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The New York University
Medical Center, one of the nation's premier centers of excellence
in health care and medical research, is located on 30th Street and
First Avenue in midtown Manhattan. NYU Medical Center consists of
two hospitals: the Tisch Hospital and the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation
Medicine and is closely affiliated with Bellevue Hospital, the New
York Downtown Hospital, and the Hospital for Joint Diseases Orthopaedic
Institute, which together provide a range of superb clinical care
matched by few centers world-wide. Tisch Hospital, an acute-care
general hospital of 726 beds, contains important treatment and diagnostic
units and is a focus for a wide spectrum of regional patient care
programs. America's first licensed female physician, Elizabeth Blackwell,
founded NYU Downtown Hospital in 1853, and today its 300 beds and
over 500 attending physicians enable it to provide acute care to
the 600,000 people who work and live in Lower Manhattan. Descendant
from an infirmary established in 1658 and founded in 1736 as the
first hospital in what was soon to be the United States, Bellevue
Hospital today occupies a 25-story, 1232 bed facility with an attending
physician staff of 1,200 and a house staff of more than 500 residents.
At Bellevue Hospital, 26,000 inpatients and nearly 400,000 outpatient
clinic visits are accommodated each year as well as another 100,000
people through the Emergency Department each year. The Hospital
for Joint Diseases Orthopaedic Institute is a 220-bed hospital with
expertise in orthopaedic surgery, rheumatology and molecular medicine,
rehabilitation medicine, neurology, and specialized neurosurgery.
The Department of Radiology
at the New York University School of Medicine has over 70 board-certified
radiologists and provides a wide ranging and large volume clinical
service at all of the NYU Medical Center hospitals. Subspecialty
expertise is world-renowned in areas such as neuroradiology, thoracic
imaging, abdominal imaging, cardiovascular imaging, genitourinary
imaging, musculoskeletal radiology, interventional radiology, and
nuclear medicine. Major research efforts are extensive and diverse,
including multiple sclerosis, brain spectroscopy, brain perfusion
imaging, ventilation MR of the lung, virtual colonoscopy, cardiac
perfusion, lung cancer screening, transplant donor evaluation, screening
for hepatocellular carcinoma, and MR renography among many others.
Education of students, researchers, residents, fellows, and visiting
scholars is also an integral component of the department's mission.
The NYU School of Medicine, one of the nation's leading centers
of advanced biomedical learning, spans a history of excellence of
nearly 160 years in the education and training of physicians, in
patient care, and in scientific research. NYU School of Medicine
includes the Post-Graduate Medical School, the Skirball Institute
of Biomolecular Medicine, the Sackler Graduate School in Biomedical
Sciences, the National Cancer Institute-designated Kaplan Comprehensive
Cancer Center, the federally-funded Nelson Institute of Environmental
Medicine, and the Center for AIDS Research.
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