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New York Medical College – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

New York Medical College, also known as New York Med or NYMC, is a private graduate health sciences university based in Valhalla, New York, a suburb of New York City and a part of the New York Metropolitan Area. The university is located approximately 20 min by car north of Yankee Stadium and 35 min by express rail north of Grand Central Terminal/Times Square.

The main campus in Valhalla includes Westchester Medical Center University Hospital, Maria Fareri Children's Hospital, the Behavioral Health Center, and the Westchester Institute for Human Development. The second university hospital of New York Medical College is Metropolitan Hospital Center in Manhattan.

New York Medical College is the leading academic biomedical research institution between New York City and Albany, with $44 million in research and programs funded by the National Institutes of Health, corporations and other sources.[3] The university has specific strengths in the areas of cardiovascular disease, cancer, neuroscience and infectious disease.

Three schools comprise New York Medical College: the Graduate School of Basic Medical Sciences, the School of Health Sciences and Practice, and the School of Medicine. Total enrollment is 1,660 students (including 774 medical students), in addition to 800 residents and clinical fellows. NYMC employs 1,350 full-time faculty members and 1,450 part-time and voluntary faculty. The university has more than 12,000 alumni active in medical practice, healthcare administration, public health, teaching and research.

New York Medical College owes its founding in 1860 to a group of civic leaders who believed that medical studies should be practiced with a better understanding of what the patient needs. This group of civic leaders was led by the noted poet William Cullen Bryant who was an editor of the New York Evening Post. Bryant was concerned about the condition of hospitals and medical education in New York City. His main concern was with some of the medical practices being used to treat disease, which at the time included bleedings, purges, and the administration of strong drugs in too large doses.

Interest in the medical field rapidly grew over the next few years due to the United States Civil War, which generated a major need for health related occupations. As a result, the college was founded and opened as the Homeopathic Medical College of the State of New York on the corner of 20th Street and Third Avenue, near Union Square in Manhattan. In the first semester there were 59 students and 8 professors. The college adopted the name New York Homeopathic Medical College in 1869 and, in 1887, New York Homeopathic Medical College and Hospital.

A separate institution known as the New York Medical College for Women was founded a few years later in 1863. In 1867, it graduated Emily Stowe, the first female physician to practice in Canada. Three years later in 1870, Susan McKinney Stewart graduated as the first African-American female physician in New York State. When the Women's College closed in 1918, its students transferred to New York Medical College.

In 1875, Metropolitan Hospital Center opened as a municipal facility on Wards Island, staffed largely by the faculty of New York Medical College. As a university hospital of New York Medical College, this relationship is among the nations oldest continuing affiliations between a private medical school and a public hospital.

Built by New York Medical College in 1889, the Flower Free Surgical Hospital, was the first teaching hospital in the United States to be owned by a medical college. It was constructed at York Avenue and 63rd Street with funds given largely by Congressman Roswell P. Flower, later governor of New York. In 1908 the College changed its name to New York Homeopathic Medical College and Flower Hospital. In 1928 the College was the first medical school in the nation to establish a minority scholarship program. By 1935, the College had transferred its outpatient activities to the Fifth Avenue Hospital at Fifth Avenue and 106th Street. The College (including Flower Hospital) and Fifth Avenue Hospital merged in 1938 and became New York Medical College, Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals.

In 1972, New York Medical College opened a campus in Valhalla, at the invitation of the Westchester County government, which desired to build an academic medical center. Completed in 1977, Westchester Medical Center is currently the main academic medical center of the College. The College became affiliated with the Archdiocese of New York in 1978, which helped provide financial stability and also established a shared commitment for the public good in the area of health care and the health sciences. The College recognized itself in the Catholic tradition and affiliated with several Catholic hospitals. When Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospital closed in 1979, the main operations of New York Medical College were transferred to the Valhalla campus. The college shortened its name to New York Medical College in 1982.

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New York Medical College - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A toddler’s gift

Amy Hubert wanted to do something bigger.

Her son James should have turned 18 in May. He should have graduated from high school.

He never even made it to kindergarten.

After falling and being discovered in the backyard pool at Huberts newly rented home in Georgia, the 16-month-old was confined to a hospital bed.

James organs slowly started working during the first week. Although he flat-lined, the occasional beep on the monitor gave his family hope. But, the toddler never woke up.

