Physician Directory

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Physician Directory Physician DPihreyscitcoiarny DProiirdeincg ttheo ry CProomimdiunng itthye Community withh CCoommpprreehhenensisviev eP rimary Panrdim Sapercyi aalntyd C are Specialty Care Spring 2014 Spring 2014 NewYork-Presbyterian/Lower Manhattan Hospital NewYork-Presbyterian/Lower Manhattan Hospital offers a comprehensive range of services to patients in a caring and culturally sensitive environment. All of the Hospital’s physicians are on the faculty of Weill Cornell Medical College – one of the top-ranked clinical and medical research centers in the country. And, if needed, the resources and advanced health care services of NewYork- Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center are available and easily accessible. NewYork-Presbyterian is one of the nation’s largest and most comprehensive hospitals, providing state-of-the-art inpatient, ambulatory and preventive care in all areas of medicine at six major centers: NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian/Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian/e Allen Hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Westchester Division, and NewYork-Presbyterian/Lower Manhattan Hospital. NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital ranks number 1 in New York State and number 7 in the nation on U.S. News & World Report’s annual Best Hospitals survey, and is also one of only 18 hospitals listed on U.S. News’ prestigious Honor Roll of America’s Best Anesthesiology Lee Winter, MD [email protected] Pedro Canals Ferrat, MD Jeffrey Chin, MD Saul Dilson, DO Pei-Lee Ee, MD Alexander Grif, DO Adam Hom, MD Jin Ki Hong, MD Vadim Kushnerik, MD Ryan Kwon, DO Helen Lin, MD Yevgeniy Shustorovich, MD Parviz Soomekh, MD Hanae Tokita, MD Winston Wong, MD 170 William St. New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5244 Dermatology Andrew Avarbock, MD Cynthia Chen, MD 156 William St. New York, NY 10038 (646) 962-3376 1 Julie Zang, MD 1305 York Ave, 9th floor New York, NY 10021 [email protected] (646) 962-3376 Ear, Nose and Throat (Otolaryngology) Otolaryngology (Adult and Pediatric) Joshua Levinger, MD [email protected] (646) 962-4451 Alison Maresh, MD [email protected] (646) 962-2224 Audiology Jenna Holke, AuD (646) 962-2231 Eric Nelson, AuD (646) 962-2231 156 William St. New York, NY 10038 Emergency Medicine Antonio Dajer, MD [email protected] 2 Caitlin Anderson, MD David Anthony, MD Elisa Aponte, MD Ryan Bayley, MD Peter Greenwald, MD Namita Kedia, MD Jeffrey Lazar, MD Vincent Lu, DO Junnie Mark-Kobashi, MD Jeff Mayer, MD Ryan McGarry, MD Tom Naparst, MD Peter Steel, MD E. Marie Villafuerte, MD Lucy Willis, MD Gena Won, MD Anne Yim, MD Emergency Medicine 83 Gold St. New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5070 UrgentCare (212) 312-5094 Pediatric Emergency Medicine Shari Platt, MD Kevin Ching, MD Janienne Kondrich, MD June Lee, MD David Listman, MD 3 Marie Lupica, MD Michele Rosenthal, MD 83 Gold St. New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5059 Medicine Allergy and Immunology Robert Lin, MD 156 William Street, 7th Floor New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 312-5920 Sharon Yost, MD 156 William Street, 1st Floor New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 571-5550 Clifford Bassett MD 381 Park Avenue South, Suite 1020 New York, NY 10016 [email protected] (212) 260-6078 Cardiology Atul Sharma, MD (Interventional Cardiology) [email protected] Alexander Slotwiner, MD (Interventional Cardiology) [email protected] 4 Geoffrey Webber, MD [email protected] 170 William St. New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5930 Warren Chin, MD 254 Canal St., Suite 3002 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 431-8808 Samuel Chan, MD 196 Canal St. New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 406-2301 Brooklyn Sudesh Srivastava, MD 833 57th St. Brooklyn, NY 11220 [email protected] (718) 686-7300 Endocrinology Howard Huey, DO 156 William St. New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 312-5920 5 George Liu, MD 185 Canal St. New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 343-7323 Anastasios Manessis, MD 275 7th Ave. New York, NY 10001 [email protected] (212) 675-9332 Gastroenterology Forrest Manheimer, MD [email protected] Jeremy Schwartz, MD [email protected] 156 William St. New York, NY 10038 (646) 962-5110 Titus Kwok, MD 109 Lafayette St., Suite 202 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 925-3877 Anthony Ng, MD 139 Centre St., Suite 609 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 431-4309 6 Charles Oliner, MD 60 Gramercy Park North New York, NY 10010 [email protected] (212) 533-6566 Timothy Wong, MD 86 Bowery, 7th Floor New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 775-8388 Brooklyn Adnan Khdair, MD 339 Hicks Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 [email protected] (718) 780-1730 (office) (917) 836-8267 (cell) Geriatrics Brian Scanlan, MD 156 William St., 7th Floor New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 312-5920 (212) 571-7465 Fax Viorel Nicolaescu, MD 201 East 21st St. New York, NY 10010 [email protected] (212) 769-7727 7 Hematology/Oncology Ok-kyong Chaekal, MD [email protected] Andy Huang, MD [email protected] 156 William St., 7th Floor New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5920 William Cheung, MD 19 Bowery, 2nd FL, Suite 8 New York, NY 10002 [email protected] (212) 226-2251 Kin Lam, MD 139 