PDF - NYU Langone Medical Center

Transcription

PDF - NYU Langone Medical Center
365 days of excellence | 2010 Annual Report
NYU Langone Medical Center | 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016 | www.nyulmc.org
Two thousand ten was another remarkable year for
NYU Langone Medical Center. For 365 days, we were bold.
We were groundbreaking. We were unwavering in fulfilling
on our vision: being a world-class patient-centered integrated
academic medical center.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
1
Day
043
2
02.12.10
The month of February, designated American Heart Month since 1963, is an
opportunity to raise awareness about cardiovascular diseases, our nation’s
number one killer. To address this burden, Dr. Mark Adelman and colleagues in the
Cardiac & Vascular Institute are establishing new programs in cardiac and vascular
disease and enhancing existing ones. These comprehensive programs bring
world-class care to the patient, from the newborn baby to the D-Day veteran.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
3
DETERMINING OUR FUTURE THROUGH 365 DAYS OF EXCELLENCE
1
Vision:
A world-class
patient-centered
integrated academic
medical center
3
missions:
Patient Care,
Research,
Education
5
Values:
Professionalism,
Respect, Integrity,
Diversity,
Excellence
365
Days of Excellence
ex-cel-lence n. The state or fact of excelling; the possession
chiefly of good qualities in an eminent or unusual degree;
surpassing merit, skill, virtue, worth, etc.; dignity, eminence.
­
— Oxford English Dictionary
World class. Patient centered. Integrated. As you read
this report of our accomplishments from 2010, you will
see evidence of this vision—in the incredible progress
we’ve already made, and in our ambitious plans for our
future. It is our committed, determined future.
We are putting patients at the center of all we do.
Through the strategic development of ambulatory care
services and the creation of a seven-day-a-week hospital,
we are providing care when and where patients need it
most. And our quality and safety progress has been nothing short of outstanding.
We are transforming medical education to meet the
demands of the 21st century through one of the biggest
changes to medical education since the American medical
school system as we know it was created 100 years ago.
In a new patient-centered and learner-centered environment, we are enriching the lives of countless people both
now and for generations to come.
And we are partnering with dear friends and benefactors, whose votes of confidence in our organization and
our future are reflected in their generous support of the
Medical Center, our faculty, and our staff.
We have set out this vision and future for ourselves,
and have been unwavering in our efforts to get there.
Through a commitment to innovation, the foundation of academic medicine, we are fostering a culture of
excellence. Regardless of how the world around us may
challenge us, NYU Langone Medical Center is excelling in
our efforts at world-class patient care, research, and education—365 days a year, in 2010 and for years to come.
Best regards,
Kenneth G. Langone
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Robert I. Grossman, MD
Saul J. Farber Dean & Chief Executive Officer
We are continually enhancing and informing our care
by the findings of groundbreaking research. We are taking ambitious new leaps in scientific research to address
the health issues facing our population—in the neurosciences, public health sciences, inflammation-related
diseases, and others.
Kenneth G. Langone
Robert I. Grossman, md
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Saul J. Farber Dean & Chief Executive Officer
4
Letter from the Dean
We are transforming our physical environment to align
with our vision. Sweeping renovations, expansions, and
construction projects are steadily bringing our facilities
to a new, state-of-the-art level, commensurate with the
quality of care and services we provide.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
52
Through an expanding network of ambulatory care centers
across the New York metropolitan area, we are bringing our
patient-centered care directly to where our patients live and
work. Our growth, both on campus and at offsite locations,
is a strategic and analytical process, where quality and safety
come first.
—Andrew W. Brotman, MD
Senior Vice President & Vice Dean for Clinical Affairs & Strategy, Chief Clinical Officer
6
Patient care
Jean & David Blechman Cardiac & Vascular Center
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
7
PATIENT CARE
73
1,069
2,140
Operating Rooms
Patient Beds
Registered/Advanced Practice Nurses
15,219
Inpatient Surgical Procedures
37,408 656,250
Admissions
1,000,000+
Physician office Visits
Outpatient Visits
PATIENT CARE
Twice awarded Magnet designation for
nursing excellence (Tisch and Rusk)
gold Seal of Approval from
The Joint Commission
Accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities for Five Inpatient Rehabilitation Programs
Day
126
8
05.06.10
The annual National Nurses Week, commencing every May 6, is a time to
celebrate the professional contributions of nurses. Our world-class nursing
care comes from unmatched skill, dedication, and a human touch. That’s why
NYU Langone Medical Center has twice received Magnet designation for excellence in nursing, a prestigious honor held by just 6% of hospitals nationwide.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
9
Patient Care
3
hospitals: Tisch,
Rusk, Hospital for
Joint Diseases
1,069 37,408
TOTAL Beds
total admissions
in 2010
We are renowned for our clinical expertise across a wide range of specialties, including cardiac and vascular medicine
and surgery, neurosurgery, cancer care, musculoskeletal diseases and conditions, and children’s services. Our physicians
and surgeons use some of the most advanced medical technology available anywhere, but it is the compassion and
individualized care that truly make the difference.
10
Patient care
quality & safety
In an achievement that underscores our commitment to
and progress in ensuring quality clinical care and patient
safety, in 2010 we were named a top 10 academic medical
center by the University HealthSystem Consortium. We
received five stars—the highest rating—for overall performance and we ranked number one in the nation for
effectiveness and equity. We finished the year with
a remarkable 98% compliance rate on the national Process
of Care measures, a set of recommended treatments for
ensuring the best results for patients with common
medical conditions or surgical procedures.
or expand our services into communities throughout the
greater New York City area, including Great Neck, Rego
Park, Westchester, and midtown Manhattan. We developed a plan for relocating the various programs of our
Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, both to make
room for the Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Pavilion
and in response to healthcare delivery trends, which are
increasingly focused on the outpatient setting.
the patient experience
We are transforming our facilities to align with our
vision by incorporating advanced technology with a
compassionate, personalized approach to care. In April
we dedicated the Yung Hsia Women’s Pavilion, a newly
In the fall, we opened a new state-of-the-art inpatient
pharmacy, which fills medication orders by machine. This renovated unit that provides care for women undergoing
gynecological, bariatric, and other surgeries, as well as
automation improves accuracy of dispensing and allows
women with other medical problems. Also in April, the
staff pharmacists to spend more time on the patient
surgical intensive care unit was completely renovated,
care units to consult with physicians, nursing staff, and
offering private rooms with flat-screen TVs, expansive
patients and families.