By the end of the second week, doctors ran tests and determined James was brain dead. Hubert and her husband decided to pull the breathing tube out of James mouth.

I did not stay in the room, Hubert said. I couldnt do it.

After James died in 1997, the family did little things like donating his viable organs and planting a tree at Carl Levin Park when they moved to Harker Heights in memory of him.

This year his family decided to donate $2,500 to the districts alumni association for the James K. Hubert Memorial Scholarship.

Weve been trying to do things to make something good out of bad, as much as you can, Hubert said. Education is very important to us, too. My husband came from a very, very small town in Texas. Hes the first not only to graduate from college, but then he went to medical school and he knows what education has opened up in his life.

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A toddler's gift

A toddler’s gift

Amy Hubert wanted to do something bigger.

Her son James should have turned 18 in May. He should have graduated from high school.

He never even made it to kindergarten.

After falling and being discovered in the backyard pool at Huberts newly rented home in Harker Heights, the 16-month-old was confined to a hospital bed.

James organs slowly started working during the first week. Although he flat-lined, the occasional beep on the monitor gave his family hope. But, the toddler never woke up.

By the end of the second week, doctors ran tests and determined James was brain dead. Hubert and her husband decided to pull the breathing tube out of James mouth.

I did not stay in the room, Hubert said. I couldnt do it.

After James died in 1997, the family did little things like donating his viable organs and planting a tree at Carl Levin Park in Harker Heights in memory of him.

This year his family decided to donate $2,500 to the districts alumni association for the James K. Hubert Memorial Scholarship.

Weve been trying to do things to make something good out of bad, as much as you can, Hubert said. Education is very important to us, too. My husband came from a very, very small town in Texas. Hes the first not only to graduate from college, but then he went to medical school and he knows what education has opened up in his life.

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A toddler's gift

Nurse helping at Bad Axe Schools

By TOM GILCHRIST For the Tribune

BAD AXE A registered nurse from Huron Medical Center has begun working in Bad Axe Public Schools to serve students four days per week, four hours per day.

The nurse began working in the schools Jan. 20 as part of an arrangement between the schools and medical center, according to Bad Axe Public Schools Superintendent Greg Newland. The nurse is based at Bad Axe Elementary School but will work in all school buildings.

One benefit to us is were (receiving) nursing services from a registered nurse whose training is obviously kept up to date, Newland said.

Theres a cost savings to the school, as well, Newland said.

In October 2013, the board accepted the resignation of school nurse Jeni Campbell, who took a job as a teacher aide with the Huron Intermediate School District. Campbell worked as Bad Axe school nurse for 12 years. The nurses job was not a union position and the district provided dental insurance, but no other insurance coverage.

In other developments following Monday nights Bad Axe Board of Education meeting, Newland said all nominations for recipients of the Bad Axe Public Schools Distinguished Alumni Awards must be submitted by Feb. 15.

Nominees must serve as a positive role model for youth, have served their communities andhave achieved distinction in their professional and personal lives.

I have stressed that (nominees) dont have to be living in Bad Axe but can be someone living in another state or overseas, Newland said.

Readers may find a nomination form on the Bad Axe Public Schools website, http://www.badaxeps.org, and can mail the form in or bring it to the Board of Education office by Feb. 15. The initial class of Distinguished Alumni will be inducted at graduation ceremonies June 1.

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Nurse helping at Bad Axe Schools

150 years in the service of education

Town Higher Secondary School, Kumbakonam, has come a long way in imparting quality education to students in and around the temple town.

Started in 1864 by M. Martin, a retired head constable, the renowned institution has completed 150 years of glorious service.

One of the few oldest schools in Tamil Nadu, the institution has produced some illustrious alumni, including mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, founder of The Hindu Kasturi Ranga Iyengar, former union finance minister T.T.Krishnamachari, renowned historian Sadhasiva Pandarathar, mridangam vidwan Padma Vibhushan Umayalpuram K.Sivaraman, former chairman of City Union Bank Ltd, Kumbakonam, V.Narayanan, medical expert S. Rangachari, Managing Director of Standard Motors J. Gopalakrishnan, founder Chairman of HCL Technologies Shiv Nadar, retired chief engineer Rao Bahadur L.Venkatakrishna Iyer, former ministers V.V.Swaminathan, and S.R.Radha, and former Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha G.Lakshmanan.

