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Notice d'autorité
Adair, John
NA0003 · Personne · 1913-1997
Ambrosia, Todd F.
NA0006 · Personne

Todd F. Ambrosia has been the Dean of the Phillips School of Nursing at Mount Sinai since August 2015.

Aron, Jack R.
NA0013 · Personne · 1907-1994
Barbasch, Avi
NA0028 · Personne · 1949-2017
Becker, Ruth M.
NA0037 · Personne

Ruth Salzman Becker was a graduate of the Class of 1945 of The Mount Sinai Hospital School of Nursing.

American College of Surgeons
NA0008 · Collectivité

The American College of Surgeons was the accrediting body for hospitals until the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals was created in 1951.

NA0044 · Collectivité

The Beth Israel Hospital was founded in New York City in 1889. Initially established to serve the Lower East Side's growing population of Eastern European Jewish immigrants, the Hospital grew into a major charitable hospital serving patients of all backgrounds. In the 1890s it was based out of existing structures on the Lower East Side, but in 1902 the Hospital moved to a purpose-built hospital building on Jefferson and Cherry Streets, and in 1929 it relocated to its present location on East 17th Street. In the ensuing years the Hospital affiliated with numerous other medical institutions and expanded its 17th Street campus through the construction of new buildings and the purchase of adjacent structures, including the neighboring Manhattan General Hospital. In 1965 the institution was renamed the Beth Israel Medical Center to reflect this growth. In 1997, Beth Israel joined several other New York City hospitals in the establishment of Continuum Health Partners, a multi-hospital system. Following the merger of Continuum Health Partners and The Mount Sinai Medical Center in 2013, Beth Israel became a part of the newly established Mount Sinai Health System. It was renamed Mount Sinai Beth Israel the following year.

Aschner, Paul
NA0015 · Personne · ?-1975
Axelrod, Judith
NA0021 · Personne

Dr. Axelrod was born and raised in Massachusetts, where her father was a general practice physician. Her interest in medicine grew from his influence, as she joined him in making house calls as a young girl, and enjoyed reading through his medical textbooks, finding her interest drawn to the chapters on microbiology, and bacteriology and immunology. She was pre-med at Wellesley College, where she was encouraged to pursue medical school by her Dean. She graduated from Cornell University Medical College, and spent a year of residency at Montefiore Hospital, transferring to Mount Sinai for the second year and Fellowship training (1969-1972). She was hired by Dr. Theodore VanItallie for the Infectious Disease Division of the St. Luke's Hospital Department of Medicine at the end of her fellowship, and was the head of the unit between 1976 and 1980.