MediFind found 1468 doctor with experience in COVID-19 near Maryland, US. Of these, 1250 are Experienced, 184 are Advanced and 30 are Distinguished.
Johns Hopkins Health Care & Surgery Center - Green Spring Station, Lutherville
Dr. Robin Avery is an infectious disease physician who joined the Johns Hopkins faculty in 2012, with two decades of experience in transplant infectious disease. She is a past chair of the American Society of Transplantation (AST) Infectious Disease Community of Practice, was a co-editor of the first edition of the AST ID Guidelines, and serves on a Guidelines Committee for the Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) on immunizations in the immunocompromised host. She was the founding head of the Transplant Infectious Disease Section at the Cleveland Clinic and served as the founding director of the Cleveland Clinic Transplant ID Special Fellowship, authoring a curriculum that served as the basis for curricula later endorsed by the AST and IDSA. Her clinical and research interests include pre-transplant donor and recipient evaluation, and prevention and treatment of post-transplant infections, particularly transplant-associated viruses, viral load monitoring, novel therapies for CMV, hypogammaglobulinemia, immunizations, and strategies for safer living post-transplant. She has a strong interest in patient education and co-authored the script for a video designed to educate patients on decreasing post-transplant infection risks. Dr. Avery is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Cytomegalic Inclusion Disease, Cytomegalovirus Infection, COVID-19, and Sepsis.
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Dr. Werbel is a physician-scientist who provides consultative care for patients at Johns Hopkins who experience infectious disease complications before and after organ transplant, as well as in the setting of solid tumors or blood cancers. His research with the Johns Hopkins Transplant Research Center uses a combination of epidemiological and laboratory methods to better personalize the prevention of infectious complications among patients with complex immunodeficiencies. This includes using national cohort studies and clinical trials to optimize the use of vaccines and other prophylactic therapies for high-risk immunosuppressed populations. Dr. Werbel is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are COVID-19, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), HIV/AIDS, and Hepatitis.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Daniel Brodie is an Intensive Care Medicine specialist and a Pulmonary Medicine provider in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Brodie is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), Respiratory Acidosis, COVID-19, Lung Transplant, and Embolectomy.
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Wound Care Center Elkton
James Ley is an Infectious Disease provider in Elkton, Maryland. Dr. Ley has been practicing medicine for over 39 years and is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are Cellulitis, Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia, COVID-19, and Osteomyelitis.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Hager is a specialist in Critical Care Medicine. He is an expert in the diagnosis and management of all forms of acute respiratory failure, including asthma, pneumonia, C.O.P.D., neuromuscular diseases, and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. He also has extensive experience in the management of other life-threatening conditions such as pulmonary embolism, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, shock from sepsis, hypovolemia, and heart disease, and metabolic emergencies such as diabetic ketoacidosis and hyperosmolar states. Dr. Hager is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), COVID-19, Cerebral Hypoxia, and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS).
Greenspring Valley Cardiovascular Associates-Quarry Lake
Paul Gurbel is a Cardiologist in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Gurbel is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are Acute Coronary Syndrome, Coronary Heart Disease, Heart Attack, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI), and Angioplasty.
Kathleen Neuzil is an Infectious Disease provider in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Neuzil is rated as a Distinguished provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Typhoid Fever, Salmonella Enterocolitis, Flu, and COVID-19.
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Sophia Purekal is a primary care provider, practicing in Addiction Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Purekal is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are COVID-19, Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C), Opioid Use Disorder, and Glucocorticoid-Remediable Aldosteronism.