Thambusamy Udayar, a philanthropist, had donated five acres of land for the construction of school buildings. Buildings added one by one still retain their old world charm.

From its humble beginning the school now boasts student strength of 3,243, said R.Visvanathan, former headmaster of the school and co-ordinator of the 150th year celebration committee.

N.Kamakoti, Managing Director of City Union Bank Ltd, Kumbakonam, who is also an alumnus of the school, said that he was the third-generation student of the school in his family.

His grandfather G.Vaidyanatha Iyer, and father V.Narayanan, Chairman of the City Union Bank, were also students of the school. The school transformed me into a good citizen, able administrator, and manager, Mr.Kamakodi said with a sense of gratitude. R.Sethuraman, a resident of Kumbakonam and Vice-Chancellor, SASTRA University, said that this old institution was the pride of the town. Centenary of the school was celebrated on September 21, 1964.

The then Governor of Tamil Nadu Jayasama Raja Wodayar took part in the celebrations. Now, on January 29, K.Rosaiah, Governor of Tamil Nadu, and G.K.Vasan, Union Minister for Shipping, would take part in the sesquicentennial celebrations.

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150 years in the service of education

Medical Alumni Association | Vanderbilt University Medical …

The Vanderbilt University Medical Alumni Association is an organization based on the common bond of being educated at Vanderbilt. Our mission is to foster and maintain mutually beneficial relationships between Vanderbilt and its medical alumni.

The Vanderbilt Medical Alumni Association maintains a broad definition of "alumni." Every VUSM graduate, resident, fellow, intern, and faculty member is an alumnus, and is eligible for all of the benefits and services that being an alumnus affords.

We are always interested in our graduates' news and accomplishments, both personal and professional. If you have news to share or wish to update your address, please email us at medalum@vanderbilt.edu. Be sure to send us current contact information so that we may keep you informed about Reunions, events in your area, and current news from the Medical Center. We also invite you to submit class notes for publication in Vanderbilt Medicine magazine.

If you have any comments or recommendations on how we can better serve you, please contact Dr. Ann Price (MD '78) at ann.price@vanderbilt.edu.

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Medical Alumni Association | Vanderbilt University Medical ...

Membership | Medical Alumni Association of the University …

Pay your dues HERE

REGISTER TO VIEWON-LINE CLASSROOM LECTURES HERE

MAA MEMBERSHIP is a tangible way to show support for your alumni association. Dues are collected each year to finance the operations of the Medical Alumni Association. As an independent foundation affiliated with the university, but not funded by the school or the state, we depend on the membership of alumni, faculty and friends to continue our endeavors.

BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP include receipt of the Bulletin magazine, a quarterly journal which keeps alumni in touch with their classmates and abreast of current campus information. Membership also provides invitations to reunion celebrations and regional gatherings, in addition to borrowing privileges at the new medical school library.Members are asked to take an active role in the Association by voting on important issues at the annual business meeting.

NEW FOR2010!! Memberscan now view classroom lectures from their computers. School of Medicine faculty members have given their permission to have more than 300 of their presentations available for on-line viewing. Topics include anatomy, genetics, physiology, pharmacology, infectious diseases, domestic abuse, geriatric assessment and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Click the link above for more details.

ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP dues is $85 for alumni, faculty and friends of the association. We also offer a discounted membership for $25 to young alumni who have graduated within the last five years. An emeritus membership is available for those who have graduated 50 years ago or more, or who have reached the age of 70. Emeritus members are no longer required to pay dues, although many choose to continue sending a membership payment in an amount comfortable for their budget.

Finally, as a welcome gift to our most recent graduates, the board of directors has decided to provide the first year of membership to graduating seniors without cost. To become a new member of the association or to renew your membership, please click here to find out how.

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Membership | Medical Alumni Association of the University ...

Exercise Found To Reduce Risk Of Cancer-Related Deaths In Men

January 27, 2014

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports Your Universe Online

Regular physical activity could reduce the risk of death in male cancer patients by nearly half, according to research appearing in the latest edition of the Journal of Physical Activity & Health.

As part of the study, researchers from the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine and Harvard Medical School looked at data from 1,021 men with an average age of 71. Each of the men had previously been diagnosed with cancer, and completed questionnaires on their exercise habits in 1988, 1993 and 2008.

