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Erin M. Treemarcki
( out of 23 reviews )

Erin M. Treemarcki, DO

Languages spoken: English

Clinical Locations

Primary Location

Eccles Primary Children's Outpatient Services

81 N Mario Capecchi Drive
Salt Lake City , UT 84113

Layton Parkway Clinic

Primary Children's Hospital Outpatient Services at Layton Hospital, Pediatric Rheumatology
201 W Layton Pkwy
Layton , UT 84041

Dr. Erin Treemarcki received her undergraduate education at the University of Notre Dame and her medical degree from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine. She completed her residency in Pediatricsat Driscoll Children’s Hospital in Texas and a fellowship in Pediatric Rheumatology at Hospital for Special Surgery and New York- Presbyterian Hospital Weill Cornell Medicine in New York. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Pediatric Rheumatology division at University of Utah.

Dr. Treemarcki treats children with rheumatic diseases including juvenile idiopathic arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, dermatomyositis, vasculitis, and autoinflammatory diseases. Her research interests include spondyloarthritis and wellness in children with rheumatologic disease. She is also interested in quality improvement.

Board Certification

American Board of Pediatrics (Sub: Peds Rheumatology)
American Board of Pediatrics (Pediatrics)

Patient Rating

4.9 /5
( out of 23 reviews )

The patient rating score is an average of all responses on our patient experience survey. The rating averages scores for all questions about care from our providers.

The scale on which responses are measured is 1 to 5 with 5 being the best score.

Patient Comments

Patient comments are gathered from our patient experience survey and displayed in their entirety. For the convenience of our visitors, some patient comments have been translated from their original language into English while preserving their original meaning as accurately as possible. Patients are de-identified for confidentiality and patient privacy.

RIVERTON CLINICS

Very disappointed. Horrible bedside manner. Asked why we were there. We explained. Her response, "So, what do you want from me?" Seriously?! Then told we were referred to the wrong specialty, which was partially true. She did an extremely poor job of explaining anything she said. I had to always pull answers out of her, e.g., what do you mean you are the wrong doctor? We state, "she has MCTD." Her response- "No, she doesn't." what do you mean she doesn't? That's what we were told and that's what the lab work appears to show? Anyway, her responses were always short and not informational. We didn't wait 4 months to see a "specialist" to not only be treated so poorly, but to get no where w/ respect to diagnoses, etc. Last thing she said to my daughter was "the good thing is you don't have anything that isn't treatable." My daughter has gone 8 years without anyone being able to figure out and treat her pain, so there was a huge lack of empathy and understanding.

EXTERNAL SITE

Helped us get to the correct person to help my daughter

EXTERNAL SITE

Helped us get to the correct person to help my daughter

RIVERTON CLINICS

Very disappointed. Horrible bedside manner. Asked why we were there. We explained. Her response, "So, what do you want from me?" Seriously?! Then told we were referred to the wrong specialty, which was partially true. She did an extremely poor job of explaining anything she said. I had to always pull answers out of her, e.g., what do you mean you are the wrong doctor? We state, "she has MCTD." Her response- "No, she doesn't." what do you mean she doesn't? That's what we were told and that's what the lab work appears to show? Anyway, her responses were always short and not informational. We didn't wait 4 months to see a "specialist" to not only be treated so poorly, but to get no where w/ respect to diagnoses, etc. Last thing she said to my daughter was "the good thing is you don't have anything that isn't treatable." My daughter has gone 8 years without anyone being able to figure out and treat her pain, so there was a huge lack of empathy and understanding.

Dr. Erin Treemarcki received her undergraduate education at the University of Notre Dame and her medical degree from Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine. She completed her residency in Pediatricsat Driscoll Children’s Hospital in Texas and a fellowship in Pediatric Rheumatology at Hospital for Special Surgery and New York- Presbyterian Hospital Weill Cornell Medicine in New York. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Pediatric Rheumatology division at University of Utah.

Dr. Treemarcki treats children with rheumatic diseases including juvenile idiopathic arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, dermatomyositis, vasculitis, and autoinflammatory diseases. Her research interests include spondyloarthritis and wellness in children with rheumatologic disease. She is also interested in quality improvement.

