
Sharon Beth Weissman, MD
Fax: (803) 545-5353
About us
Sharon Beth Weissman, MD, is division chief of infectious diseases at Prisma Health in Columbia, South Carolina, where she also serves as a clinical professor of internal medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine. She previously served as program director for the Prisma Health–Midlands Infectious Disease Fellowship Program.
Dr. Weissman received her medical degree from Columbia University in New York City and completed her residency at Beth Israel Hospital in Boston. After her residency, she completed a fellowship in infectious diseases at Beth Israel Hospital-Brigham and Women's Hospital, also in Boston. She previously held positions at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, where she was director of the HIV/Infectious Disease Clinic at the Louis Stoke Cleveland VAMC, and Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, where she also served as director of HIV services at the Hospital of Saint Raphael.
Tags | intraspinal abscess, joint infection, leptospirosis, salmonella infection, tropical medicine, tuberculosis, pre exposure prophylaxis (prep), cellulitis, herpes zoster, herpangina, herpes, osteomyelitis, babesiosis infection, bacterial encephalitis, bacterial endocarditis, bacterial meningitis, staphylococcus infections, staphylococcal meningitis, streptococcal meningitis, subacute bacterial endocarditis, syphilis, gonococcal arthritis, hepatitis, hepatitis a, methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus, methicillin susceptible staphylococcus aureus, miliary tuberculosis, gangrene, giardiasis, sepsis, sexually transmitted disease (std), spirochetal infection, splenic infection, listeriosis, lyme disease, malaria, meningitis, varicella, varicella encephalitis, viral meningitis, west nile virus, fungemia, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids), anal pap smear, atypical mycobacteria infection, herpes zoster encephalitis, histoplasmosis, human immunodeficiency virus (hiv), cryptococcal meningitis, cryptococcosis, mycobacterial infection, mycobacterium avium complex, necrotizing soft tissue infections, prosthetic joint infection, tick borne infections, transplant related infection, hepatitis b, hepatitis c, hepatitis d, hepatitis e, herpes encephalitis, herpes meningitis, empyema, peritonsillar abscess, septic arthritis |