Johns Hopkins Outpatient Center
Dr. Nisha A. Gilotra is a cardiologist in the Johns Hopkins Medicine Division of Cardiology with expertise in advanced heart failure, including the care of heart transplant and ventricular assist device patients. Dr. Gilotra specializes in inflammatory cardiomyopathies, including sarcoidosis, myocarditis and inherited causes of cardiomyopathy. Dr. Gilotra received her medical degree from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, PA. She completed her medical residency, general cardiology fellowship and advanced heart failure fellowship at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Between fellowships, she served as an Assistant Chief of Service for the Department of Medicine. Dr. Gilotra is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Sarcoidosis, Myocarditis, Cardiomyopathy, Heart Transplant, and Endoscopy.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Richard Moore is recognized for mentorship of medical students, residents, fellows, and junior faculty in HIV/AIDS Research. Winner of the David M. Levine Mentorship Awards in the General Internal Medicine Department, he is an expert in pharmacoepidemiology, clinical epidemiology, and health services research. Now serving as the Director of the Moore Clinic for HIV Care, which began in 1984, he has influenced the careers of young scholars not only in General Internal Medicine, but also in the Infectious Disease Division. His colleagues and mentees praise him for his accessibility, his patience, his scientific candor, his instinct for compelling research, his insight, and his abilities as a teacher and editor. Dr. Moore has authored 129 original manuscripts, 24 chapters, reviews and letters. For his medical degree he attended Vanderbilt University School of Medicine where he also completed his Internship and Residency in the Department of Medicine. A fellowship, completed at Johns Hopkins University, Department of Medicine, Division of Internal Medicine, was followed by a Masters of Health Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology. Dr. Moore is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are HIV/AIDS, Sepsis, Hepatitis C, Hepatitis, and Gastrostomy.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Gregory Kirk is a professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He holds joint appointments in oncology and, at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in epidemiology. His areas of clinical expertise include epidemiology, hepatitis, HIV, AIDS and infectious diseases. He serves as the vice chair for clinical and translational research at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Dr. Kirk received his undergraduate degree from Oklahoma State University. He earned a Ph.D. and M.P.H. from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He earned his M.D. from the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center College of Medicine. He completed a residency in preventative medicine at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and in internal medicine at Georgetown University. He performed a fellowship in infectious diseases at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. His research focuses on understanding and preventing the long-term consequences of chronic HIV infection, particularly the malignant complications of HIV and viral hepatitis. He has extensive research and clinical experience in Africa, leading the Gambia Liver Cancer Study, one of the largest studies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) performed in the continent, in addition to years of collaborative research in Uganda. Dr. Kirk pioneered the use of elastography and application of novel aflatoxin-associated biomarkers of HCC risk to be applied in Consortium projects. He has strong, multidisciplinary team leadership skills as principal investigator of the ALIVE cohort and several other collaborative studies in Baltimore. Dr. Kirk is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis C, Hepatitis, and Hepatitis B.
Johns Hopkins Health Care & Surgery Center - Green Spring Station, Lutherville
Dr. Andrea L. Cox is a professor of Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases and is a member of the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center. She holds joint appointments in Oncology and at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in Molecular Microbiology and Immunology. She is an internationally recognized leader in studies of immune responses in immunocompetent and immunocompromised patient populations to viral infections and vaccines against them, including SARS-Co-V-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19), HIV, hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV). Dr. Cox earned her Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Virginia, where she characterized peptides that drive T cell responses. She then earned her M.D. and completed internal medicine residency and infectious disease fellowship training at Johns Hopkins. She leads the largest prospective cohort study of acute HCV infection, designed to enable detailed molecular analysis of HCV transmission, host immune responses, and virus sequence evolution. She co-led the first prophylactic HCV vaccine trial in individuals at risk of HCV infection. She leads a multidisciplinary international team investigating HCV-specific immune responses to improve vaccine development against HCV, is the lead immunologist on a clinical trial of HBV vaccines in people living with HIV, and co-leads a large team investigating immune responses to COVID-19 infection and vaccines. In addition to her research on viral infections and vaccines, Dr. Cox is actively involved in clinical care of patients with HCV, HIV, and HBV infections. Dr. Cox serves as the director of the Medical Scientist Training Program. A teacher, advisor, and mentor of physician-scientists and scientists, Dr. Cox mentors Ph.D. students in the Johns Hopkins Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, and the Immunology graduate training programs. Dr. Cox is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Hepatitis C, Hepatitis, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), and COVID-19.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Kelly Gebo is a graduate of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She also earned an MPH in Epidemiology from The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She completed residency training in Internal Medicine at The Johns Hopkins Hospital followed by an infectious diseases fellowship and two additional years of fellowship training as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, also at Hopkins. Her clinical and research interests include clinical outcomes and healthcare utilization research within infectious diseases. She was Director of the JHU Public Health Studies Program between the Krieger School for Arts and Sciences and the Bloomberg School for Public Health, was an American Council of Education Fellow (hosted at the University of Pennsylvania) and was the inaugural Vice Provost for Education at Johns Hopkins. She was on sabbatical at Stanford University School of Medicine 2019-20 and served as the Chief Medical and Scientific Officer for the All of Us Research Program 2018-2020. She currently serves as the director of the Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Scholars Program and is Deputy Director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Clinical and Translational Research. She has mentored undergraduate, public health and medical students, trainees, and junior faculty on infectious diseases and health services projects. She has authored or co-authored numerous chapters and over 250 papers. She is a member of the American Society of Clinical Investigation and has been awarded the David Levine Prize for mentoring at Johns Hopkins. LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/kelly-gebo-13377811/. Dr. Gebo is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are HIV/AIDS, Myelitis, AIDS Dysmorphic Syndrome, and AIDS Dementia Complex.