views of the East River, and accommodations for families
Multidisciplinary collaboration remained a cornerstone
to stay with their loved one around the clock. Later in the
of quality and safety. Our Partnering for Quality
fall, we opened the Joel E. Smilow Comprehensive ProsProgram—a team-based program in which nursing staff
tate Cancer Center, offering state-of-the-art personalized
and physicians work together to lead quality-improvecare and education for men with prostate cancer.
ment efforts—undertook 60 projects across five sites. Our
By year’s end, we began designing the Kimmel Pavilion,
Infection Prevention and Control Department collabowhich will offer patient-centered acute care and will interated with nursing, building services, and other departgrate seamlessly with our flagship Tisch Hospital. In 2010
ments to reduce hospital-acquired infections. Several of
we also received generous support to renovate and expand
our Lean Six Sigma projects focused on quality and
our emergency department and to move our Institute for
safety, enabling, for example, infection-rate reductions
Reconstructive Plastic Surgery into a new nearby facility.
for neurosurgical ventricular shunts and peripherally
inserted central catheters.
To further improve the patient experience, our PatientCentered Care Department began a Hospitality Services
In 2010 we were fully immersed in the transition to
program and expanded the scope of services provided by
Epic, our new electronic medical record system. At the
patient advocates. And even after patients are discharged,
same time, we enhanced our current health information
their well-being and needs remain a concern to us—inpasystems and processes, making substantial progress in
tients from acute care units now receive a phone call
eliminating duplicate medical record numbers and fully
within three days of leaving the hospital from a nurse
converting to electronic physician documentation—all
care manager regarding their condition and to answer
key components of patient safety and quality.
any questions about their care.
access & reach of services
We continued to expand access to care and made important progress in becoming a true seven-day-a-week hospital. By the end of 2010, patients were offered a host of
nonemergency services on weekends: Caesarian sections,
nuclear cardiology and cardiac catherization services,
mammograms, chemotherapy and radiation therapy,
among other services. We continued to bring
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
11
Innovation is at the core of academic medicine and scientific
research. To us, it is that mysterious and intangible combination
of curiosity, observation, reflection, and imagination. Through
innovation, our world-class researchers are making strides in
understanding the basic biology of life and developing better
ways to diagnose and treat disease. And we are committed to
rapidly bringing those advances to the bedside to improve
patient care and public health.
—Vivian S. Lee, MD, PHD, MBA
Senior Vice President & Vice Dean for Science, Chief Scientific Officer
12
research
Joan and Joel Smilow Research Center
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
13
Research
259,000,000
$
in Research Awards in 2010
72.5
8.6
5.6
13.3
% from NIH
% from Federal Non-NIH
% from NIH Subcontract
% from Non-Federal
4,153
Total Publications in 2010 including 17 books,
76 chapters & 3,184 journal articles
Research
1,450
INVENTIONS
349
370
662
active license agreements
pending U.S. patent applications
issued U.S. patents
1,700,000,000
$
License revenue received
Day
157
14
06.10.10
New York magazine named 122 NYU Langone physicians to its annual “Best
Doctors” list in 2010 and featured neurosurgeon Dr. Anthony Frempong-Boadu,
known for treating especially difficult cases of the spine. Like many of our surgical
subspecialty faculty, Dr. Frempong-Boadu uses the latest advances in minimally
invasive surgery, giving patients a shorter recovery time with fewer complications.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
15
research
188
m
Dollars of National
Institutes of Health
Research Funding in
FY2010
4,153 533
total journal
articles and other
publications in 2010
K
square feet of
Research Space
advancing science
Thanks to the generosity of Fiona and Stanley Druckenmiller, we continued to make major strides in advancing
neurosciences in 2010. We are proud and fortunate to
have some of the greatest minds in neuroscience on our
faculty and—with the recruitment in the fall of the brilliant Richard Tsien, DPhil, to lead our new Neuroscience
Institute—we are poised like never before to continue and
expand our groundbreaking work in this area through both
physical construction of neuroscience research space and
by leading interdisciplinary collaborations across the Medical Center and New York University.
Our researchers continued to make advances on a range
of scientific inquiries: for example, revealing how an
investigational drug wards off the inflammation accompanying rheumatoid arthritis by holding a specific enzyme
at bay; discovering a microRNA that helps regulate cholesterol balance and movement; implicating UVA radiation as a key contributor to melanoma, the deadliest form
of skin cancer; sequencing the genomes of two species of
ants to lay the foundation for understanding environmentally induced epigenetic changes; and discovering new
insights into the maternal heredity of Alzheimer’s disease.
Our dynamic research culture attracts the best minds from all over the world. We strive to develop new and better ways
to diagnose and treat disease and are committed to rapidly bringing advances to the bedside to improve patient care and
public health.
16
research
Our Centers of Excellence continued to advance translational research, and we launched a new interdisciplinary
effort in inflammation, infection, and immunology —
dubbed I3 — building on world-class programs in immunology and inflammatory and infectious diseases. We
commenced planning for the new neurosciences and I3
research building space. We also strengthened our commitment to the public health sciences and our growing
faculty and programs in population health, health services
research, community health, bioinformatics, biostatistics,
and epidemiology, which began the move into a new
home on 30th Street together with the Clinical and
Translational Science Institute.
a $9.3-million grant from the National Institutes of
Health, and in June by $5.4 million from the Empire
State Stem Cell Board. The stem cell grant will be used,
in part, to expand the RNAi Core Facility. With the
NIH funding, we began to renovate our 40-year-old Berg
research facility—another step in transforming our physical environment to align with our vision. This funding
has allowed us to advance our scientific research in
a range of areas, including neurobehavioral sciences.
And in July, our Division of Laboratory Animal
Resources received full accreditation from the governing
body that oversees animal research, with unprecedented
survey success.
