How Climate Change is Helping the Spread of Infectious Diseases
Warmer, shorter winters; changes in precipitation patterns; extreme weather events and habitat encroachment have created ideal conditions for the spread of new pathogens.
Contact Information
Cox Building, 5th Floor
55 Fruit Street
Boston,
MA
02114
Phone: 617-726-7495
For directions, questions regarding referrals and appointments and practice information, please call 617-726-7495.
Patients must call 866-211-6588 to register with the hospital before calling to make an appointment.
The Massachusetts General Hospital Perinatal Infectious Disease Program is a program of the Division of Infectious Disease that is dedicated to providing high-quality, multidisciplinary care to patients who are planning pregnancy, currently pregnant or have recently delivered a baby, and who are living with a variety of infectious disease conditions, including HIV, hepatitis, other bacterial, viral and fungal infections, tuberculosis and positive TB skin tests, or recent exposures to these infections.
We work closely with other specialists at Mass General who care for women around the time of pregnancy, including obstetrician/gynecologists and maternal-fetal medicine specialists. We have a dedicated team of nurses, social workers and administrative staff who work to ensure a smooth referral process from the obstetrics service to the Perinatal Infectious Disease Program. Our program includes Mass General for Children pediatric infectious disease specialists for the diagnosis and treatment of newborns with maternally transmitted infections and the coordination of care with community pediatricians.
Full phlebotomy, diagnostic laboratory and radiographic facilities are available on-site, including microbiological and histopathological evaluations. We provide counseling and testing for HIV infection. Translators for most languages are available with advance notice. An outpatient pharmacy is available in the hospital.
The practice is staffed by a team of healthcare providers trained in infectious disease with experience and expertise in the evaluation and management of infections before, during and after pregnancy.
Mass General is recognized as a top hospital on the U.S. News Best Hospitals Honor Roll for 2024-2025.
Patient and Family Relations specialists can help patients and families resolve issues or express praise or concern about their experience at MGH.
Warmer, shorter winters; changes in precipitation patterns; extreme weather events and habitat encroachment have created ideal conditions for the spread of new pathogens.
Significant work still needs to be done in HIV care and treatment for adolescents living with HIV who have not experienced the same benefits in longevity as adults with HIV.
Caitlin Dugdale, MD, MSc, and Kimon Zachary, MD, are co-lead authors of a new study in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, TB or Not TB? Development and Validation of a Clinical Decision Support System for the Evaluation of Suspected Tuberculosis.
Researchers found that shifting HIV prevention resources away from men who have sex with men, transgender women, and heterosexual Black women would harm Tennesseans at large.
Although disparities in consistent ART use between Black and White Medicare beneficiaries have narrowed since 2013, the percentage of beneficiaries who filled ART prescriptions for 10+ months/year remained significantly lower among Black beneficiaries relative to White beneficiaries in 2019.
MGH’s Age Positively Program, a partnership between the Geriatric Medicine and Infectious Diseases divisions, provides care and resources to enhance the care and well-being of people with HIV as they age.
Warmer, shorter winters; changes in precipitation patterns; extreme weather events and habitat encroachment have created ideal conditions for the spread of new pathogens.
Significant work still needs to be done in HIV care and treatment for adolescents living with HIV who have not experienced the same benefits in longevity as adults with HIV.
Caitlin Dugdale, MD, MSc, and Kimon Zachary, MD, are co-lead authors of a new study in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, TB or Not TB? Development and Validation of a Clinical Decision Support System for the Evaluation of Suspected Tuberculosis.
Researchers found that shifting HIV prevention resources away from men who have sex with men, transgender women, and heterosexual Black women would harm Tennesseans at large.