Neurology
Our Specialists
HIV Neurology (NeuroAids)
Giovanni Schifitto, M.D.
585-275-3052
Current Titles and Roles
Associate Professor of Neurology
Degrees, Certifications, and Licenses
- B.S., University of Toronto, Toronto Ontario, 1989
- M.D., Faculty of Medicine, University of Milan, 1988
- Internship, Brookdale Hospital Medical Center, Brooklyn,
New York, 1990-1991
- Residency, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; New York,
New York, 1991-1992
- Residency, Strong Memorial Hospital, University of
Rochester, 1992-1994
- Fellowship, Instructor and Fellow in Neurology, Experimental
Therapeutics, 1994-1996
- Certification, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
(Neurology), 1995
Prior Work History
2002-Present, Associate Professor of Neurology, University of
Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York
1998-2002, Assistant
Professor of Neurology, University of Rochester School of Medicine,
Rochester, New York
1996-1998, Senior Instructor in Neurology, University of Rochester
School of Medicine, Rochester, New York
1994-1995, Primary
Care Provider, Infectious Disease Clinic, University of Rochester
School of Medicine, Rochester, New York
1994-1996, Instructor and Fellow in Neurology, Experimental
Therapeutics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester,
New York
Clinical Specialties
Neurological complications of HIV/AIDS, Quantitative assessment
of the Autonomic Nervous System
Memberships
-
American Academy of Neurology
-
American Autonomic Society
and Clinical Research Society
-
International AIDS Society
-
International Society of NeuroVirology
-
Society for Neuroscience
Research
- Neurological complication of HIV infection
- Dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system
Academic Activity
- Mentoring undergraduate/graduate and medical students
- Mentoring
neurology residents, fellows and Junior faculty
- Member of the
University of Rochester International Medical Exchange Program
- Member of the General Clinical Research Center Advisory Committee
Comments
"I feel privileged to provide clinical care and research initiatives
to our patients with HIV-associated neurological complications."
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