- Home
- About Us
- Divisions
- Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine
- Allergy and Immunology
- Blood and Marrow Transplantation and Cellular Therapies
- Cardiology
- Child Advocacy
- Emergency Medicine
- Endocrinology
- Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition
- General Academic Pediatrics
- Genetic and Genomic Medicine
- Health Informatics
- Hematology-Oncology
- Infectious Diseases
- Nephrology
- Neurology and Child Development
- Newborn Medicine
- Paul C. Gaffney Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine
- Pulmonology
- Rheumatology
- Centers & Institutes
- Center for Pediatric Research in Obesity and Metabolism
- Center for Rare Disease Therapy
- Children's Neuroscience Institute
- Cystic Fibrosis Research Center
- Institute for Infection, Inflammation, and Immunity in Children
- Pediatric Asthma Center
- Pediatric Institute for Heart Regeneration and Therapeutics
- Richard King Mellon Foundation Institute for Pediatric Research
- Pittsburgh Vaccine Trials Unit
- The Pittsburgh Study
- Research
- Diversity
- Education
- Faculty Affairs
- News
- People
- Podcasts
Katharina Hayes, MD
- Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Katie Hayes joined the Paul C. Gaffney Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine in 2018 after spending two years in private practice in the Pittsburgh community and one year as a community Pediatric Hospitalist in Cleveland. A UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh residency graduate, Hayes is actively involved as a clinician-educator through her role as a teaching attending as part of the division’s evening hospitalist group. Her academic interests include quality improvement and resident and medical student education. Hayes is the co-director for the third-year Pediatrics Clerkship at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
Professional and Scientific Society Memberships
- American Academy of Pediatrics, 2012-Present
Education & Training
- BS, Biochemistry, magna cum laude, Bates College, 2006
- MD, Tulane University, 2012
- Residency in Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, 2012-2015
Selected Publications
Neville, DN; Hayes, KR; Ivan, Y; McDowell, ER; Pitetti, RD. Double-blind randomized controlled trial of intranasal dexmedetomidine versus intranasal midazolam as anxiolysis prior to pediatric laceration repair in the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2016 April 30. PMID: 27129606.