Speaker Profile
Johannes Bogner

Johannes Bogner

Internal Medicine, Infectious Disease
Munich, Bavaria, Germany

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Prof. Dr. Johannes Bogner Senior Consultant at the Medical Clinic and Polyclinic IV, Inner City Campus, Clinic of the University of Munich, and as head of the Clinical Infectious Diseases Section. Since 1986 he has played a key role in setting up the infection department with an outpatient clinic, day clinic, and inpatient care. He received his clinical training in the fields of internal medicine, gastroenterology, and pulmonology in Munich, and his training as a clinical infection took place at the Montefiore Medical Center of the Albert Einstein Medical School, Bronx, New York. Since 1997 he has built up an interdisciplinary clinical and infectious consultation service at the Medical Polyclinic.

In 2000, the Infection Consil Service was expanded to include the entire inner-city clinic through the establishment of an interdisciplinary working group on clinical infectious diseases. At the beginning of 2001, he was appointed professor at the University of Munich. Since 1994 Prof. Bogner has been teaching clinical infectious diseases through his own lecture, teaching visits, and study groups in the sense of POL (problem-oriented learning) according to the Harvard program. In 2004 he received the certificate "Clinical Infectiology" from the German Society for Infectious Diseases (DGI).

Prof. Bogner is a member of infectious specialist societies (DAIG, DGI) and a member of the scientific advisory board of the DGI as well as a reviewer for numerous peer-reviewed journals. Working area: The scientific focus is on the three areas "Cell-mediated immunity in lymphoid tissue in HIV infection", "Clinical studies with anti-infectives" and "Epidemiological multicenter studies". Lectures: Prof. Dr. Bogner regularly organizes specialist colloquia and national advanced training events and presents at national and international conferences on topics relating to HIV infection, antibiotic therapy, and the treatment of fungal infections.