Maryana Shenderov, M.D.

Headshot of Maryana Shenderov
Female

Languages: English, Hebrew, Russian

Expertise

Cardiovascular Device Infections, Chronic Sinonasal Infection and Ear Disease, Hardware Infections, Healthcare Associated Infections, Infectious Diseases, Infectious Diseases of the Skin, Odontogenic Infection, Prosthetic Joint Infections, Respiratory Tract Infections, Spinal Infection, Surgical Infections, Urinary Tract Infections ...read more

Locations

The Johns Hopkins Hospital

600 N. Wolfe Street
Brady Building, # 522B
Baltimore, MD 21287 map

Background

Dr. Maryana Shenderov is on the faculty at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Her area of clinical expertise is infectious disease.

She earned her M.D. from SUNY Downstate Medical Center. She completed her residency and a fellowship in infectious diseases at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Dr. Maryana Shenderov sees patients at the Greenspring Station and Bartlett Infectious Diseases Clinics and also provides inpatient consultations at Johns Hopkins Hospital, with a commitment to excellent and collaborative patient care. 

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Departments / Divisions

Education

Degrees

  • MD; SUNY Downstate Medical Center College of Medicine (2011)

Residencies

  • Internal Medicine; University of Maryland Medical Center (2014)

Fellowships

  • Infectious Diseases; University of Maryland Medical Center (2016)

Board Certifications

  • American Board of Internal Medicine (Infectious Disease) (2017)
  • American Board of Internal Medicine (Internal Medicine) (2014)

Activities & Honors

Memberships

  • Infectious Disease Society of America

Patient Ratings & Comments

The Patient Rating score is an average of all responses to physician related questions on the national CG-CAHPS Medical Practice patient experience survey through Press Ganey. Responses are measured on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the best score. Comments are also gathered from our CG-CAHPS Medical Practice Survey through Press Ganey and displayed in their entirety. Patients are de-identified for confidentiality and patient privacy.

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