Compare 236 infectious disease specialists in Atlanta, GA. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
236
Infectious Disease Specialists
100%
Accepting patients
75%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Atlanta is the healthcare capital of the Southeast. The CDC is headquartered here, Emory is a top-20 research university with a massive hospital system, and Grady Memorial is one of the largest public hospitals in the country. Beyond the academic centers, Piedmont Healthcare and WellStar have built networks that reach deep into the suburbs, where most of metro Atlanta actually lives.
Atlanta has 236 infectious disease specialists. The most common credential is MD (75%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Atlanta's healthcare geography follows its sprawl. The Midtown medical corridor along Peachtree Street holds Piedmont Atlanta and Emory Midtown. Emory's main campus and the CDC are in Druid Hills, east of downtown. Grady Memorial anchors the downtown core. Getting between these clusters depends on I-85, I-75, and GA-400, and traffic can double travel times during rush hours. MARTA rail reaches Midtown and downtown hospitals, but most suburban patients drive.
Providers practice throughout Atlanta. Midtown is piedmont Atlanta Hospital and Emory Midtown campus serve this dense, walkable area near the BeltLine. Buckhead is piedmont Hospital Buckhead and numerous specialty practices line Peachtree Road in this affluent district. Virginia-Highland is a charming residential area with independent practices and quick access to Emory and Piedmont hospitals. Decatur is emory Decatur Hospital (formerly DeKalb Medical) anchors healthcare in this walkable, east-of-Atlanta city.
Nearby hospitals include Emory University Hospital, Grady Memorial Hospital, and Piedmont Atlanta Hospital. Local training programs run through Emory University School of Medicine and Morehouse School of Medicine. The CDC is headquartered in Atlanta, making it a global epicenter for public health research and disease prevention.
The ID specialist will review your infection history, lab results (cultures, sensitivity reports), imaging, and current antibiotics. They may order additional specialized testing (fungal cultures, PCR tests, serologies). The consultation often focuses on optimizing your antibiotic regimen, recommending the narrowest effective treatment for the shortest appropriate duration. For chronic conditions like HIV, they will establish a long-term management plan.
Emory and Piedmont are the two dominant systems. If your employer is in Midtown or Buckhead, Piedmont is often the default network. For academic or research-driven care, Emory is the referral center for the region.
See an infectious disease specialist for infections that are not responding to standard antibiotics, HIV management, hepatitis B or C treatment, fever of unknown origin, infections after surgery or implant placement, bone or joint infections, infections in immunocompromised patients (cancer, transplant, HIV), travel-related infections, and tick-borne diseases like Lyme disease that are complicated or atypical.
Office visit copay: $30-75 · Blood cultures: $100-300 · HIV viral load test: $100-400 · IV antibiotic therapy: $200-500/day
Atlanta, GA has 236 licensed infectious disease specialists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of infectious disease specialists in Atlanta, GA are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia and UnitedHealthcare are the dominant commercial carriers. Ambetter and Peach State Health Plan manage Georgia Medicaid in the metro area. Piedmont and Emory each have strong networks with different insurers, so verify before your first visit.
An office visit copay is $30 to $75. Blood cultures cost $100 to $300. HIV viral load testing costs $100 to $400. IV antibiotic therapy runs $200 to $500 per day. Actual costs in Atlanta, GA depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Many antiviral and antibiotic medications are expensive. Manufacturer copay assistance programs exist for most HIV medications. The 340B drug pricing program provides discounted medications at qualifying health centers.
Atlanta's healthcare market is dominated by four systems: Emory Healthcare, Piedmont Healthcare, WellStar Health System, and Northside Hospital. Grady Memorial serves as the public safety-net hospital. Your insurance network will typically point you toward one of these systems.
59% of infectious disease specialists in Atlanta, GA accept Medicare. Medicare covers ID consultations and medically necessary treatments. HIV medications, hepatitis treatment, and IV antibiotics are covered. Preventive vaccines are covered under Part D. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
Some infectious disease specialists in Atlanta, GA accept Georgia Medicaid, the state's Medicaid program. Medicaid covers infectious disease services in all states. HIV treatment is covered, and the Ryan White Program provides additional support for uninsured patients. Contact the provider's office directly to confirm Georgia Medicaid participation before scheduling.
No. Grady is a Level I trauma center and serves all patients. It is the public safety-net hospital for Fulton and DeKalb counties, but it also runs specialty clinics that accept commercial insurance. Its Emory affiliation means you may see Emory-trained physicians there.
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta operates two main campuses (Egleston near Emory and Scottish Rite in Sandy Springs) and is building a new campus in Brookhaven. It is the primary pediatric referral center for the entire state of Georgia.
Top accepted carriers in Atlanta, GA include unitedhealthcare, medicare, centene, qhp-29854, and qhp-58944.
ID consultations are covered as specialist visits. HIV medications (ART) are covered under pharmacy benefits, though copays vary. Many ART manufacturers offer copay assistance programs. The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program provides coverage for uninsured and underinsured patients. Long-term IV antibiotics administered at home through a PICC line are typically covered under home health benefits.