Treatment Center Medical Director
Internist & Hospitalist Medical Director
Emergency Department Medical Director
Urgent Care Medical Director
The incoming Infectious Disease physician serves as the dedicated ID specialist at Good Shepherd and integrates with an established clinical team across the Treatment Center, hospitalist service, internal medicine, and emergency department. The role carries high visibility and immediate demand given the breadth of referring services on a single campus.
David Stenstrom, MD
Treatment Center Medical Director. Board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine, the American Board of Wound Management, and the American Board of Wound Healing. Physician Certified in Wound Care and Certified Wound Specialist Physician. Directs the Good Shepherd Treatment Center, which provides wound care and infusion therapy services. Primary collaborator for the ID physician on osteomyelitis, complex wound-related infections, and outpatient IV antibiotic management.
The internal medicine group manages a significant portion of medical admissions and outpatient chronic disease care, and is a frequent source of inpatient and outpatient ID referrals.
Taylor Delamarter, MD
Hospitalist Medical Director. Leads the inpatient hospitalist team that manages admitted patients and routes consultation requests to ID. The hospitalists are a primary inpatient partner for day-to-day ID consultation.
Robert McCauley, MD
Emergency Department Medical Director. Oversees a 24/7 Level 3 Trauma designated Emergency Department that is a source of daytime ID consultation.
The Treatment Center is staffed by board-certified physicians and nurses providing wound care and infusion therapy services. This team is the operational counterpart for ID management of wound-related infections and OPAT transitions.
Good Shepherd Medical Group is housed on a single campus, which supports fast curbside consults and close working relationships across specialties. The ID physician operates with meaningful clinical autonomy and has direct access to the Treatment Center, hospitalists, the emergency department, and primary care. Given the breadth of collaborating services and the absence of other dedicated ID physicians on staff, the incoming physician plays a defining role in shaping how infectious disease care is delivered across the system.