William B Horton, MD
Diabetes
Additional Locations
Bio & Overview
William Horton, MD, FACP, (pronouns: he/him) is an assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism. He sees patients with general endocrinology issues, ranging from diabetes and thyroid disorders to adrenal and bone mineral metabolism diseases.
Horton’s clinical interests include type 1 and type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, hyperparathyroidism, hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism. His research interests include inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia, diabetes technology and the cardiovascular complications of diabetes.
Born and raised in Mississippi, Horton attended medical school at the University of Mississippi. He then completed internal medicine residency training at the University of Mississippi Medical Center before coming to UVA for a combined academic and clinical fellowship in endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism.
Horton volunteers with the Charlottesville Free Clinic. In his free time, he enjoys spending time with his wife, being active outdoors, and cheering on the Hoos.
Academic Information
- Department
- Medicine
- Academic Role
- Assistant Professor
- Division
- Endocrinology
- Research Interests
- Cardiovascular disease in persons with type 1 diabetes, Diabetes technology, Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia
- Gender
- Male
- Languages
- English
- Age Groups Seen
- Adolescents (12-21)
Adults (21-65)
Older Adults (65+)
- Primary Education
- University of Mississippi Health Care
- Residency
- University of Mississippi Health Care
- Fellowships
- University of Virginia School of Medicine
- Certification
- American Board of Internal Medicine (Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism), American Board of Internal Medicine (Internal Medicine)
- Additional Specialties
- Endocrinology, Metabolic Medicine
Highlights
Meet Endocrinologist William Horton, MD
Hi, I'm William Horton. I'm an endocrinologist here at the University of Virginia. I take care of patients with endocrine diseases which typically relate to the hormone system in the body. Anything from diabetes to thyroid disease to polycystic ovary syndrome and osteoporosis. I myself live with Type 1 diabetes, which I think provides a unique perspective on what it's like to live with a chronic disease. That motivated me to want to pursue clinical care of patients who also live with chronic diseases. And then my father was also a physician. He was a general internist, a primary care doctor. And seeing the loving, compassionate care that he provided to patients was a real motivation for me to enter medicine as well. When I first meet a patient, I will introduce myself. I'll take time to get to know their background, their clinical history, and also just their personal history. How the disease or the issue that they're coming to see me for affects their quality of life. And then over time, we'll work together to hopefully find the ideal treatments that will help manage their disease, but also treatments that will fit their lifestyle so that they have the quality of life that they desire. And so I think that's something that is really motivating and also really valuable on my side and the patient side.
Awards
- 2024 Virginia Chapter of the American College of Physicians Outpatient Subspecialty Teaching Award
- 2024 University of Virginia Department of Medicine Excellence in Teaching
- 2022 University of Virginia Department of Medicine Excellence in Research
Reviews
78 Patient Satisfaction Ratings
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