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Departments that treat this condition Infectious Diseases Doctors who treat this condition Edit search filters close Narrow your search By location Rochester, MN Jacksonville, FL Phoenix/Scottsdale, AZ By last name Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter A A active Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter B B Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter C C Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter D D Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter E E Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter F F There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter G G Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter H H There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter I I There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter J J Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter K K There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter L L Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter M M Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter N N Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter O O Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter P P There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter Q Q Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter R R Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter S S Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter T T There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter U U Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter V V Find a doctor whose last name begins with the letter W W There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter X X There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter Y Y There are no doctors whose last name begins with the letter Z Z Reset all filters Search Tips Use quotes for phrases. Even if there are no auto-suggestions within the search field, hit "Search" anyway, as you may still get results. Displaying 1-6 out of 6 doctors available Last Name Initial: B Andrew D. Badley, M.D. Infectious Disease Specialist Rochester, MN Areas of focus: HIV/AIDS, General infectious diseases Elena Beam, M.D. Internist Infectious Disease Specialist Rochester, MN Areas of focus: Transplant, Infection control, Infection, General infectious diseases Elie F. Berbari, M.D., M.B.A. Infectious Disease Specialist Rochester, MN Areas of focus: General infectious diseases Janis E. Blair, M.D. Infectious Disease Specialist Phoenix, AZ Areas of focus: Valley fever, General infectious diseases Wendelyn Bosch, M.D. Internist Infectious Disease Specialist Jacksonville, FL Areas of focus: Transplant, Hospitalization, Infection, General infectious diseases Lisa Brumble, M.D. Internist Infectious Disease Specialist Jacksonville, FL Areas of focus: Transplant, Travel vaccinations, Infection, General infectious diseases, Fungal skin infections By Mayo Clinic Staff Request an appointment Diagnosis & treatment Feb. 18, 2022 Print Related Antibiotic use in agriculture Ebola transmission: Can Ebola spread through the air? Enterovirus D68 and parechovirus: How can I protect my child? Germs Infection: Bacterial or viral? Mayo Clinic Minute: What is the Asian longhorned tick? Mpox (monkeypox): What is it and how can it be prevented? Types of infectious agents Vaccine guidance from Mayo Clinic What are superbugs and how can I protect myself from infection? 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Nov. 21, 2022, 04:00 p.m. CDT Show more news from Mayo Clinic Products & Services A Book: Endemic - A Post-Pandemic Playbook A Book: Mayo Clinic Family Health Book Newsletter: Mayo Clinic Health Letter — Digital Edition Show more products and services from Mayo Clinic Infectious diseasesSymptoms&causesDiagnosis&treatmentDoctors&departments Research: It's all about patients Show transcript for video Research: It's all about patients [MUSIC PLAYING] Joseph Sirven, M.D., Professor of Neurology, Mayo Clinic: Mayo's mission is about the patient. The patient comes first. So the mission and research here is to advance how we can best help the patient, how to make sure the patient comes first in care. So in many ways, it's a cycle. It can start with as simple as an idea worked on in a laboratory, brought to the patient bedside, and if everything goes right — and let's say it's helpful or beneficial — then brought on as a standard approach. And I think that is one of the unique characteristics of Mayo's approach to research — that patient-centeredness — that really helps to put it in its own spotlight. CON-20155610 Patient Care & Health Information Diseases & Conditions Infectious diseases