We continued to invest in our researchers and foster
young investigators. We began a new training program
for researchers who are managing labs, giving them the
tools and competencies to run a lab efficiently and effectively. The first session was held in November, with more
than 50 researchers enrolled, representing a mix of clinical and basic scientists. Our efforts to enrich our faculty
through development and mentoring programs are among
the best investments we can make.
funding
By the end of our fiscal year 2010, our baseline NIH
funding had grown from $126.4 million to $138.1 million—a 9.3% increase from the previous year and a fivefold rate of increase compared to other medical schools
around the country. We also benefited from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act with an additional
$49.9 million in funding for scientific research. Our total
research awards for the year exceeded $259 million.
supporting our researchers
In 2010 our new Office of Collaborative Sciences became
fully operational. It was created to cultivate team science
to solve interdisciplinary problems through management
of core research facilities—from the RNAi lab to our new
genome technology center. By harnessing emerging technologies and their application to biomedical problems,
the office is ensuring we remain at the forefront of innovation and state-of-the-art research. In April, our core
facilities and technologies were further bolstered with
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
17
NYU School of Medicine is pioneering a new teaching
model, the Curriculum for the 21st Century (C21). C21
represents a major change to medical education as it has
existed for 100 years. Not only will it give students a deeper
knowledge of disease pathways and encourage their pursuit
of scholarly investigation, but it strengthens the humanistic
element of being a doctor and expands the nature of what
students need to know to the civic responsibility of this
noble profession.
—Steven B. Abramson, MD
Senior Vice President & Vice Dean for Education, Faculty & Academic Affairs
18
education
Alumni Hall B
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
19
Education
4,542
99
29
total Faculty MEMBERS
Endowed professorships
Academic Departments
6
4
INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE MEMBERS
ON CURRENT FACULTY
Nobel Laureates
AMONG OUR ALUMNI & FORMER FACULTY
736
68
Medical STUDENTS
MD/PhD STUDENTS
248 381 1,125
PhD STUDENTS
POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS
RESIDENTS & FELLOWS
Education
1
INNOVATIVE curriculum
Day
273
20
09.30.10
In fall 2010, the University HealthSystem Consortium ranked us in the top 10
hospitals nationwide for patient safety and quality. Our commitment to patient
safety embraces both well-established procedures such as proper scrubbing and
innovative initiatives such as our proactive telephone calls to discharged patients
to ensure their well-being.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
21
Education
C21
first class of
students
169
years of training
physicians and
scientists
1,243
Full-time Faculty
a new curriculum
Last year was a pivotal year for our medical education
programs. After two years of planning that engaged more
than 100 faculty members and students, the Curriculum
for the 21st Century (C21) made its debut in September when students in the class of 2014 saw their first
patients—on their first day of class. This new model of
medical education intertwines the clinical and basic sciences through all four years of a student’s training—taking students from the classroom to patients to virtual 3D
operating suites and back again, constantly reinforcing
their understanding of the biological underpinnings of
disease and their consequences on human health.
An integral part of this new model is PLACE, the
Patient-based Longitudinal Ambulatory Clinical Experience. In this early clinical immersion program, medical
students are paired with practicing physicians and asked
to follow a small group of patients over the course of a
year, wherever their illnesses may take them. We see this
as an early opportunity for students to practice how to be
humanistic caregivers. Some PLACE sessions are based in
public health facilities in New York City, such as Baruch
Family Health Center, Gouverneur Healthcare Services,
and the Charles B. Wang Community Health Center, to
expose students to a diverse patient population in a range
of community settings. In addition, students shadow
physicians and patients in private practices.
Over its 169-year history, NYU School of Medicine has trained thousands of physicians and scientists who have helped shape
the course of medical history. In the fall of 2010, for the first time, first-year medical students were introduced to patients on
their first day of classes as part of our Curriculum for the 21st Century, or C21.
22
education
We have enriched our educational offerings by developing
new dual degree programs. In addition to degrees in public
health or public administration, medical students can
now earn a master’s in clinical investigation, global public
health or biomedical ethics. Our C21 curriculum includes
a new emphasis on cultural competencies and healthcare
disparities, and our international health program continued to connect students with health projects throughout
the world—30 sites in the previous academic year.
harnessing technology
In addition to cultivating a student body skilled in providing humanistic, compassionate medical care, we are
equally ensuring a technologically savvy generation of
future doctors. In November, we announced our partnership with the City University of New York to create the
New York Simulation Center for Health Sciences. With
over 20,000 square feet of space, the center will train
a wide range of health professionals including students,
staff, and residents from the School of Medicine, the
NYU Colleges of Dentistry and Nursing, CUNY nursing schools, CUNY allied health professional schools,
and CUNY emergency medical technician programs.
Our proprietary Web Initiative for Surgical Education (WISE-MD), a program using advanced computer
graphics and video to enhance the teaching of surgical
skills to medical students, residents, nurses, and allied
health workers, is now used in 53 schools nationwide, up
from 36 by the end of 2009. Our Division of Educational
Informatics continued to promote and develop cuttingedge tools in medical education, including our online
Learning Activities Modules, or LAMS.
enhancing student life
We are transforming our campus infrastructure to
meet the demands of technology in education, including
a complete renovation of our lecture hall, Alumni Hall
B. The space was fully wired last year for collaborative
learning using tools such as videoconferencing, teleconferencing, and wireless connectivity. We also designed
six new small-group teaching rooms—another step in
our commitment to team-based learning.
We upgraded our residence halls with philanthropic support from our friends. In the summer, the main lobby of
the Susan and Martin Lipton Hall on First Avenue underwent renovations and a host of aesthetic improvements.
And in September, our students began to fill a new
residence on 26th Street to replace the aging Rubin Hall.
Thanks to an extraordinary gift of $21 million from our
longtime faculty member and supporter, Dr. Jan Vilcek,
and his wife, Marica, the hall was renovated to include
a new lounge, fitness center, and study space as well as
upgraded bedroom suites, a modernized lobby, and technology enhancements. In recognition of their steadfast
dedication and constant commitment to the lives of
future generations of physicians, we named the new
facility the Jan and Marica Vilcek Hall.
The Vilceks’ transformational gift will create full-tuition
merit scholarships, allowing our medical school graduates
to begin their careers without debt and ensuring we
attract the most highly qualified and talented students in
an increasingly competitive environment. Their contribution also expands the existing Jan T. Vilcek Endowed
Fellowship Fund, which will greatly aid graduate students
and postdoctoral fellows and dramatically change the
trajectory of their biomedical education and lives.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
23
We rely on the Medical Center’s generous donors and
friends to ensure our standard of excellence as we serve the
health and wellness needs of the thousands who come to us
for care each day. We are especially grateful to our dedicated
community of individuals, foundations, corporations, and
organizations that support our institution.
­— Kenneth G. Langone
Chairman, Board of Trustees
24
Philanthropy
Charlotte and Henry E. Fleck Garden
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
25
Philanthropy
Throughout NYU Langone
Medical Center’s history,
our friends and committed supporters have made
remarkable gifts to advance
our educational initiatives,
groundbreaking research,
and patient-centered care.
