Michael Virata, MD, FACP, FIDSA
Cards
About
Titles
Associate Professor Term
Director, HIV Clinical Services, Internal Medicine; Associate Professor of Clinical Internal Medicine, Yale Medicine
Positions outside Yale
Program Director, Medicine, HIV Care and Prevention Program, Yale-New Haven Hospital
Biography
Dr. Virata earned his medical degree from the University of the Philippines School of Medicine. He did his residency in Internal Medicine at the Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Baltimore, MD. The continued training for two fellowships at the Yale School of Medicine for Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology. After completing his post-doctoral training, he started working for the Cornell Scott Hill Health Center in New Haven, CT as the Director of HIV Services, then transitioned to the medical staff at the Hospital of Saint Raphael, Section of Infectious Diseases also in New Haven, before formally entering Yale School of Medicine as faculty in the Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Infectious Diseases. Aside from a faculty role, currently a Medical Director for the Yale Center for Infectious Diseases (HIV services) and Program Director for the HIV Care and Prevention Program at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
Appointments
Infectious Diseases
Associate Professor on TermPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Fellowship
- Yale University School of Medicine (1997)
- Fellowship
- Yale University School of Medicine (1994)
- Residency
- Sinai Hospital of Baltimore (1993)
- Internship
- Sinai Hospital of Baltimore (1991)
- MD
- University of the Philippines (1989)
Research
Overview
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Clinical Care
Overview
Michael Virata, MD, is an infectious disease specialist who has focused his career to caring for people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). He is the medical director of HIV clinical services at Yale New Haven Hospital-Saint Raphael Campus, and has worked with Yale New Haven Health and the state of Connecticut to end HIV infections—a goal he hopes to achieve in his lifetime.
Since Dr. Virata decided to specialize in HIV and AIDS in the early ‘90s, prospects for patients have changed tremendously. “It’s moved from being a terminal illness where we didn't have much in the way of treatment to really being in the chronic disease realm,” he says. “For someone young who gets infected right now, their life expectancy is close to being normal as long as they are getting care and follow the general recommendations.” Treatments can bring the virus down to undetectable levels, so people who have HIV can have sexual relationships without fear of transmission, he says. Ending the HIV epidemic is a national goal.
The next steps in eradicating the disease starts with the new “95-95-95” goal, which means making sure 95% of people are aware of their HIV status, having 95% of those with HIV on antiretroviral therapy, (ART), and bringing 95% of those on antiretroviral therapy to the point of being virologically suppressed to undetectable levels.
Dr. Virata says the patients with HIV that he cares for do extremely well. “I have patients that I have followed for many, many years. It's very rewarding to see them carrying on with their normal lives. I've had several patients start families,” he says. “I know their life stories. It's really very fulfilling work.”
Clinical Specialties
Fact Sheets
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
Learn More on Yale MedicinePediatric Cancer Immunotherapy
Learn More on Yale MedicinePediatric Sepsis
Learn More on Yale MedicinePreventing Infections in the NICU
Learn More on Yale Medicine
Board Certifications
HIV Specialist
- Certification Organization
- American Academy of HIV Medicine
- Original Certification Date
- 2014
Yale Medicine News
News
News
- May 27, 2024
Unhealthy Alcohol Use Among Men who have Sex with Men Taking PrEP for HIV Prevention
- January 30, 2024
Fostering Equity and Inclusion in Infectious Diseases at Yale
- June 13, 2022
Happy Pride! Some News & Activities for Pride Month
- November 30, 2020Source: Yale Medicine
How HIV Became the Virus We Can Treat