Johns Hopkins Health Care & Surgery Center - Green Spring Station, Lutherville
Dr. Erin D. Michos is a Professor of Medicine within the Division of Cardiology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, with joint appointment in the Department of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is the Director of Women's Cardiovascular Health and the Associate Director of Preventive Cardiology within the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease. Dr. Michos is an internationally known expert in Preventive Cardiology and Women’s Health, having authored >700 publications and 11 book chapters. Her research involves (1) Women’s Cardiovascular Health; (2) Lipids and Lipid management; (3) Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic and Obesity disease management (4) Coronary artery calcium, inflammation and biomarkers of cardiovascular risk. She is the co-Editor-in-Chief for the American Journal of Preventive Cardiology. She is Co-Director of the IMPACT Center (Improving Participation Among Diverse Populations in Cardiovascular Clinical Trials) at Johns Hopkins, funded by the American Heart Association (AHA). She is a co-investigator in several NIH-funded studies including the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities cohorts. She has served as the Training Director for four AHA Strategic Focused Research Networks. She has mentored over 60 individuals and the recipient of 2 mentoring awards. Additionally, she was the recipient of the Nanette Wegner Award for Women’s Health Medical Leadership by the Women Heart Organization and the Donna Vogel Women’s Health Champion Award by Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Michos completed medical school at Northwestern University, Internal Medicine residency and Cardiology fellowship at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, and a Masters of Health Science degree at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Dr. Michos is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Atherosclerosis, Vitamin D Deficiency, Heart Failure, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI), and Thrombectomy.
Johns Hopkins Health Care & Surgery Center - Green Spring Station, Lutherville
Dr. Wendy Post is professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and holds a joint appointment as professor of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She is the Lou and Nancy Grasmick Professor of Cardiology. Dr. Post is a cardiologist at the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and the Echocardiography Laboratory and is associate faculty at the Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research at Johns Hopkins University. She is Director of Cardiovascular Research for the Division of Cardiology and Director of Research for the Hopkins Cardiovascular Fellowship Training Program. Dr. Post received her undergraduate degree in biology from Harvard University. She earned her medical degree from Columbia College of Surgeons and Physicians, Columbia University. After completing her internship and residency at Harvard Medical School’s Beth Israel Hospital, Dr. Post received her master’s degree in epidemiology from the Harvard School of Public Health. She was a research fellow at the Framingham Heart Study, in Framingham, Mass., and completed a fellowship in cardiology at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Dr. Post joined the Johns Hopkins faculty in 1997. Dr. Post’s research interests include prediction and prevention of coronary heart disease and sudden cardiac death, noninvasive imaging of subclinical atherosclerosis, genetics of cardiovascular disease, sex and racial/ethnic differences in cardiovascular disease, and cardiovascular disease in HIV/AIDS and COVID-19. She is the chair of the steering committee, and the principal investigator for the Hopkins field center for the NIH-funded Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). Dr. Post also leads Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) Cardiovascular Disease sub-studies. She has been the PI for three R01 grants from NHLBI investigating cardiovascular disease in HIV, and is dual PI on the cardiology NHLBI training grant, which has been continuously funded for over 45 years. Dr. Post is a manuscript reviewer for multiple publications and is currently associate editor of Circulation. She has over 350 peer-reviewed research publications. Dr. Post was elected as a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI) in 2015. She mentors multiple medical students, medical house staff, fellows and junior faculty. She was a member of the Hopkins Professorial Promotions Committee and a former Johns Hopkins University Provost Fellow. She was co-chair of the Johns Hopkins University Committee on the Biomedical Scientific Workforce. Dr. Post is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Atherosclerosis, Coronary Heart Disease, Carotid Artery Disease, Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT), and Aortic Valve Replacement.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Theodore Iwashyna is a Pulmonary Medicine provider in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Iwashyna is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), Cerebral Hypoxia, and COVID-19.