We gratefully acknowledge
those who have given generously to our fine institution,
helping us to excel as a leading academic medical center.
* The donors listed here have
made cumulative gifts of $10M+
to NYU Langone.
Historic Partners*
Historic Partners*
Total Gift Amount (in Dollars)
Total Gift Amount (in Dollars)
100M +
10-100M
The Druckenmiller Foundation
Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel
Elaine A. and Kenneth G. Langone
The Family of Wilma S. and Laurence A. Tisch
Marica and Jan Vilcek
American Cancer Society, Inc.
Leon H. Charney
Dr. Jerome S. Coles and Mrs. Geraldine Coles
Dysautonomia Foundation, Inc.
Edith K. and Frederick L. Ehrman
Laurence and Lori Fink
Charlotte and Henry E. Fleck
Arlene and Arnold Goldstein
The Irma T. Hirschl Trust
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Stanley Allan Isenberg, md ’43
Kate Macy Ladd Fund
Evan F. Lilly Memorial Trust
Ruth and Leonard Litwin
Frederick Lueders
Suzanne and Thomas Murphy
National Foundation for Facial Reconstruction
Ronald O. Perelman
Bernard and Irene Schwartz
The Skirball Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Joel E. Smilow
Anita and Joseph Steckler
The Family of Joan H. and Preston Robert Tisch
Philanthropy
All gifts make a difference to the
continued excellence of NYU
Langone. This chart illustrates the
numbers of donors in each dollar
range who contributed to the
Medical Center in fiscal year 2010.
20
$1,000,000 & above
140
$100,000 - $999,999
572 12,615
$10,000 - $99,999
13,347
total gift amount: $118,625,359
Under $10,000
Philanthropy
2010 Gift Amount (in Dollars)
2+
M
The Alvin Benjamin and
Kenneth Coyle Sr. Families
Robert and Christina Seix Dow
Estate of Isabel Fine
Eleanor and Stephen Hammerman, Esq.
The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley
Charitable Trust
Susan and William Jaffe, MD
National Foundation for
Facial Reconstruction
Nancy Glickenhaus Pier
Estate of Martin Spatz
Marica and Jan Vilcek
2010 Gift Amount (in Dollars)
1-2 M
Anonymous
Dysautonomia Foundation, Inc.
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Arlene & Arnold Goldstein Family Foundation
International Brain Research Foundation
Estate of Mary B. Ketcham
KiDS of NYU Foundation, Inc.
Sandra R. and Edward H. Meyer
Estate of Stephen C. Moss
Patricia Rosenwald and E. John Rosenwald Jr.
Estate of Joseph Schlackman
Devendra Shah
Francia and James Shaw
2010 Gift Amount (in Dollars)
500k -1m
Alzheimer’s Association
American Cancer Society, Inc.
American Heart Association, Inc.
Avon Foundation, Inc.
Burroughs Wellcome Fund
Cancer Research Institute
Judith K. and Jamie Dimon
Estate of Helen G. Grunebaum
International Flavors and Fragrances
Marc Jacobs International, LLC
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Manzo Family
Melanoma Research Alliance
National Multiple Sclerosis Society
Joanne Pearson
Alan and Jill Rappaport
The Morris and Alma Schapiro Fund
Irene Schwartz and Bernard L. Schwartz
The Schwartz Family Foundation
Steven and Deborah Shapiro
Robert and Laura Sillerman
Preethi Krishna and Ram Sundaram
The Tomorrow Foundation
The donors listed here made or recommended gifts or new pledges in fiscal year 2010.
2010 Gift Amount (in Dollars)
100 -500
k
k
The American Ireland Fund
American Liver Foundation
H. van Ameringen Foundation
Amgen USA
Julie Wilson Anderson and Dwight Anderson
Anonymous
The Auxiliary of NYU Langone Medical Center
St. Baldrick’s Foundation
Phyllis and Marvin Barasch
Belluck & Fox, LLP
Katherine and Todd Boehly
The Honorable and Mrs. Nicholas F. Brady
Breast Cancer Alliance, Inc.
Breast Cancer Research Foundation
Clarissa and Edgar M. Bronfman Jr.
Estate of Sylvia Brustor
Estate of Marion B. Carstairs
Linda and Arthur Carter
The Charina Endowment Fund, Inc.
Chemotherapy Foundation, Inc.
Kathryn Cassell Chenault, Esq. and
Kenneth I. Chenault
Clinton Foundation HIV/AIDS Initiative
The Lynne Cohen Foundation for
Ovarian Cancer Research
Baukje and Noel Cohen, MD
Judy Angelo Cowen Foundation
Estate of Leroy G. Dalheim
Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation
Philanthropy 2010 Gift Amount (in Dollars) 100k-500k cont.
The Dana Foundation
Joseph Dancis, MD‡
Dart NeuroScience LLC
Estate of Dorothy Irene De Bear
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
Joan and Alvin H. Einbender
Shelley and Steven Einhorn
Frederick and Diana Elghanayan
Ellison Medical Foundation
Carol J. Feinberg
Laurence and Lori Fink
The Foundation for AIDS Research, Inc.
Genzyme Corporation
Gilead Foundation
Lucienne and Lawrence Glaubinger
Loretta Brennan Glucksman
Marsha Gray
Brian and Tania Higgins
The Irma T. Hirschl Trust
Benjamin H. Homan Jr. Charitable Trust
Human Frontier Science Program
Elizabeth B. Dater Jennings and
William M. Jennings Jr.
Anastasios John Kanellopoulos, MD
Rob and Ellen Kapito
Cynthia Gordon Kaplan, MD and
Martin P. Kaplan, MD
F.M. Kirby Foundation, Inc.
Klarman Family Foundation Grants
Program in Eating Disorders Research
The Klein Family
Susan G. Komen for the Cure,
Greater NYC Affiliate
James and Marjorie Kuhn
Elaine A. and Kenneth G. Langone
Ruth and Sidney Lapidus
Ann Tenenbaum Lee and Thomas H. Lee
Dalia Leeds and Laurence C. Leeds Jr.
Toni Lieberman Family Charitable Trust
Evan F. Lilly Memorial Trust
Estate of Leah W. Linn
The Lillian S. Lusskin
Orthopedic Foundation
Ralph Lusskin, MD
Making Headway Foundation, Inc.
