Todd Barton, MD

headshot of Todd Barton, MD
No patient ratings. Why not?
Why doesn't this doctor have a rating?

There is no publicly available rating for this medical professional for one of the following reasons:

  1. They are not employed by Penn Medicine.
  2. They do not see patients.
  3. They see patients but have not yet received the minimum 30 patient satisfaction reviews in the past 12 months, ensuring that the rating is statistically reliable and a true reflection of patient satisfaction.

Sees patients age 18 and up

Todd Barton, MD

No patient ratings. Why not?
Why doesn't this doctor have a rating?

There is no publicly available rating for this medical professional for one of the following reasons:

  1. They are not employed by Penn Medicine.
  2. They do not see patients.
  3. They see patients but have not yet received the minimum 30 patient satisfaction reviews in the past 12 months, ensuring that the rating is statistically reliable and a true reflection of patient satisfaction.

Sees patients age 18 and up

  • Professor of Clinical Medicine (Infectious Diseases)
  • Dr. Barton is a Penn Medicine physician.

Meet Dr. Barton

Todd D. Barton, M.D., is a Professor of Clinical Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases.  He was raised in St. Louis, where he warmed the bench on varsity sports teams, did a bit better on the chess team, and began a life-long commitment to the 11-time World Champion St. Louis Cardinals.  Todd attended Swarthmore College where he met his future wife, won an intramural volleyball championship, called radio play-by-play for the school’s football and basketball teams, and was president of the Movie Committee.  He also occasionally studied synthetic organic chemistry and English literature, especially Shakespeare and his contemporaries.  Todd subsequently went to the University of Rochester School of Medicine, where he led an AIDS education task force.  During medical school, Todd took a year out and worked at Penn in the ID division, working predominantly in the Immunodeficiency Program and with the oncology ID service.  After medical school graduation, Todd returned to Penn for internship, residency, chief residency, fellowship, and a faculty career now lasting over 20 years.  He has won several teaching awards from medical students, residents, and fellows, and spent 20 years as either an Associate Program Director or eventually Program Director of the internal medicine residency program.  Todd was recently (2024) elected to the Gold Humanism Society by Penn medical students.  His wife, Maryl Kreider, is the Program Director of the pulmonary and critical care medicine fellowship at Penn.  Todd has two children in graduate school, a commitment to regular exercise limited by a balky left knee, and a now 10-year engagement with local community theaters which provides much more joy than the exercise.

Recognized by Best Doctors in America 2007 - 2012, 2015 - 2018

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