Teena Chopra
Biography
Teena Chopra, M.D., , is the Assistant Dean of Professional Development and Coaching and is a professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases at the Wayne State University School of Medicine, and corporate medical director of Hospital Epidemiology, Infection Prevention and Antibiotic Stewardship at Detroit Medical Center, Wayne State University.
A 2001 graduate of the Dayanand Medical College in Ludhiana, India, Dr. Chopra completed her residency in Internal Medicine at WSU, and fellowships in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology and in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology at the DMC. In 2011, she earned a Master of Public Health degree and joined the WSU faculty.
Her research interests include Epidemiology of Health care associated Infections, Infection Prevention Antibiotic Stewardship and Immunization. Dr. Chopra has a special interest in immunization and studying the epidemiology of infections, including Clostridium difficile and Multi-Drug Resistant Organisms. She has published more than 70 papers in various journals and book chapters. She has independently reviewed more than 60 journal articles.
Office Address
540 E. Canfield,Scott Hall Rm. 1310
Detroit MI 48201
Recent university news spotlights
- Wayne State University Center for Emerging and Infectious Diseases experts speak out on danger of measles outbreak
- Michigan lawmakers consider legislation that would prohibit vaccination status discrimination
- Measles cases continue to rise in the United States
- Health officials: 2 more children die of flu; total pediatric deaths in Michigan now at 5
- Birdwatching: Farmers, researchers and state leaders urge diligence in containing bird flu
- Holistic medicine is becoming a more common practice
- 11 people in Oakland County had contact with H5N1-infected backyard flock, 2 are now sick
- Detroit Medical Center implements new visitor guidelines amid flu uptick
- Detroit Medical Center adds visitor restrictions at hospitals as flu cases rise
- DMC restricts young visitors at Metro Detroit hospitals amid rise in flu cases