Danielle Jimenez

Communications Specialist, Department of Emergency Medicine

Danielle Jimenez has spent 15 years sharing stories that connect people and inspire change, with experience spanning healthcare, government, the military, and nonprofits. At Michigan Medicine’s Department of Emergency Medicine, she shines a light on the people, research, and innovations shaping the future of emergency care. She’s passionate about making complex ideas clear and compelling, celebrating the people behind the work, and using storytelling to build understanding and spark action. Contact [email protected]

Danielle Jimenez
A group of attendees to the conference from U-M pose for a group photo.
Department News

Advocacy in Action: Michigan Emergency Physicians Lead the Charge for Change in Washington

From physician mental health to rising patient volumes and funding cuts, every year Michigan Medicine faculty and trainees join the national conversation at the American College of Emergency Physicians’ (ACEP) annual Leadership and Advocacy Conference in Washington, D.C.
Collage of new faculty
Department News

Welcoming Our New Emergency Medicine Faculty – 2025

The Department of Emergency Medicine is proud to welcome an accomplished and inspiring group of new faculty members to Michigan Medicine. Each brings unique expertise, fresh energy, and a passion for advancing emergency care, research, and education. From clinical innovation to creative pursuits outside the hospital, their stories highlight the diverse talent shaping the department’s future.
A panel sits on stage and speak
Department News

Michigan Medicine’s Department of Emergency Medicine Hosts International Meeting on Diagnostic Excellence

The Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Michigan welcomed clinicians, educators, researchers, administrators, patients, and advocates from around the world for the Diagnostic Excellence 2025 (DEX25) meeting, held October 27–29 at the Michigan League in Ann Arbor. This three-day gathering focused on advancing the safety and accuracy of clinical diagnosis through science, education, and collaboration.
Kids ride scooters
Department News

University of Michigan Hosts Mcity Safety and Science Event for Middle School Students

Dozens of middle schoolers from underserved communities visited the University of Michigan Transportation research Institute’s (UMTRI) MCity test facility to explore hands-on lessons in science and safety.
lacrosse player UM playing on field in action
Health Lab

A U-M lacrosse player's rare life saving procedure in the emergency room

When a University of Michigan lacrosse player walked into an urgent care clinic with bruises on his legs and vision changes, a rare procedure available at Michigan Medicine saved his life.
Courtney reid gives out coins to her survivor team
Department News

It takes a village: Michigan Medicine celebrates cardiac arrest survivors

On October 14, Michigan Medicine’s Department of Emergency Medicine and the Samuel and Jean Frankel Cardiovascular Center, with support from the Max Harry Weil Institute for Critical Care Research and Innovation, hosted the first-ever Cardiac Arrest Survivor Celebration Dinner. Survivors gathered with the very people who once fought to keep them alive, in a night that honored not only patients who beat the odds, but also the many hands that made their recoveries possible.
Thompson family photo on the beach
Department News

Spotting sepsis fast: How Michigan Medicine’s ED is saving lives

In 2022, the Emergency Department launched its sepsis team, which partners with sepsis teams across the hospital to strengthen recognition and care. Nowhere have improvements been greater than in the Adult Emergency Department. Innovations such as nurse-initiated sepsis screening, electronic medical record alerts, and “sepsis huddles” have improved communications and bundle compliance for patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. Since 2020, these efforts have reduced mortality by 6.5% — an estimated 393 lives saved.
Doctors rushing through the hospital with a patient bed
Department News

Making emergency care better, faster, and more compassionate

If you’ve ever waited in an emergency department, you know it can be stressful and long. At Michigan Medicine’s Adult Emergency Services (AES), teams are working to improve comfort, communication, bedside technology, and, ultimately, reduce wait times.
Graphic image of a brain with EEG waves across it
Department News

Could ketamine be the key to stopping life-threatening seizures?

Every second counts during a prolonged seizure. Known as status epilepticus, these seizures won’t stop on their own, and if not treated fast, they can lead to brain damage, ICU stays, or death. Michigan Medicine is now leading a major clinical trial that could change how these patients are treated in the emergency department. The study, called KESETT (Ketamine add-on therapy for Established Status Epilepticus Treatment Trial), funded by the NIH, will test whether adding ketamine to current treatments can stop seizures more effectively.
Group photo of CES Founders
Department News

From walk-in clinic to national leader: How Michigan Medicine’s Pediatric Emergency Division was built

In the late 1980s, Michigan Medicine’s pediatric emergency care was more like a walk-in clinic tucked in a corner of the adult emergency department. With limited resources and space, and only two physicians trained in pediatric emergency medicine (PEM), with others moonlighting, it was a humble start fueled by a love for kids, grit, and a vision for something better.
A PA talks into her phone, using DAX AI
Department News

The future, fast: Emergency Medicine at U-M positions AI as a department-wide strategy

Artificial intelligence is transforming medicine nationwide — and at the University of Michigan, the Department of Emergency Medicine is moving faster and thinking bigger. Rather than using AI as a one-off tool, the department is adopting it as a core strategy — reshaping everything from education and clinical decision-making to operations, discovery and diagnostics. It’s a vision that places emergency medicine at the forefront of AI’s role in redefining academic medicine.
Dr. Joseph Wider prepares cells for the microscope
Department News

Supercharged science: New high-tech microscopes fuel brain injury research in the Emergency Medicine Department

Thanks to a $1.2 million Department of Defense grant, scientists in the Department of Emergency Medicine can now study cells too fragile to image previously — pushing brain injury research forward with two advanced microscopes and a state-of-the-art brain monitor.
image of a white shape over a mouth of a skull model that's tan on a blue background
Health Lab

Stopping a $40,000 infection with a $40 device

Michigan Medicine’s Department of Emergency Medicine is tackling one of the deadliest and most overlooked hospital-acquired infections with a $40 device.
Residents gather around at the Welcome Picnic
Department News

A day of celebration: Welcoming our new trainees & honoring faculty excellence

This weekend, the Emergency Department came together to welcome our newest class of emergency medicine trainees at the annual Welcome Picnic, at Island Park in Ann Arbor.
Dr. Muraglia smiles for photo.
Department News

A new way to fight sepsis

Sepsis is one of the deadliest conditions treated in emergency departments, and one Michigan Medicine physician-scientist is working on a way to stop it. Dr. Katrina Muraglia, MD, PhD, a resident physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Michigan Medicine and a PhD-trained biochemist, has received a $300,000 Research Training Grant from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Foundation (SAEMF) to support her work developing a novel approach to prevent and treat catheter-associated bloodstream infections, a leading cause of sepsis in hospitals.