Academic Offices and Administration Division of Infectious Diseases Academic Offices and Administration 1830 East Monument Street, 4th floor Baltimore MD 21205 Tel: 410-955-3150 Fax: 410-614-8488
The Center for Infectious Diseases at Johns Hopkins Bayview provides a full range of diagnostic, consultation, evaluation, treatment and prevention services for a wide variety of infectious disease-related problems. Aside from the treatment of general infectious diseases, our specialties include the diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue infections, infections of prosthetic joints, wound infections, tropical diseases, and reproductive tract infections. All physicians are full-time faculty in the division of infectious disease at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Clinical Global Health Education (CCGHE) provides high quality, locally relevant clinical education to health care providers in resource-limited regions of the world.
The Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health is a unique collaboration between three institutions -- the Bloomberg School of Public Health, the School of Medicine, and the School of Nursing - that harnesses the expertise of its dedicated health and medical professionals to address a myriad of global health challenges: HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, malnutrition, hepatitis, and other threats to health, especially in developing countries. The Center promotes collaboration; marshals resources for research, policy, and programmatic initiatives; recruits dynamic faculty and other professionals; and trains the next generation of leaders in global health. The Center manages the Global Projects Database (http://research.hopkinsglobalhealth.org/SearchProjects.cfm), accessible online, which catalogs all of the international projects being worked on across the university. The database allows Center staff to spot potential synergies and organize collaborations where appropriate between faculty members in order to tackle global health issues in new and unique ways. The Center also implements a variety of programming initiatives focused on providing resources and educational opportunities to faculty, staff, and students in order to keep Hopkins on the cutting edge of global health. To achieve this goal, we offer a global health speakers series, grants for overseas fellowships, full tuition scholarships, and a website full of global health news and resources. Mission: To facilitate and focus the extensive expertise and resources of the Johns Hopkins Institutions together with global collaborators to effectively address and ameliorate the world's most pressing health issues. Thomas C. Quinn, MD, MSc, Director Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH, Associate Director, Public Health Robert C. Bollinger, Jr., MD, MPH, Associate Director, Medicine Nancy Glass, PhD, MPH, RN, Associate Director, Nursing Hampton House 180 624 N. Broadway Baltimore, MD 21205 410-502-9873
The goal of the Johns Hopkins Center for Tuberculosis Research (CTR), founded in 1998, is to contribute to global tuberculosis control through a range of research initiatives in epidemiology, clinical trials, drug development, diagnostics, vaccine development, pathogenesis, and basic biology. The Center strives to be an internationally recognized center of excellence for research, training and clinical practice. The mission of The Center for Tuberculosis Research Laboratory is to apply medical technology towards basic advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of TB, host immunity to TB, mechanisms of spread, and animal models which better emulate the pathology of human disease. With these basic tools we intend to build a translational bridge to more effective drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics for tuberculosis.
HIV Moore Clinic (downtown Johns Hopkins): Outpatient: Carnegie 3, Johns Hopkins Hospital Tel: 410-955-1723 Fax: 410-955-7733
Greenspring Station HIV Moore Clinic (10753 Falls Road, #325 Lutherville MD) Tel: 410-502-8650 Fax: 410-502-7029
The mission of the Department of Hospital Epidemiology and Infection Control is to promote patient safety by reducing the risk of acquiring and transmitting infections; and to become a leader in health care epidemiology and infection control field.
Transplant Medicine Infectious Diseases Viral Hepatitis Center We combine interests in the epidemiology, host genetics, host immune response, viral pathogenesis, and viral evolution to discover new ways to understand, treat, and prevent viral hepatitis infections and their complications. The Viral Hepatitis Center has a longstanding history of excellence and leadership in direct patient care and clinical research in the management of viral hepatitis infection. We evaluate and manage patients with confirmed or suspected acute or chronic infections due to hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV), hepatitis D/delta virus (HDV), including those with HIV/AIDS.
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