Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University
2009
Philadelphia
PA
Internship
Fletcher Allen Health Care, University of Vermont
2010
Burlington
VT
Residency
Pediatrics
Fletcher Allen Health Care, University of Vermont
2012
Burlington
VT
Fellowship
Allergy & Immunology
Boston Children's Hospital
2014
Boston
MA
Fellowship
Harvard Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine Training Program
2016
Boston
MA
Certifications
American Board of Pediatrics (Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine)
American Board of Allergy & Immunology (General)
American Board of Pediatrics (General)
Professional History
Dr. Amy O’Connell is a physician scientist who has clinical training in pediatrics, allergy/immunology, and neonatology. She attended medical and graduate school at what is now Jefferson University in Philadelphia and did her pediatrics residency at the University of Vermont. She has been in Boston since 2012 when she started her fellowship training at Boston Children’s Hospital, completing fellowships in allergy/immunology in 2014 and neonatal perinatal medicine in 2017. Her research focuses on developmental biology and neonatal immunity. The biggest focuses of the laboratory are intestinal stem cell biology and immune maturation in former preterm infants.
Approach to Care
My passion is taking care of critically ill babies and their families in a team-centered environment, and that is why I am a neonatologist at Boston Children’s Hospital. I help babies and infants with respiratory failure, congenital heart disease, prematurity, complex surgical problems, and a host of other diseases, from the common to the rare. In addition, I oversee infection control for the unit and make sure we are always doing our best to minimize the risk of hospital-acquired infections.
Publications
Necrotizing enterocolitis causes increased ileal goblet cell loss in Wnt2b KO mice. View Abstract
Cataloguing the postnatal small intestinal transcriptome during the first postnatal month. View Abstract
A 4-Month-Old With Jaundice, Lethargy, and Emesis. View Abstract
Next generation sequencing reveals skewing of the T and B cell receptor repertoires in patients with wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. View Abstract
Paravertebral mushroom: identification of a novel species of Phellinus as a human pathogen in chronic granulomatous disease. View Abstract
Successful desensitization to brentuximab vedotin after anaphylaxis. View Abstract
Human and mouse macrophages collaborate with neutrophils to kill larval Strongyloides stercoralis. View Abstract
Major basic protein from eosinophils and myeloperoxidase from neutrophils are required for protective immunity to Strongyloides stercoralis in mice. View Abstract
Soluble extract from the nematode Strongyloides stercoralis induces CXCR2 dependent/IL-17 independent neutrophil recruitment. View Abstract
IL-4(-/-) mice with lethal Mesocestoides corti infections--reduced Th2 cytokines and alternatively activated macrophages. View Abstract