Johns Hopkins Infusion - Care At Home
Thomas Cudjoe is a primary care provider, practicing in Geriatrics in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Cudjoe is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. His top areas of expertise are COVID-19, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), and Dementia.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Olivia Kates is an Infectious Disease provider in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Kates is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are COVID-19, Diphtheria, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), and Listeriosis.
Johns Hopkins Outpatient Center
Dr. Anum Minhas attended medical school at Duke University and trained in internal medicine at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. During her Cardiology fellowship training at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, she served as the Chief Cardiology fellow and was honored to receive the Marie-Josee and Henry R. Kravis Endowed Fellowship and the Lou and Nancy Grasmick Endowed Research Fellowship (2021-2022). She was also awarded the Dlabal Clinical Research award for originality and creativity in research. During her fellowship, she completed additional training and obtained a Master of Health Science with focus in cardiovascular epidemiology as an NIH T32 postdoctoral fellow at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She also completed additional clinical training during fellowship in Advanced Echocardiography, and designed and completed an inaugural fellowship in Cardio-Obstetrics. Dr. Minhas joined the Johns Hopkins Cardiology faculty with a clinical focus in women's cardiovascular health, specifically Cardio-Obstetrics, or cardiac disease around pregnancy. She also attends in the coronary critical care unit and the echocardiography laboratory. She was selected as a recipient of an NIH-sponsored KL2 award through the Clinical Research Scholars Program. Her current research focuses on preventing and managing cardiovascular disease associated with pregnancy complications, such as preeclampsia. She is the recipient of several grants and has coauthored multiple publications and book chapters in women's cardiovascular health. She hopes to use her research to raise awareness of and provide insights into mechanisms of pregnancy-associated cardiac disease and promote health equity in maternal health. Videos Community ConversationMaternal Health Recent News Articles and Media Coverage https://the1a.org/segments/in-good-health-unpacking-heart-disease-in-women/ In Good Health: Medical missteps for women with heart disease, NPR Podcast. Dr. Minhas is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are Peripartum Cardiomyopathy, Pulmonary Edema, COVID-19, and Cardiomyopathy.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. Yukari Manabe is a Professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases in the Department of Medicine with secondary appointments in the Bloomberg School of Public Health Department of International Health and the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Immunology. Dr. Manabe began her career working on the basic science aspects of tuberculosis (TB) immunopathogenesis in comparative animal models of infection, particularly latency, reactivation, and immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) in the rabbit model within the Johns Hopkins Center for Tuberculosis Research. In 2007, she was seconded to the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) at Makerere College of Health Sciences as the Associate Medical Laboratory Director of the College of American Pathologists certified Makerere University-Johns Hopkins University Clinical Core Lab to study antiretroviral associated TB and IRIS. She then became the Head of Research at the IDI in 2008 until 2012 where she built research capacity and infrastructure to train Ugandan investigators. Since returning to Hopkins, she has become the PI of the Johns Hopkins POC STD Center (U54 funded through NIH) which is part of the newly formed Johns Hopkins Center for Innovative Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases. The Center develops new diagnostics, funds development for point-of-care diagnostics, evaluates (validation and verification) new technology, and performs pre-clinical studies to accelerate the development of infectious disease assays (STIs, TB, acute febrile illness, HIV, syphilis, viral hepatitis). Dr. Manabe is particularly interested in rapid, point-of-care infectious disease diagnostics suitable for the resource-limited settings particularly in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Her research has focused on accuracy testing of various rapid, point-of-care diagnostics for HIV and related infectious diseases of clinical importance in SSA. Studies have ranged from evaluations of performance accuracy through clinical implementation science studies on the patient-centered outcomes and impactful use of new rapid diagnostics. Dr. Manabe obtained her undergraduate degree from Yale University and her M.D. from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. After completing both her residency in Internal Medicine and fellowship in Infectious Diseases at Johns Hopkins Hospital, she joined the faculty in 1999. Dr. Manabe is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of COVID-19. Her top areas of expertise are HIV/AIDS, Cryptococcosis, Gonorrhea, Meningitis, and Tissue Biopsy.
Last Updated: 02/22/2026


















