted Time Series

Research

  • Outcomes
  • Health Services
  • Pragmatic Trials
  • Implementation
  • Informatics and AI
  • Population Health
  • Social Drivers of Health/Social Determinants of Health