March of Dimes Foundation
Estate of Eli Mason
Melissa Mathison
Sir Deryck and Lady Vaofua Maughan
Estate of Claudia McClintock
Meidar Family Charitable Trust
Melanoma Research Foundation
Sema Merjanian
Edward and Vivian Merrin
Julie C. and Edward J. Minskoff
Estate of Suzanne C. Murphy
Thomas S. Murphy
The New York Community Trust
NY Epilepsy & Neurology PLLC
NYU Plastic Surgery Associates, LLP
Organogenesis, Inc.
Orthopaedic Research and
Education Foundation
Alaleh Ostad and Ariel Ostad, MD
Debra Perelman
Lee and Bob Peterson
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Martin‡ and Sondra Rappaport
The Honorable Kimba M. Wood and
Frank E. Richardson
The donors listed here made or recommended gifts or new pledges in fiscal year 2010.
‡ Deceased
The Riley Family Foundation
Robin Hood Foundation
Linda Gosden Robinson and
James D. Robinson III
Gloria and Burton D. Rose, MD
Kenneth Rosenberg Foundation
Daniel Rosenbloom, Esq.
The Louis and Rachel Rudin Foundation, Inc
Louise and Joshua Samuelson
Olga M. Santiago, MD
The Selander Foundation
Sephardic Hospital Fund—Medstar
Tracy and Stanley Shopkorn
Bruce A. Silberstein
William & Sylvia Silberstein Foundation, Inc.
Klara and Larry Silverstein
Simmons Mesothelioma Foundation
The Simons Foundation
Gordon and Norma Smith Family Foundation
Robin L. Smith, MD, MBA
Lynda and William C. Steere Jr.
Stryker Corporation
Lisa & Steven Tananbaum Family Foundation
Theresa and Mark Tillinger
Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz Foundation
The Wagner Family Foundation
Peter Stanley Walker, PhD
Elaine Weiler and Alan G. Weiler, Esq.
J. Weinstein Foundation, Inc.
Leah J. and Michael R. Weisberg
Adam Scott Weiss Cancer Memorial Fund
Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Weiss
Mr. R. Van Whisnand
The Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation
Charles F. Wolf Scholarship Fund
Day
305
26
11.01.10
At the American Society for Radiation Oncology’s annual meeting, Dr. Silvia
Formenti shared results of her study of using the prone position during radiation
therapy for breast cancer. By sharing research findings at meetings such as this
and in 4,153 publications in 2010, our faculty are changing the lives of not just our
patients, but patients around the world. Dr. Formenti’s own efforts are bringing
hope to many, from women in rural Africa to the stars of TV, film, and Broadway.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
27
About Us
1
integrated
medical center
3
missions
3
patient-centered
hospitals
1
preeminent
medical school
We are committed to making world-class contributions
that place service to human health at the center of an
academic culture devoted to excellence in research, patient
care, and education.
NYU Langone Medical Center is one of the nation’s
premier centers of excellence in healthcare, biomedical
research, and medical education. Located in Manhattan,
NYU Langone consists of three hospitals—Tisch Hospital, a 705-bed acute-care tertiary facility; Rusk Institute
of Rehabilitation Medicine, the first rehabilitation hospital in the world, with extensive inpatient and outpatient
rehabilitation programs; and the 190-bed Hospital for
Joint Diseases, one of only five hospitals in the world
dedicated to orthopaedics and rheumatology—plus the
NYU School of Medicine, one of the nation’s preeminent
academic institutions and one of 18 schools and colleges
of New York University.
In addition, NYU Langone Medical Center offers ambulatory-care services in various Manhattan neighborhoods, the
outer boroughs, Long Island, New Jersey and Westchester
County, bringing services directly to where our patients
live and work. NYU Langone’s medical students, residents,
and faculty also provide patient care at Bellevue Hospital
Center, the nation’s oldest public hospital, and the Medical
Center is affiliated with Woodhull Hospital in Brooklyn,
Gouverneur Healthcare Services in Manhattan, and the
New York Harbor Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
In all three facets of our mission, we are becoming a national leader in applying the power of technology to accelerate,
streamline, and enrich our services. We are implementing Epic, our integrated electronic medical record system, across
the Medical Center, and our new automated, state-of-the-art pharmacy (above) is the first of its kind in New York.
The Medical Center’s trifold mission to serve, teach, and
discover is achieved on a daily basis through the seamless
integration of an academic culture devoted to excellence
in patient care, education and research.
Patient Care
In a culture of humanism that emphasizes treating the whole
person and not simply the disease, NYU Langone Medical
Center is renowned for evidence-based clinical care across
a wide array of specialties. Our five key clinical areas are:
28
About Us
cardiac & vascular
The Cardiac and Vascular Institute (CVI) is a world
leader in cardiovascular care. CVI’s cardiac surgeons
pioneered minimally invasive heart surgery and mitral
valve repair and continue to pave the way in the development of new techniques and procedures for treating heart
rhythm disorders, aortic aneurysms and congestive heart
failure. Our cardiac and vascular physicians work collaboratively with our cardiac rehabilitation team to ensure
patients move seamlessly from diagnosis and treatment
to the rehabilitation phase of their care.
cancer
The NYU Cancer Institute, a National Cancer Institutedesignated cancer center, is recognized for translating
knowledge about the roots of cancer into innovative
therapies and advanced cancer care in a setting where
the patient comes first. With three outpatient cancer
centers—the Clinical Cancer Center, the Stephen D.
Hassenfeld Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood
Disorders, and the Joel E. Smilow Comprehensive
Prostate Cancer Center—we provide care that is simultaneously compassionate and state of the art. Our patients
have access to not only the latest prevention, screening,
diagnostic, treatment, genetic counseling, and support
services for cancer, but also broad access to cutting-edge
clinical trials.
musculoskeletal
At the core of NYU Langone’s expertise in musculoskeletal diseases and conditions and rehabilitation are
the Hospital for Joint Diseases (HJD) and Rusk Institute
of Rehabilitation Medicine. Both have been repeatedly
recognized by U.S. News & World Report as among the
best in the nation. Rusk has been ranked one of the top
10 rehabilitation programs in the country—and number
one in New York State—for more than 20 years, while
HJD is ranked as one of the top 11 orthopaedic programs.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
29
4,542 2,140 14,143
faculty members
registered and
advanced practice
nurses
total staff
In addition, a new specialized Outpatient Surgery Center
expands the scope of our services. The center, adjacent to
the main campus, is dedicated solely to orthopaedic procedures and boasts four operating rooms. Our orthopaedic surgeons are leaders in minimally invasive and robotic
knee, hip, and spine surgery, and with our rheumatologists, are pioneering new treatments for arthritis. And, as
the birthplace of rehabilitation medicine, Rusk continues
to set the global standard for rehabilitation care for every
stage of life and every phase of recovery on both an inpatient and outpatient basis.
