Compare 24 infectious disease specialists in Greenville, SC. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
24
Infectious Disease Specialists
100%
Accepting patients
79%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Greenville has quietly become one of the strongest healthcare cities in the Southeast, built around Prisma Health's flagship campus and a medical school that did not exist fifteen years ago. Bon Secours provides the alternative system, and the combination gives this mid-sized metro a depth of specialty care that surprises people who only know Greenville for its downtown revitalization.
Greenville has 24 infectious disease specialists. The most common credential is MD (79%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Prisma Health Greenville Memorial Hospital sits just east of downtown on Grove Road, with specialty clinics and the USC medical school campus adjacent. Bon Secours St. Francis operates from the Eastside and Downtown campuses. Most medical offices cluster along the Laurens Road, Pleasantburg Drive, and Verdae Boulevard corridors. Greenville's manageable traffic means even cross-town appointments rarely take more than 20 minutes.
Providers practice throughout Greenville. Downtown Greenville is a walkable core near Falls Park with specialty practices and proximity to Prisma Health Greenville Memorial. North Main is a residential corridor with established primary care offices and easy access to downtown hospitals. Augusta Road is a popular south-of-downtown neighborhood with family medicine practices and pediatric offices. Pleasantburg is a commercial corridor on the east side with medical plazas and outpatient clinic clusters.
Nearby hospitals include Prisma Health Greenville Memorial Hospital, Bon Secours St. Francis Health System, and AnMed Health (Anderson, nearby). Local training programs run through University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville and Furman University. Prisma Health is the largest not-for-profit healthcare system in South Carolina, with its flagship campus at Greenville Memorial Hospital.
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.
New patient appointments with Prisma Health primary care take about two weeks on average. Bon Secours clinics and independent practices along Verdae Boulevard and Laurens Road often schedule faster.
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
Greenville, SC has 24 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 Greenville, SC are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of South Carolina is the largest carrier. South Carolina has not expanded Medicaid, so the uninsured rate is higher than the national average. Prisma Health serves as the primary safety-net provider for the Upstate region. Marketplace plans are available through BCBS, Ambetter, and Molina.
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 Greenville, SC 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.
Prisma Health dominates the Greenville market, and most subspecialists are affiliated with the system. Bon Secours offers a meaningful alternative for primary care and common surgical procedures. If your insurance network excludes Prisma, check Bon Secours and the independent practices along Laurens Road.
MD stands for Doctor of Medicine and DO stands for Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Greenville, SC, 79% hold the MD credential and 13% hold DO. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
83% of infectious disease specialists in Greenville, SC 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.
Yes. Greenville Health System merged with Palmetto Health in 2017 to form Prisma Health, the largest healthcare system in South Carolina. The Greenville Memorial campus remains the flagship hospital for the Upstate region.
Greenville has strong subspecialty coverage through Prisma Health and the USC School of Medicine Greenville. For most conditions, you can receive comprehensive care locally. A few rare subspecialties may require referral to MUSC in Charleston or larger systems in Charlotte.
Top accepted carriers in Greenville, SC include medicare, unitedhealthcare, qhp-73107, qhp-33863, and qhp-26065.
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.