Benjamin S. Abella | |
Birth Place: | Chicago, Illinois |
Nationality: | American |
Occupation: | Physician, emergency medicine practitioner and academic |
Education: | B.A., Biochemistry M.Phil., Genetics M.D. |
Alma Mater: | Washington University in St. Louis Cambridge University Johns Hopkins School of Medicine |
Workplaces: | University of Pennsylvania |
Benjamin S. Abella is an American physician, emergency medicine practitioner, internist, academic and researcher. He is the William G. Baxt Professor and Vice Chair of Research at University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Emergency Medicine. He directs the Center for Resuscitation Science[1] and the Penn Acute Research Collaboration at the University. He has participated in developing international CPR guidelines.[2]
Abella has published over 200 scholarly papers regarding cardiac arrest, myocardial perfusion, therapeutic hypothermia, CPR delivery and resuscitation.[3] He is a fellow of the American Heart Association and the European Resuscitation Council.[4]
Abella was born and raised in Hyde Park, Chicago. His father, Isaac Abella, was a physics professor at the University of Chicago, and his mother, Mary Ann Abella, was a professor of Art at Chicago State University. He has one sibling, a sister Sarah Abella. In high school, Abella showed aptitude for science, placing 3rd nationally in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search.[5]
Abella completed his B.A. in Biochemistry from Washington University in St. Louis in 1992. He completed his M.Phil. in Genetics from the University of Cambridge in the following year. In 1998, Abella received his MD degree from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.[1]
Abella joined University of Pennsylvania's Department of Emergency Medicine as an Assistant Professor in the early 2000s. In 2013, he was promoted to Associate Professor and to Professor in 2017. Along with academic appointments, he has also been involved with administrative responsibilities. From 2007 to 2017, he co-chaired the Hospital Clinical Emergencies Committee and was appointed as Vice Chair of Research at the Department of Emergency Medicine during this tenure. In 2016, he was appointed as Director of Center for Resuscitation Science and of Penn Acute Research Collaboration.[1]
Abella chaired the Council on Cardiopulmonary, Critical Care and Resuscitation for the American Heart Association from 2015 till 2017, and served as the Co-Chair of the American Heart Association Resuscitation Science Symposium from 2014 until 2022. He also served on the Obama campaign Medical Advisory Board.[1]
Abella has discussed cardiac arrest and his research work on Good Morning America,[6] National Geographic, and other national media sources. He worked with Sanjay Gupta on the CNN documentary Cheating Death and is featured in Gupta's book of the same title.[7]
Abella currently serves as an emergency care consultant to the National Basketball Association and was appointed by Governor Josh Shapiro to the Pennsylvania Board of Medicine in 2023.[8]
Abella has conducted research on sudden cardiac arrest, myocardial perfusion and targeted temperature management. He has also worked on evaluation of CPR and resuscitation performance, testing of new teaching methods of CPR, assessment of neurologic outcomes after cardiac arrest and methods to improve the application of therapeutic hypothermia. He is the developer of a training course for post-arrest care and targeted temperature management, known as the Penn TTM Academy.[9]
Abella studied the practical implementation of TTM after cardiac arrest and presented a detailed management plan for the addition of TTM for in the care of out of hospital cardiac arrest survivors.[10] He developed an important animal model to study post-arrest TTM. He was one of the first to establish that intra-arrest TTM could dramatically improve arrest outcomes, which has subsequently sparked clinical trials to study the same concept.[11]
Abella research in this area indicated an improved CPR quality through a combination of a training procedure (termed “RAPID” post arrest training) along with real-time audiovisual feedback. This combined procedure also led to a greater rate of return of spontaneous circulation.[12] In early 2010s, Abella published an article about the importance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality and presented several practical approaches such as using real-time CPR sensing, physiologic monitoring and metronome prompting in order to improve the CPR performance.[13]