According to the Huffington Post, men that burned at least 12,600 calories each week reduced fatality risk by 48 percent over a 15-year period compared to those who burned less than 2,100 calories weekly.

Those who exercised most also had a 49 percent decreased risk of cardiovascular disease-related deaths, and were 38-percent less likely to die from cancer-related causes, Medical Express reported on Friday.

The physical activities reported included walking, stair-climbing and participation in sports and similar recreational activities. The findings were adjusted for age, body mass index (BMI), dietary variables, early parental mortality and smoking habits and involved men who enrolled in the Harvard Alumni Health Study between 1916 and 1950.

Physical activity should be actively promoted to such individuals to enhance longevity, study co-author Dr. Kathleen Y. Wolin of the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine said, according to Sarah Griffiths of the Daily Mail.

The research supports a previous study that found the most physically active cancer survivors are much less likely to die of cancer and heart disease, Griffiths added. While there has been plenty of research that shows regular exercise boosts the life expectancy of healthy people, this study is among very few that show exercise also extended the life of cancer survivors.

The research conducted by Dr. Wolin and her colleagues was a prospective cohort study, and during the 15-year period, 777 of the men died (337 from cancer and 190 from cardiovascular disease). I-Min Lee, Sarah E. Freeman, Jacob Sattelmair, and Howard D. Sesso were also credited as authors of the paper.

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Exercise Found To Reduce Risk Of Cancer-Related Deaths In Men

UND aerospace school plans new building

GRAND FORKS The University of North Dakota aerospace school aims to break ground this spring on a new building, with the goal of attracting businesses that want to be part of the universitys growing aerospace research and development conglomerate.

Bruce Smith, dean of the John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences, called it a nice statement about the good things that have happened at the school.

Some of the new space will provide a secure area for research into unmanned aircraft systems and other projects that need security, according to state documents. Other space will house research facilities for air traffic control, Smith said.

Total cost for what has been tabbed the Center for Aerospace Innovation and Research, could be as high as $25 million, UND officials told state lawmakers last year. But Smith said Friday that the cost could be trimmed and most of it will be privately raised.

The proposed 65,000-square-foot building will be connected to Ryan Hall on the far west end of campus.

Ownership of the building will be under the UND Aerospace Foundation, a private nonprofit group formed to help the Odegard school grow, state documents say. Operating costs will be paid by the university using existing funds and any funds raised through research activities in the building.

So far, the Aerospace Foundation has been promised a $7.5 million gift over three years from a couple involved in an aviation-related company, who, while not UND alumni, are big fans of the university, Smith said. He declined to divulge their names.

The foundation is providing another $3.5 million of its own funds.

So we have $11 million, cash in the bank, for that building, Smith said. Right now, we are trying to figure out just how big a building we can have.

Some money from the states Education Challenge Fund could be involved. Last year, the Legislature created the fund to match private donations, with the state paying $1 for every $2 donated with a cap of $10 million for UND. Earlier this month, the UND Foundation announced that it had raised enough to get a $3.3 million match.

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UND aerospace school plans new building

After dean firing, business school fundraising drops by a third

by Mary Ellen McIntire | Assistant News Editor

Issue: January 26, 2014 | News

Donations to the GW School of Business have shrunk by about one-third over the last year after a sudden firing of its dean and public clashes over a wide budget shortfall.

The schools first decline since hiring Doug Guthrie in 2010 is a key loss just months away from the Universitys largest-ever fundraising campaign.

Media Credit: Photo courtesy of GW Media Relations

Fundraising has slipped under interim business school dean Chris Kayes, who took over in September.

Guthrie, who had boasted double-digit increases during most of his three-year tenure, was fired in August after he failed to resolve $13 million in overspending with top officials. But GWs fundraising chief Michael Morsberger said gifts to the school will bounce back after it hires a permanent leader over the next few months. He said interim leaders who cant present long-term goals often struggle to attract new donors.

Generally, whenever there is a dean change, [fundraising] goes down. Even in the best case scenarios, it will go down, because your biggest donors want to meet with the dean. They want to know the vision, where are we going, Morsberger said.

Professors attributed the decline to a mix of the schools temporary leadership as well as its reputation for unstable finances that spread last fall.

Robin Tarpley, an associate professor of accounting, said Guthries well-publicized firing, which was reported by national news outlets including the Washington Post, may have turned off potential donors.

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After dean firing, business school fundraising drops by a third