NYU Langone will soon be home to a Musculoskeletal
Institute, an outpatient facility occupying 110,000 square
feet, which—as the largest facility of its kind in the country—will integrate research, clinical practice, rehabilitation, and wellness services for conditions involving the
spine, arthritis, autoimmune diseases, sports injuries, and
total joint replacement under one roof.
neurology and neurosurgery
U.S. News & World Report has recognized our expertise
in these areas and has named us one of the top 10 hospitals for neurology and neurosurgery for the past three
years. Our neurologists are experts in the diagnosis and
treatment of a broad spectrum of neurological diseases
and deliver integrated care to patients who have had
a stroke or are living with epilepsy, cerebrovascular disease, dementia, genetic and degenerative diseases, nerve
and muscle problems, headache and pain syndromes, and
movement disorders. We are also home to the largest
multiple sclerosis program in New York.
Our Department of Neurosurgery offers the most
advanced technology and surgical techniques available,
and our expertise encompasses surgery for brain tumors,
brain aneurysms and vascular malformations, spine ailments, epileptic seizures, and deep brain stimulation for
30
About Us
Supported by an environment that fosters collaboration and intellectual exchange, our researchers make remarkable discoveries
and translate them into patient care. The result: research that dramatically transforms the way disease is diagnosed, treated, and
ultimately, eradicated.
Parkinson’s disease. In an environment of cutting-edge
research and medical education, the department’s interdisciplinary team is world renowned for highly specialized treatments and procedures. We are one of only a few
hospitals on the East Coast to use the Leksell Gamma
Knife, which allows our neurosurgeons to remove deepseated tumors, vascular malformations, and other sites of
dysfunction with outstanding results.
children’s services
From neonatal to pediatric and adolescent care, and from
routine well-baby visits to intricate cardiac surgery on
newborns, NYU Langone offers a virtual children’s hospital, giving our young patients access to specialized care
from a multidisciplinary team of talented and dedicated
neonatal specialists, pediatricians and pediatric surgeons.
General pediatrics, neonatal intensive care, pediatric
orthopaedics, pediatric congenital cardiac surgery,
childhood cancers, and child and adolescent psychiatry
services—just a few of the areas where NYU Langone
excels—are all provided in a compassionate, familycentered environment.
NYU Langone also treats the full range of medical
conditions in outstanding programs including our
Fertility Center, Weight Management Program (including bariatric surgery), Institute for Reconstructive Plastic
Surgery, Robotic Surgery Center, Cochlear Implant
Center, Sleep Disorders Center, and programs ranging
from maternal-fetal medicine to Alzheimer’s disease.
Research
With over 50 centers, 29 academic departments, and
533,000 square feet of research space, NYU Langone
boasts scientists who have produced groundbreaking
discoveries, some of which have led to Nobel Prizes, and
all of which have helped advance the diagnosis and
treatment of disease.
cancer institute
The research mission of the NYU Cancer Institute is to
discover the origins of cancer and use that knowledge
to eradicate the personal and societal burden of cancer
in our community and around the world. The Cancer
Institute specializes in translational research programs
in melanoma, genitourinary cancers, and breast cancer, among other areas. Its basic research programs
are devoted to cancer immunology, stem cell biology,
and environmental and molecular carcinogenesis. Our
researchers are highly regarded for their studies of the
complex cellular pathways leading to cancer, which may
provide new targets for treatment. New programs in
neuro-oncology, developmental therapeutics, and cancer
healthcare disparities have expanded research and treatment capabilities, and clinical trials are currently evaluating vaccines and new tools for detection and treatment.
centers of excellence
Six Centers of Excellence bring together our most
outstanding basic scientists and clinical researchers to
foster highly collaborative, multidisciplinary investigations that inspire new ideas and discoveries in areas long
recognized as institutional strengths. The six Centers of
Excellence are: Addiction, Brain Aging, Cancers of the
Skin, Multiple Sclerosis, Musculoskeletal Disease, and
Urologic Disease.
clinical & translational science institute
The Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI),
a collaborative effort with the New York City Health and
Hospitals Corporation, is designed to develop ways to
more rapidly advance science from the lab to the patients
and out to the community, and to explore the underlying cause of health disparities. The CTSI supports the
education, training, and development of scientists so that
they can conduct the investigations necessary to bring
scientific advances to patients. By enhancing ties between
NYU and HHC researchers and the community, it helps
enable these scientists to identify health problems and
apply their knowledge to promote new developments and
evidence-based medicine within communities, thereby
reducing healthcare disparities.
neuroscience institute
The Medical Center is ushering in a new era of neuroscience, expanding on our existing strength and extensive
expertise in neuroscience research, focused on the goal
of understanding the role of the nervous system in health
and in disease. The new Neuroscience Institute is
a collaborative enterprise of clinicians and scientists
from across the Medical Center and New York University, encompassing a wide range of related disciplines
including developmental genetics, molecular systems,
and behavioral and clinical neuroscience.
skirball institute of biomolecular medicine
The Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine conducts basic research in the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie the way organisms function in four
areas: developmental genetics, molecular neurobiology,
immunology and pathogenesis, and structural biology.
It is home to some 275 researchers, including 27 principal
investigators, from a diverse range of specialties—creating a fertile ground for multidisciplinary collaboration.
Such collaborations and the research of individual investigators have led to important discoveries in many areas,
such as autoimmunity and origins of allergic diseases,
cell migration, specification and renewal, cell polarity,
the structural basis of signal transduction and membrane
transport, neural differentiation, synapse formation, and
neural networks. Researchers at Skirball have developed
models for host-pathogen interactions in inflammatory
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
31
COUNTLESS
lives changed over
our 169-year history
of service to human
health
disease as well as models for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
disease, discovered the molecular basis for antidepressant
function, and provided key evidence for the role of the
K+ channel in the etiology of T-cell-mediated colitis.
