Overview
David Rudolph, MD is an instructor and current International Emergency Medicine and Public Health Fellow in the Department of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Rudolph graduated from medical school at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine. He completed his residency training at Johns Hopkins University, where he served as chief resident. Dr. Rudolph's interests include increasing HIV PrEP access, implementation science projects involving comprehensive STI services, mpox surveillance and treatment pathways, and LGBTQIA+ healthcare representation. He works on projects both in Baltimore and in South Africa to increase access to HIV services.
Dr. Rudolph is rated as an Experienced provider by MediFind in the treatment of Monkeypox. His top area of expertise is Monkeypox.
His clinical research consists of co-authoring 3 peer reviewed articles. MediFind looks at clinical research from the past 15 years.
Insurance
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Locations
Baltimore, MD 21287
5755 Cedar Lane, Columbia, MD 21044
4940 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21224
Clinical Research
Clinical research consists of overseeing clinical studies of patients undergoing new treatments and therapies, and publishing articles in peer reviewed medical journals. Providers who actively participate in clinical research are generally at the forefront of the fields and aware of the most up-to-date advances in treatments for their patients.
Sibley Memorial Hospital
Dr. Hansoti is an Associate Professor in Emergency Medicine at John Hopkins University (JHU). She completed her MBChB at Edinburgh University (2006) and an EM residency at the University of Chicago (2012), an MPH from JHU (2013), and a Ph.D. from the University of Cape Town (2016). She has over 100 publications, several research awards and is an active member of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Institutional Review Board (IRB). Her research focuses on the intersection of Global Health, Public Health and Implementation Science. Specifically, she seeks to evaluate the implementation of evidence-based interventions to improve the health of vulnerable patients who present to the ED. Most of her research to date has been based in South Africa, focused on HIV service delivery from the ED. Her domestic research focuses on the implementation of ED-based surveillance activities for COVID-19 and other influenza-like illnesses, and social determienents of health. In addition to her research, a large part of her academic portfolio includes international pandemic response and capacity-building activities. Previously she served as the Learning Director for the USAID-funded, Sustaining Technical and Analytic Resources (STAR) program at PHI. With the recent COVID-19 pandemic, she has served as the COVID-19 Response and Critical Care Senior Technical Director for the Reaching Impact, Saturation and Epidemic Control (RISE) project at JHPIEGO, funded by USAID (RISE COAG # 7200AA19CA00003). In this role, she oversees the critical care COVID response across eight countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Ecuador, Guatemala, India, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, and Ethiopia). She is also the Co-PI of the CDC-funded Building Capacity for National Public Health Institutes (CDC-RFA-GH20-2107) and the Enhancing Global Health Security: Expanding Efforts and Strategies to Protect and Improve Public Health Globally (CDC-RFA-GH20-2110). Dr. Hansoti has achieved nationally recognized success in research, education, mentorship, advising, and program building. She holds several significant service roles at Johns Hopkins University, serving as the Associate Director for Academic Programs at the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health (CGH), and is co-director for the Public Health Scholarly Concentration (SC) course at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She is also the Director for the Center for Global Emergency Care (CGEC), director for the WHO Collaborating Center for Emergency Critical and Operative Care and serves as the fellowship director for the International Emergency Medicine and Public Health fellowship program at Johns Hopkins University. In addition, she is the Co-PI for the Johns Hopkins site for the UJMT Fogarty fellowship consortium. She seeks to build the institutional capacity to develop global health leaders at Johns Hopkins and beyond in these roles. Dr. Hansoti is rated as an Advanced provider by MediFind in the treatment of Monkeypox. Her top area of expertise is Monkeypox.
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Dr. William Garneau is a native of Durham, North Carolina. He graduated from Yale University with a degree in English and served as a middle school teacher in the Peace Corps in Namibia. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and earned a Master of Public Health at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. He completed internal medicine residency training at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and is an assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Hospital Medicine. In 2023 he received a KL2 mentored Career Development award from the National Institutes of Health. He is currently enrolled in the Graduate Training Program in Clinical Investigation at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Dr. Garneau's research uses observational data to study health outcomes including novel therapies and emerging illnesses. His prior research includes studies of mpox and COVID-19. He additionally serves as a lead informaticist with the Critical Path Institute's CURE ID project. His clinical responsibilities include providing direct care to hospitalized patients, serving as a medicine consultant to surgical services, and attending on resident teaching teams. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Garneau is a Barker Firm Faculty member and teaches students in the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine as well as the Osler Medical Residency Training Program. Dr. Garneau is rated as an Experienced provider by MediFind in the treatment of Monkeypox. His top areas of expertise are Monkeypox, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), COVID-19, and Syphilis.
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Edana Mann is the senior associate clinical director of The Johns Hopkins Hospital’s emergency department and an assistant professor of emergency medicine. Mann received her medical degree in 1997 from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She completed her emergency medicine residency training at the Carolinas Medical Center. In 2000, Mann brought her talents to St. Agnes Healthcare in Baltimore as an emergency physician, and in 2002 she became the clinical director of the emergency department chest pain center—the only accredited chest pain center in Maryland at the time. In 2006, Mann began working in the emergency department at MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center, where she took on the role of director of clinical education in 2010. She was named associate chairman of the Franklin Square Department of Emergency Medicine in 2011. Mann is currently a fellow of the American College of Emergency Physicians. Dr. Mann is rated as an Experienced provider by MediFind in the treatment of Monkeypox. Her top area of expertise is Monkeypox.
Areas of Expertise
MediFind evaluates expertise by pulling from factors such as number of articles a doctor has published in medical journals, participation in clinical trials, speaking at industry conferences, prescribing and referral patterns, and strength of connections with other experts in their field.
Learn more about MediFind’s expert tiers