Liz Crowe, MD

Photos

1800 Orleans St
Baltimore, MD 21287
Dr. Elizabeth (Liz) Crowe is an Assistant Professor of Pathology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Dr. Crowe serves as the Medical Director of the Blood Bank in the Division of Transfusion Medicine at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Her areas of clinical practice are in transfusion medicine and therapeutic apheresis. Dr. Crowe was born and raised in Philadelphia, PA. She received her undergraduate degree in Biology from Immaculata University and pursued a PhD in Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics as part of the MD/PhD Program at Drexel University College of Medicine. She served as Clinical Pathology Chief resident in her final year of pathology residency. Her research interests include immunohematology and patient blood management. As a clinician-educator, she is engaged in teaching and mentoring resident and fellow trainees, medical students, and Specialist in Blood Banking (SBB) students. She is interested in developing novel methods to engage patient learners. She is a member of AABB, International Society for Blood Transfusion, and American Society for Apheresis.
Owner verified
See a problem?

You might also like

Ruth A. Karron, MD
Psychiatrists and psychoanalysts, Internal medicine practitioners

Ruth A. Karron, MD

Gastroenterologist Mouen Khashab specializes in therapeutic endoscopy, and he oversees this group of practitioners across the Johns Hopkins enterprise. Nationally and internationally known in the field of interventional endoscopy, Dr. Khashab has contributed immensely to the field’s advancement as a minimally invasive means to treat gastrointestinal and pancreaticobiliary disorders. Dr. Khashab earned his medical degree from the American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine, and subsequently completed a residency in internal medicine and a fellowship in gastroenterology at Indiana University. He then completed a two-year fellowship at The Johns Hopkins Hospital before joining the faculty in 2011. A busy researcher, Dr. Khashab has published more than 600 papers in peer-reviewed journals. In 2013, he described the procedure called gastric peroral endoscopic myotomy (known as G-POEM) and was able to disseminate and teach it all over the world. Other procedures that he expanded include peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM), peroral endoscopic myotomy with fundoplication (POEM-F), Zenker’s peroral endoscopic myotomy (Z-POEM) and full thickness resection. In 2022, he received the Master Endoscopist Award from the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) for his numerous contributions to the field. His procedural expertise includes endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), interventional EUS, submucosal endoscopy, POEM/achalasia, endoscopic mucosal resection, endoscopic submucosal dissection, luminal stenting, large polyp resection and Barrett’s therapy, among others. Dr. Khashab is involved with multiple gastrointestinal societies and has served on many committees, including the ASGE Standards of Practice Committee, which is in charge of formulating guidelines for the practice of endoscopy. He has also served as an associate editor for the journal Endoscopy, a premier journal in the field. Khashab is a highly sought-after speaker at national and international conferences, and he has participated in multiple live endoscopy conferences. Outside of academic medicine, Dr. Khashab is an entrepreneur. His major interest is in new technology and medical devices, and his goal is to disrupt the field by introducing technology that makes endoscopic procedures safer, easier, efficient and more scalable.
United StatesMarylandBaltimoreLiz Crowe, MD

Yext