Dynamic interdisciplinary research to address the entire
range of biomedical science is conducted in numerous
other programs and centers, including the Nelson Institute
of Environmental Medicine, one of the nation’s oldest and
most distinguished centers for research into the health
effects of environmental pollution; the Center for
Biomedical Imaging, one of the premier imaging research
centers in the world; the AIDS Clinical Trial Unit, focused
on advancing HIV/AIDS research, promoting the highest
quality of care for HIV-infected patients and sharing
discoveries with the public both here and abroad; and the
Comparative Effectiveness Research Program at our Health
Promotion and Prevention Research Center, focused on,
among others, hypertension and colorectal cancer health
disparities in African-American men in New York City.
As the focal point of our translational research efforts,
the 13-story Joan and Joel Smilow Research Center
houses multidisciplinary research teams dedicated to
such fields as cancer, cardiovascular biology, neuroscience, dermatology, genetics, and infectious diseases. And
to support our scientists, the Medical Center runs more
than 20 core facilities, or shared resources and technology, from analytic chemistry and bioinformatics to tissue
banking and vaccine therapy.
Education
In all facets of our mission—medical education, research, clinical care—the patient is at the center of our work. From our steady
advances in patient safety and quality to our exciting new model of medical education to the huge strides we are making in
applying research to clinical care and public health, we are changing countless lives.
Since 1841, NYU School of Medicine has trained thousands of physicians and scientists who have helped to
shape the course of medical history and enrich the lives
of countless people. An integral part of NYU Langone
Medical Center, the School, at its core, is committed to
improving the human condition through medical education, scientific research, and direct patient care.
educational opportunities
In addition to the medical degree, the School collaborates
with New York University to offer master’s degrees in
public administration, public health, clinical investigation, and bioethics. The School also sponsors more than
65 residency and fellowship training programs, as well
as postgraduate medical education courses for practicing
32
About Us
physicians. Our Physician Scientist Training Program is
designed to give residents and fellows the research skills
needed to conduct the highest caliber science. Our Sackler
Institute, a division of the NYU Graduate School of the
Arts and Science, offers programs in the basic medical
sciences, leading to a PhD and, in coordination with the
Medical Scientist Training Program, combined MD/PhD.
The School has 29 academic departments in the clinical
and basic sciences and more than 50 divisions, programs,
and centers that provide the broadest educational experiences available anywhere. The School also maintains
affiliations with area hospitals, including Bellevue Hospital, one of the nation’s finest municipal hospitals, where
students provide care to New York City’s diverse population, enhancing the scope and quality of their education
and training.
transforming medical education
We are transforming medical education with our new
Curriculum for the 21st Century, or C21—a patientcentered and learner-centered curriculum. C21 is
a model of medical education based on a spiral curriculum, or pillars, where learning wraps around and builds
upon specific areas of medicine. The pillars concept aids
students in making connections between the increasingly
complicated mechanisms of disease and clinical concepts.
This fosters student knowledge both through a study
of the scientific underpinnings of a disease and, at the
same time, through direct patient care. This innovative
approach allows students to better connect mechanisms
of disease to the care and treatment of patients. Currently, the four pillars in the curriculum are atherosclerosis, diabetes, colon cancer, and tuberculosis. Starting with
the class of 2014, students see patients beginning the very
first week of medical school and follow many of these
same patients throughout their four years of study.
The School is also on the forefront of leveraging technology to enhance medical learning through the Program for
Medical Education and Technology, which includes webbased training in surgery, as well as a variety of initiatives
that use simulation modalities for clinical teaching.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
33
In all areas of our operations—patient services, quality and
safety initiatives, our finances—we have never been more
focused. Through our strategic initiatives and effective and
careful management, we are becoming more efficient and
creating added value that translates both to patient outcomes
and the bottom line. By doing so, we are being recognized
as a leading academic medical center.
—Bernard A. Birnbaum, MD
Senior Vice President & Vice Dean, Chief of Hospital Operations
34
Measures of Success
Main Lobby
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
35
MEASURES OF SUCCESS
top 10
1st
NATIONWIDE FOR PATIENT SAFETY & QUALITY,
UNIVERSITY HEALTHSYSTEM CONSORTIUM
IN EQUITY AND EFFectiveness NATIONWIDE,
UNIVERSITY HEALTHSYSTEM CONSORTIUM
U.S. News & World Report “Best Hospitals in America” 2010/2011
1st
2nd
8th
9th
IN REHABILITATION MEDICINE
IN NEW YORK STATe
IN ORTHOPAEDICS
IN NEW YORK STATE
IN RHEUMATOLOGY
NATIONWIDe
IN NEUROLOGY/NEUROSURGERY
NATIONWIDE
14
number of specialties ranked among best in the country by
U.S. News & World Report “Best Hospitals in America” 2010/2011
MEASURES OF SUCCESS
top 10
America’s 10 Best Hospitals,
Becker’s Hospital Review, 2009
bbb+
Standard & poor’s
baa1 positive
Moody’s Investor Services
honor roll
Niagara Health Quality Coalition’s NYS Hospital
Report Card for patient safety & quality, 2009 & 2010
fitch & Standard & poor’s
Day
340
36
12.05.10
Collaboration is a cornerstone of quality and safety. Whether it’s effective teamwork between perioperative nurses and surgeons or collaborations between the
infection prevention and the building services departments to prevent hospitalacquired infections, each team member is integral to ensuring quality and safe
care. We also employ Lean Six Sigma methodology into these efforts, including
a project in December to reduce neurosurgical shunt infections.
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
37
OUR REACH
A NYU Langone Medical Center Main Campus
550 First Avenue, New York, NY
Tisch Hospital
Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine
NYU School of Medicine
B Musculoskeletal Institute (Fall 2011)
& Outpatient Surgery Center
333 East 38 th Street, New York, NY
C NYU Clinical Cancer Center
j NYU Langone Medical Center – Williamsburg
101 Broadway, Brooklyn, NY
K NYU Langone Medical Center – Columbus Medical
97-85 Queens Boulevard, Rego Park, NY
L NYU Langone Medical Center – Great Neck
488 Great Neck Road, Great Neck, NY
M Nelson Institute of Environmental Medicine
Sterling Forest: 57 Old Forge Road, Tuxedo, NY
160 East 34 th Street, New York, NY
D Stephen D. Hassenfeld Children’s Center for
Cancer and Blood Disorders | the Laurence D. and
Lori Weider Fink Children’s Ambulatory Care Center
160 East 32 nd Street, New York, NY
E Smilow Comprehensive Prostate Cancer Center
N Orthopaedics at Westchester
311 North Street, White Plains, NY
O Orthopaedic Specialists at Westbury
761 Merrick Avenue, Westbury, NY
135 East 31 st Street, New York, NY
P NYUlmc Hepatology Associates
1097 Old Country Road, Plainview, NY
F Hospital for Joint Diseases
301 East 17 th Street, New York, NY
Q NYUlmc Vein Center – morristown
95 Madison Avenue, Morristown, NJ
G NYU Langone Medical Center – Trinity
111 Broadway, New York, NY
R Child Study Center – Hackensack
411 Hackensack Avenue, Hackensack, NJ
H Internal Medicine Associates – The Miller Practice
355 West 52nd Street, New York, NY
I Center for Women’s Health (Fall 2011)
1491 Third Avenue, New York, NY
38
our Reach
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
39
Day
365
40
12.31.10
By year’s end, the Department of Neurosurgery—already known for excellence
in the surgical treatment for numerous brain disorders—added to its roster of
specialists with the recruitment of several world-renowned neurosurgeons,
including Dr. Noel Perin. For the last three years, U.S. News & World Report has
ranked our program in neurosurgery among the top 10 nationwide in its
“Best Hospitals in America.”
