KIMBERLY FENTON MD.
Department:
STONY BROOK CHILDREN'S SERVICE
Board Certification:
Pediatrics
Hospital Affiliations:
Stony Brook University Hospital
Gender:
Female
Primary Medical Conditions Treated:
ACUTE LUNG INJURY
ARRHYTHMIA
CARDIOVASCULAR DYSFUNCTION
ETHICS
HEART FAILURE (CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE)
LARYNGOSCOPY
NEUROBLASTOMA
PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE
PEDIATRIC TRAUMA
SEPSIS
TRACHEOSTOMY
TRAUMA
Education and Training
Residency:
New York University Medical Center
Fellowship:
Children¿s National Medical Center, Washington, DC
Academic
Year Appointed at Stony Brook:
2003
Honors, Awards and Grants:
6/04 Excellence in Teaching Award, Department of Pediatrics, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY
Academic Rank:
Assistant Professor
Insurance Plans
AETNA
AFFINITY HEALTH PLAN
AMERICHOICE
APA PARTNERS
BEECH STREET
BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD HMO
BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD OTHER PLANS
BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD PPO
CIGNA HMO
CIGNA PPO
EMPIRE PLAN
FIDELIS CARE NEW YORK
FIRST HEALTH
GHI CBP
GHI HMO
GREAT WEST HEALTHCARE
HEALTH NET
HEALTHFIRST
HEALTHNET FEDERAL SERVICES (TRICARE)
HIP
ISLAND GROUP ADMINISTRATION
MAGNACARE
MEDICAID
MEDICARE
MULTIPLAN
OXFORD FREEDOM PLAN
SUFFOLK HEALTH PLAN
UNITED HEALTHCARE
US FAMILY HEALTH PLAN
VYTRA (except SMART START)
Practice Sites

My Notes
There are 600 + physicians and other health care providers practicing within 18 different clinical entities, or specialty groups that are affiliated with Stony Brook University Physicians (SBU Physicians). Together, these providers offer patients of all ages a comprehensive range of high quality medical services, from primary care to advanced specialty care. The physicians and health care professionals affiliated with SBU Physicians are committed to excellence in service and leadership in clinical care. In their capacity as faculty of the Stony Brook University School of Medicine, they also educate medical students, interns, residents and fellows in many specialties and sub-specialties, and engage in research and clinical trials that help to advance the science of medicine.

My Articles
(1)Epstein HT, Fenton K and Shimpach S: Lead acetate delays rapid postnatal mouse brain and body growth. Life Sciences 1991; 49: 1169-1172
(2)Epstein HT, Newton JT and Fenton K: Lead effects on offspring depend on when mouse mothers were exposed to lead. Biology of the Neonate 1999; 75: 272-278
(3)Fenton KE and Parker MM: Severe sepsis: advances in management and the need to do more. Advances in Sepsis 2004; 3: 75-82
(4)Fenton KE, Sable CA, Bell MJ, Patel KM and Berger JB: Increases in serum levels of troponin I are associated with cardiac dysfunction and disease severity in pediatric patients with septic shock. Pediatric Crit Care Med 2004; 5:533-538