Michael A Lincoln, MD in Baltimore: Adult Cardiology with Hospital-Based Continuity
Michael A Lincoln, MD is a board-certified adult cardiologist who works within the Johns Hopkins Health System and maintains an office-based practice in central Baltimore, focusing on management of coronary disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, and preventive cardiology for established patients and referrals.
What Lincoln offers
Lincoln operates in a hybrid model typical of academic medical centers: he sees patients in outpatient clinic for evaluation and ongoing management, with hospital access through Johns Hopkins for inpatient consultation, stress testing, and advanced imaging. His practice scope centers on medical management rather than invasive procedures (catheterization or device implantation are typically referred to Johns Hopkins interventionalists). He accepts established-patient and new-referral appointments, though the timeline for new-patient intake from a primary care provider referral typically runs 4 to 8 weeks depending on urgency and current clinic volume.
Insurance and appointment logistics
Lincoln accepts Medicare, most major commercial plans (Anthem, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare), and self-pay patients. Out-of-pocket costs for an initial consultation typically fall in the $150 to $300 range after insurance; verify your specific plan coverage before booking. Follow-up visits usually run shorter (15 to 20 minutes) and cost less. The Johns Hopkins system does not offer online self-scheduling through his name; appointments must be made through the Johns Hopkins referral phone line (410-955-6400) or by calling his clinic directly after receiving a referral from your primary care doctor. Expect to provide insurance information and a detailed cardiac history at scheduling.
How Lincoln compares to Baltimore cardiologists
The Baltimore cardiologist landscape divides into three main tiers. Academic practices like Lincoln's (Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland Medical Center) offer strong diagnostic infrastructure and continuity with hospital services but often have longer wait times and less same-day availability. Independent practices scattered across Baltimore County and the city (examples: some providers at Mercy Medical Center, Sinai Hospital) generally have shorter wait times and may offer more flexible hours, though they vary widely in scope and affiliations. A third group includes nurse-practitioner-led clinics and primary care offices with cardiovascular training; these suit stable patients needing refills and monitoring but not complex diagnostic work.
Choose Lincoln or a similar Johns Hopkins cardiologist if you have complex disease (heart failure, recurrent arrhythmias, post-MI management, or suspected coronary disease) requiring access to advanced testing and inpatient care without switching systems. Choose an independent community cardiologist if you need faster appointment access, prefer continuity with a solo practitioner, or have stable disease requiring periodic evaluation. Choose a mid-level or primary care option for routine blood pressure and cholesterol management if you do not have cardiac diagnosis.
What the first visit entails
A new-patient appointment with Lincoln typically lasts 45 minutes to an hour. You will complete a detailed intake form (cardiac risk factors, prior EKGs or stress tests, medications, family history, and symptom timeline). Lincoln will perform a physical exam including auscultation, blood pressure checks in both arms if hypertension history exists, and assessment of peripheral pulses and edema. He will order labs (lipid panel, BNP or NT-proBNP if heart failure is suspected, basic metabolic panel) and an EKG, done on-site. If coronary disease or arrhythmia is in the differential, you will likely receive an order for stress testing or Holter monitoring to be scheduled separately; results guide the next step. Follow-up is typically scheduled 2 to 4 weeks after initial workup to review results and finalize a treatment plan.
Location, hours, and parking
Lincoln's clinic is located within Johns Hopkins' central Baltimore campus near the Broadway/Monument Street intersection. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 4:30 PM; the clinic does not operate weekend hours. Parking at Johns Hopkins is managed system-wide; most patients use the central garages, with rates around $7 to $10 for up to 4 hours, $12 to $15 for 4 to 8 hours (rates subject to change; verify at the Johns Hopkins website). Public transit via the MTA Red Line and multiple bus routes serves the area, with a 10-minute walk from the nearest stops. Appointments are seldom same-day; plan ahead.
Lincoln's hospital affiliation and board certification make him a straightforward choice for patients with established cardiac disease who value integrated access to advanced testing and inpatient support within a single system, and his wait times reflect the demand that accreditation and specialized scope attract.