Board Certification and Academic Information

Academic Departments Pediatrics -Associate Professor (Clinical)
Board Certification
American Board of Pediatrics (Sub: Peds Rheumatology)
American Board of Pediatrics (Pediatrics)

Education history

Undergraduate Biochemistry and Anthropology - University of Notre Dame B.S.
Professional Medical Osteopathic Medicine - Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine D.O.
Residency Pediatrics - Driscoll Children¿s Hospital Resident
Fellowship Pediatric Rheumatology - Hospital for Special Surgery Fellow

Selected Publications

Journal Article

  1. Treemarcki, EM; Hersh, A (2020). Health-Related Quality of Life Measures in Childhood-Onset Systematic Lupus Erythematosus. Arthritis care and research, 72(S10), 593-607.
  2. Rubinstein TB, Ogbu EA, Rodriguez M, Waqar L, Woo JMP, Davis AM, Lapin WB, Ng L, Treemarcki E, von Scheven E, Knight AM, CARRA Mental Health Workgroup (2020). Prioritized Agenda for Mental Health Research in Pediatric Rheumatology from the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance Mental Health Workgroup. The Journal of rheumatology, 47(11), 1687-1695.
  3. Basiaga ML, Stern SM, Mehta JJ, Edens C, Randell RL, Pomorska A, Irga-Jaworska N, Ibarra MF, Bracaglia C, Nicolai R, Susic G, Boneparth A, Srinivasalu H, Dizon B, Kamdar AA, Goldberg B, Knupp-Oliveira S, Antón J, Mosquera JM, Appenzeller S, O'Neil KM, Protopapas SA, Saad-Magalhães C, Akikusa JD, Thatayatikom A, Cha S, Nieto-González JC, Lo MS, Treemarcki EB, Yokogawa N, Lieberman SM, Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance and the International Childhood Sjögren Syndrome Workgroup (2021). Childhood Sjögren syndrome: features of an international cohort and application of the 2016 ACR/EULAR classification criteria. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 60(7), 3144-3155.
  4. Srinivasalu H, Treemarcki EB, Redmond (2021). Advances in Juvenile Spondyloarthritis. Current rheumatology reports, 23(9), 70.
  5. Weiss PF, Brandon TG, Ryan ME, Treemarcki EB, Armendariz S, Wright TB, Godiwala C, Stoll ML, Xiao R, Lovell (2021). Development and validation of the juvenile spondyloarthritis disease flare (JSpAflare) measure: Ascertaining flare in patients with inactive disease. Arthritis care & research,
  6. Srinivasalu H, Treemarcki EB, Rumsey DG, Weiss PF, Colbert RA, CARRA Spondyloarthritis Workgroup & the CARRA Registry Investigators (2022). Modified Juvenile Spondyloarthritis Disease Activity Index in the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA) Registry. The Journal of rheumatology, 50(4), 532-537.
  7. Carter-Febres M, Lozano-Chinga M, Thomsen W, Treemarcki EB, James KE, Fluchel (2022). VARIATION OF DIAGNOSTIC APPROACHES AND TREATMENT PRACTICES FOR HLH/MAS AMONG PEDIATRIC SUBSPECIALISTS. The Journal of pediatrics,
  8. Beaver M, Jepson B, Binka E, Truong D, Crandall H, McFarland C, Williams R, Ou Z, Treemarcki E, Jensen D, Minich LL, Colquitt J (2024). Baseline Echocardiography and Laboratory Findings in MIS-C and Associations with Clinical Illness Severity. Pediatric cardiology, 45(3), 560-569.
  9. Treemarcki EB, Lieberman SM, Basiaga ML, Orrock J, Edens C, Thatayatikom A, Srinivasalu H, Bracaglia C, Inoue Y, Jelusic M, Bloom JL, Robinson A, Nguyen J, Go E, Martinez P, Randell RL, Tiger S, Tiger G, Diianni J, Cha S, Appenzeller S, Singer NG, Stern SM, CARRA Childhood Sjogren Disease Workgrou (2024). Opportunities in childhood Sjogren's disease-Results from collaborative roundtable discussions. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 63(12), e321-e324.
  10. Cunningham NR, Danguecan AN, Ely SL, Amponsah Y, Davis A, Edison S, Harris J, Jones JT, Goldstein-Leever A, Manning A, McHugh A, Mui C, Ogbu E, Reitz N, Rodriguez M, Rosenwasser N, Tankanow A, Treemarcki E, Winner K, Rubinstein TB, Knight AM, CARRA Mental Health Workgrou (2025). American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Guidance Statements for Addressing Mental Health Concerns in Youth with Pediatric Rheumatologic Diseases. Arthritis care & research,

Review

  1. Treemarcki EB, Danguecan AN, Cunningham NR, Knight A (2022). Mental Health in Pediatric Rheumatology: An Opportunity to Improve Outcomes. Rheumatic diseases clinics of North America, 48(1), 67-90.