Maria Raven, MD, MPH, MS

Associate Professor
Emergency Medicine

Dr. Raven is a practicing Emergency Medicine physician and health services researcher, is the Chief of Emergency Medicine at UCSF and a Vice Chair in the UCSF Department of Emergency Medicine.   Prior to joining the UCSF faculty in 2011, Dr. Raven completed her residency and a research fellowship at NYU/Bellevue Hospital Center and oversaw one of six New York State Department of Health-funded Chronic Illness Demonstration Projects for the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation and New York State Medicaid.  In addition to working clinically in the ED at UCSF, Maria speaks locally and nationally about caring for complex populations, frequent emergency department users, and the link between homelessness and health. She has published and peer-reviewed extensively on these and other topics. Maria is co-PI for the San Francisco Whole Person Care Pilot evaluation, focused on improving care for chronically homeless high users of health and social care services, leads the EDIE (emergency department information exchange) program in the UCSF ED, and is the lead evaluator for a Santa Clara County Pay for Success program providing permanent supportive housing for chronically homeless frequents users of the County health system and jail. She is co-editor of a forthcoming Social Emergency Medicine textbook and is currently working on multiple initiatives to improve care for individuals with substance use disorders in emergency departments.  Since March 2020, her main focus has been on UCSF emergency department operations and preparedness in the face of COVID-19, and related research.

Featured Publications: 

Association between Methamphetamine Use and Psychiatric Hospitalization, Chemical Restraint, and Emergency Department Length of Stay.

Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

Murphy CE, Wang RC, Coralic Z, Lai AR, Raven M

Correlation Between N95 Extended Use and Reuse and Fit Failure in an Emergency Department.

JAMA

Degesys NF, Wang RC, Kwan E, Fahimi J, Noble JA, Raven MC

Emergency department preparation for COVID-19: accelerated care units.

Emergency medicine journal : EMJ

Noble J, Degesys NF, Kwan E, Grom E, Brown C, Fahimi J, Raven M

Violence and Emergency Department Use among Community-Recruited Women Who Experience Homelessness and Housing Instability.

Journal of urban health : bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine

Riley ED, Vittinghoff E, Kagawa RMC, Raven MC, Eagen KV, Cohee A, Dilworth SE, Shumway M

Part I: A Quantitative Study of Social Risk Screening Acceptability in Patients and Caregivers.

American journal of preventive medicine

De Marchis EH, Hessler D, Fichtenberg C, Adler N, Byhoff E, Cohen AJ, Doran KM, Ettinger de Cuba S, Fleegler EW, Lewis CC, Lindau ST, Tung EL, Huebschmann AG, Prather AA, Raven M, Gavin N, Jepson S, Johnson W, Ochoa E, Olson AL, Sandel M, Sheward RS, Gottlieb LM

Part II: A Qualitative Study of Social Risk Screening Acceptability in Patients and Caregivers.

American journal of preventive medicine

Byhoff E, De Marchis EH, Hessler D, Fichtenberg C, Adler N, Cohen AJ, Doran KM, Ettinger de Cuba S, Fleegler EW, Gavin N, Huebschmann AG, Lindau ST, Tung EL, Raven M, Jepson S, Johnson W, Olson AL, Sandel M, Sheward RS, Gottlieb LM

Frequent Emergency Department Users: Focusing Solely On Medical Utilization Misses The Whole Person.

Health affairs (Project Hope)

Kanzaria HK, Niedzwiecki M, Cawley CL, Chapman C, Sabbagh SH, Riggs E, Chen AH, Martinez MX, Raven MC

Past Frequent Emergency Department Use Predicts Mortality.

Health affairs (Project Hope)

Niedzwiecki MJ, Kanzaria HK, Montoy JC, Hsia RY, Raven MC