Hannah C Mannem, MD
Pulmonary Critical Care
Additional Locations
Bio & Overview
Hannah Mannem, MD, was born in Evansville, Indiana, and attended St. Louis University for her undergraduate education. She earned her medical degree from Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, then returned to St. Louis for her residency training in internal medicine at Washington University/Barnes-Jewish Hospital. Dr. Mannem then completed a pulmonary/critical care fellowship at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. She joined UVA in 2016, as an assistant professor in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, specializing in interstitial lung disease and lung transplant.
Academic Information
- Department
- Medicine
- Academic Role
- Assistant Professor
- Division
- Pulmonary Critical Care
- Gender
- Female
- Languages
- English
- Age Groups Seen
- Adults (21-65)
Older Adults (65+)
- Primary Education
- Creighton University School of Medicine
- Residency
- University of Washington School of Medicine
- Fellowships
- University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
- Certification
- American Board of Internal Medicine (Critical Care Medicine), American Board of Internal Medicine (Pulmonary Disease), American Board of Internal Medicine (Internal Medicine)
Highlights
Dr. Hannah Mannem video profile
Hi. My name is Hannah Manem. I'm an assistant professor of medicine in the department of pulmonary and critical care medicine at UVA. And my really clinical niche and specialty that I have true passion for is lung transplant. I really love the field because it involves acute critical care needs combined with longitudinal care throughout the patient's life after their lung transplant, so you really get to develop a strong relationship with the patient over time. But they are also very complicated sick patients that you really can make a true, life changing experience for by giving them a lung transplant, and helping to guide them through that process is really something that I enjoy doing. When a new patient comes to lung transplant clinic, it's usually for a pre-evaluation, meaning they have some kind of underlying, endstage lung disease that may shorten their life or gives them a poor quality of life. And they come to see us in transplant clinic to assess whether they'd be a transplant candidate. So the first appointment is usually quite lengthy where we just get a full comprehensive story from them about their medical course. We learn a lot about their social needs, their mental health needs, and their medical needs all together. They also see a bunch of other specialists at the same time, including nutritionist, social work, physical therapy. We like to get an overall sense of the patient as a person and also a sense of their true medical condition and the severity of it. I really love working with people and I love combining the science and biology with the personalities and arts of medicine. That combination together is something that I think is special and I love to be a part of.
Reviews
182 Patient Satisfaction Ratings
Our patient satisfaction ratings are an average of all the survey responses to the below questions a provider got within the past 2 years. To protect your privacy, patients aren't identified.
See more about our patient satisfaction surveys .