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
41
MISSION
To Serve, To Teach, To Discover
Vision
A World-Class Patient-Centered
Integrated Academic Medical Center
Values
PRIDE: Professionalism, Respect,
Integrity, Diversity, Excellence
Leadership
Trustees
NYU Langone Medical Center
New York University
NYU Langone Medical Center
Martin Lipton, esq.
Kenneth G. Langone
Vicki Match Suna, aia
Kenneth G. Langone
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Chairman, Board of Trustees
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean for Real Estate
Development and Facilities
Chairman
John Sexton
Robert I. Grossman, md
President
Dean and Chief Executive Officer
Robert Berne, mba, phd
Steven B. Abramson, md
Executive Vice President for Health
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean for Education,
Faculty and Academic Affairs
Bernard A. Birnbaum, md
Senior Vice President and Vice Dean,
Chief of Hospital Operations
Andrew W. Brotman, md
Senior Vice President and Vice Dean
for Clinical Affairs and Strategy,
Chief Clinical Officer
Michael T. Burke
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean, Corporate
Chief Financial Officer
Nancy Sanchez
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean for Human Resources
Anthony Shorris
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean, Chief of Staff
Richard Donoghue
Senior Vice President for Strategic
Planning and Business Development
Deborah Loeb Bohren
Vice President for Communications
and Public Affairs
Lisa J. Silverman
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean, General Counsel
Vice President for Development
and Alumni Affairs
Senior Vice President and
Vice Dean for Science,
Chief Scientific Officer
leadership
Senior Vice President and Vice Dean,
Chief Information Officer (Interim)
Annette Johnson, jd
Vivian S. Lee, md, phd, mba
42
Nader Mherabi
Laurence D. Fink
Co-Chairman
Dwight Anderson
Marc H. Bell
William R. Berkley
Edgar M. BronfmaN Jr.
Kenneth I. Chenault
Gary D. Cohn
William J. Constantine
Elizabeth B. Dater
Jamie Dimon
Fiona Druckenmiller
James J. Dunne III
Alvin H. Einbender
Lori Fink
Louis P. Friedman
Jay M. Furman
Michael Gardner
Steven J. Gilbert
George E. Hall
Jacqueline S. Harris Hochberg
Sylvia Hassenfeld
Helen L. Kimmel
Sidney Lapidus
Thomas H. Lee
Laurence C. Leeds Jr.
Martin Lipton
Louis Marx Jr.
Deryck Maughan
Edward H. Meyer
Edward J. Minskoff
Ex Officio Trustees
Darla Moore
Thomas S. Murphy
Thomas S. Murphy Jr.
Frank T. Nickell
Michael E. Novogratz
Ronald O. Perelman
Debra Perelman
William A. Perlmuth
Laura Perlmutter
Douglas A. Phillips
Robert W. Pittman
Alan Rappaport
Linda Gosden Robinson
E. John Rosenwald Jr.
Alan D. Schwartz
Bernard L. Schwartz
Stanley Shopkorn
Henry R. Silverman
Larry A. Silverstein
Joel E. Smilow
Norma Smith
Robin L. Smith, MD, MBA
Carla Solomon, PhD
William C. Steere Jr.
John M. Stewart
Alice M. Tisch
Thomas J. Tisch
Bradley J. Wechsler
Anthony Welters
Michael C. Alfano, DMD, PhD
Robert Berne, PhD
Bonnie Brier
Robert I. Grossman, MD
David W. McLaughlin
John Sexton
Life Trustees
Mamdouha S. Bobst
Geraldine H. Coles
Arnold Greenberg
Felix Kaufman, PhD
Eleanor J. Piel, Esq.
Associate Trustees
Lola Finkelstein
Irma R. Hilton
Miriam Lubling
Daniel Rosenbloom, Esq.
Michael R. Stoler
Sam Sutton
Trustees Emeriti
Frank E. Richardson
Michael P. Schulhof
Medical Staff
Aubrey Galloway, MD
Stuart Garay, MD
Robert A. Press, MD, PhD
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER
43
phOTO CREDITs
Pages 1, 12, 44: Jeff Goldberg/Esto; pages 2, 8, 14, 20, 26, 31 (right), 32 (top, bottom right), 36, 40: Peter Turnley; page 6:
John Abbott; pages 10, 18, 24: Rene Perez; pages 16, 31 (left): Michael Weymouth; pages 22, 28, 32 (top, bottom left):
Joshua Bright; page 34: Bud Glick; page 42: Lynn Saville.
pRINTED ON fsC CERTIfIED pApER AND MANUfACTURED wITh ELECTRICITY IN ThE fORM Of RENEwAbLE ENERGY.
© 2011, NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER | 550 fIRsT AVENUE, NEw YORK, NY 10016 | www.NYULMC.ORG
44
365 days of excellence | 2010 Annual Report
NYU Langone Medical Center | 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016 | www.nyulmc.org

Similar documents

gastroenterology and gi surgery

gastroenterology and gi surgery achievements of the NYU Langone Medical Center Gastrointestinal (GI) Disease Service Line, reflecting the combined efforts of the Division of Gastroenterology and the Department of Surgery in addre...

More information

otolaryngology — head and neck surgery

otolaryngology — head and neck surgery Dear Colleagues and Friends, NYU Langone Medical Center’s Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery continues to push the boundaries of research and care. Our multidisciplinary teams work ...

More information