Nathan Irvin, MD

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1800 Orleans St
Baltimore, MD 21287
Dr. Irvin is an assistant professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine. He earned a medical degree at Harvard in 2003. Following medical school, he completed a residency in emergency medicine at Alameda Health System’s Highland Hospital in Oakland, California, where he was a chief resident, prior to graduating in 2011.Upon completion of residency, Dr. Irvin entered into the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Clinical Scholars Program at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating in 2013 with a master's degree in health policy research.Dr. Irvin holds interests in social emergency medicine and addressing many of the health and behavioral problems that affect people living in urban communities. Two such threats are HIV/AIDs and violence. He is currently the clinical director of the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Emergency Department HIV/HCV screening program, working to identify and get people with new diagnoses of HIV linked into care. Additionally, he is engaged in work related to youth violence prevention and endeavors to develop a trauma-informed, hospital-based violence intervention program.
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Vishank A. Shah, MBBS

Vishank A. Shah, MBBS

Dr. Maunank Shah is Professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. His areas of clinical expertise include infectious disease. Dr. Shah received his undergraduate degree in biology from the University of Virginia. He earned his M.D. from the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine. He completed his residency at Emory University School of Medicine and performed a fellowship in infectious diseases at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Shah earned his Ph.D. in clinical investigation and public health, with expertise in decision-analysis, epidemiology, and biostatistics, from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. His research interests focus on innovation in HIV and TB care. He is the inventor of video-DOT software (Scene.health) now used for patient-centered adherence support in over 700 US health departments. He is also co-inventor of HIVASSIST (www.hivassist.com), an educational and decision-support application for individualized ARV selection for persons with HIV. He has also built decision support tools for latent TB infection, and other infectious diseases. He has led WHO evidence review for novel TB diagnostics including urinary LAM antigen tests, and developed JHEEM (Johns Hopkins Epidemiologic-Economic Model), chaired the NTCA guideline development for community based TB isolation recommendations. Dr. Shah is medical director for the Baltimore City Tuberculosis Program, and past-President of the National Society of TB Clinicians. He serves on the Maryland Tuberculosis Guidelines committee and is Deputy Editor for CID, the flagship clinical journal of the Infectious Disease Society of America. An author of more than 70 peer-reviewed studies, he is a member of the International Union for TB and Lung Disease, the International AIDS Society and the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Dr. Shah leads online infectious diseases educational activities in partnership with the JH Office of Online Education, is Director of Johns Hopkins IDEAL (Center for Infectious Diseases Education, Advancement and Learning), and serves as co-director for the microbiology and infectious disease curriculum for students at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Rich Rothman, MD
Internal medicine practitioners

Rich Rothman, MD

Dr. Rothman has been on the faculty at Johns Hopkins since 1996, when he joined as assistant chief of service. He was promoted in 2012 to professor and vice chair of research for the Department of Emergency Medicine. He also serves as the Emergency Medicine Research Fellowship director and director of research for the Emergency Medicine Residency Program. He holds a joint appointment in the Department of Medicine’s Division of Infectious Diseases.Dr. Rothman’s research program focuses on the interface of emergency/episodic care and infectious disease surveillance, diagnosis, and treatment. His research includes studies on varied infectious diseases, including HIV/STDs, pneumonia, meningitis, skin and soft tissue infections, and influenza. He also conducts research on development/translation of rapid novel diagnostics for infectious disease detection. Dr. Rothman’s interdisciplinary research program includes investigators from emergency medicine, microbiology, infectious disease and public health. Dr. Rothman has been continuously funded by federal grants since 1996. He has served as principal investigator for the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases’ Mid-Atlantic Regional Center of Excellence in Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases’ diagnostics program. He was also the lead investigator on a diagnostics program for the Department of Homeland Security on disaster preparedness and response, focusing on evaluation of diagnostic methods for hospitals for emerging and biothreat events. He founded the National Emergency Department HIV Testing Consortium in 2007 with colleagues from Denver Health Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati, and is active in implementation research in this arena with funding from the National Institutes of Health. Currently, he serves as co-principal investigator on a multicenter study for the Department of Health and Human Services’ Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, which is developing new approaches for rapid influenza surveillance diagnosis and treatment. He is also co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center of Excellence for Influenza Research and Surveillance, funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Dr. Rothman also holds a multipatent portfolio in molecular diagnostics.
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