Centre St. Suite 515 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 941-9020 Hospitalist Service PROGRAM DIRECTORS Daniel J. Crossman, MD [email protected] (212) 312-5781 Chin C. Tang, MD [email protected] (212) 312-5782 8 Gloria Acety, MD Daniel Amoruso, MD Francini Arguedas, MD Magalie Bruneus, MD Patricia Centron, MD Louis Chung, MD Swana De Gijsel, MD Rebecca Florsheim, MD Alka Gupta, MD Demitria Hernandez, MD Smita Joshi, MD Dominique Kalil, MD Balakumar Krishnarasa, MD Sarita Mahtani, MD Adrian Mei, MD Lalitha Parameswaran, MD Chiti Parikh, MD Mili Shum, MD 170 William St. New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5780 [email protected] Infectious Disease Chester Lerner, MD [email protected] Claire Brown, MD [email protected] 156 William St., 7th Floor New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5920 9 Internal Medicine Bruce D. Logan, MD [email protected] LiJun Mi, MD [email protected] Vincent W. Ng, MD [email protected] Anthony Smith, MD [email protected] Deborah Sonenblick, MD [email protected] 156 William St., 7th Floor New York, NY 10038 (212) 312-5920 Edward J. Matta, MD Hallmark Wellness Center 455 North End Avenue New York, NY 10282 [email protected] (917) 522-1341 Douglas Chen, DO [email protected] Christine Cheng, MD [email protected] 10 Helang Kravitz, MD [email protected] Y-Uyen Nguyen, MD [email protected] Ady Oster, MD [email protected] Perry Pong, MD [email protected] Tsun Shen, MD [email protected] Weiyan Tan, MD [email protected] Deane Tsuei, MD [email protected] Duchu Wu, MD [email protected] Tsz-Yin Yeung, MD [email protected] Jingbo Zhao,MD [email protected] 268 Canal St. New York, NY 10013 (212) 966-0228 11 Zaw Aung, MD 7-8 Chatham Square Suite C-1 New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 227-4349 Alexander Chan, MD 13-17 Elizabeth Street New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 334-3999 Charles Chan, MD 221 Canal St., Suite 302 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 226-1221 Melissa Chan, MD 70-72 Bowery, #505 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 343-2536 Bi-Hoon Che, MD 210 Canal Street, Suite 203 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 587-8384 Sandy Cheung, DO 18 East Broadway, Suite 503 New York, NY 10003 [email protected] (212) 966-9886 12 Roger Chung, MD 139 Centre Street Suite 501 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 966-2818 Amy Chu-Wong, MD 210 Canal Street Suite 411 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 406-5526 Mikhail Fuks, MD 150 Broadway #714 New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 962-1115 Susan Gonnella, MD American Express Wellness 200 Vesey St. New York, NY 10285 [email protected] (212) 640-2057 Xi (Freda) Gu, MD 80 Warren St. New York, NY 10007 [email protected] (212) 608-6940 Kevin Guo, MD 41 Elizabeth St., Suite 500 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 966-8488 13 Lan He, MD 81 Elizabeth St., Suite 501 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 267-2388 Yong He, MD 81 Elizabeth St. New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 966-8216 Bao Jiang, MD 8 Chatham Square, Suite 301 New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 964-9488 Wuhua Jing, MD 8 Chatham Square, Suite 800 New York, NY 10038 Wuhua_ [email protected] (212) 587-0678 Ching-Yin Lam, MD 8 Chatham Square New York, NY 10038 [email protected] (212) 732-6992 On Lau, MD 139 Centre St., 605 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 267-3773 14 Raymond Lau, DO 217 Grand St., Suite 401 New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 965-1380 Andrew Lee, MD 33 Bowery, Room B202 New York, NY 10002 [email protected] (212) 219-9652 Kwok Man Lee, MD 198 Canal Street New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 732-3538 Xiao Li, MD 86 Bowery, 8th Floor New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 226-1161 Yong Sheng Lin, MD 217 Grand Street New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 226-9717 Fei-Lien Liong, MD 110 Lafayette Street New York, NY 10013 [email protected] (212) 226-6610 15 Sheung-Bun Lui, MD 17 Elizabeth St.
Recommended publications
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  • The Chatham Square Daguerreotype
    Visualizing 19th Century New York Digital Publication The Chatham Square Daguerreotype Zahava Friedman-Stadler FIG. 1 Chatham Square, New York, 1853–55. Daguerreotype. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gilman Collection, Gift of The Howard Gilman Foundation, 2005 (2005.100.173). The daguerreotype entitled Chatham Square, New York (FIG. 1) of about 1853, captures a rare street scene of the busy downtown area that was known for its cheap shopping, entertainment, and daguerreotype studio-factories, which existed in stark contrast to the more elite Broadway establishments. Daguerreotypes represent an early phase of photography whose development was hailed for its scientific and technological progress, but entrepreneurs quickly seized on the new art form for its commercial possibilities as a medium for portraiture, and nowhere more so than in New York City. Prices Friedman-Stadler 2 dropped over the course of the 1840s and 1850s, replacing the miniature portrait for some and offering affordable portraits for all. The Chatham Square daguerreotype is therefore unusual because of its subject: a street scene. The Chatham daguerreotype captures antebellum New York, even if its quotidian view of crowds and carriages begins to blur at a distance. An amateur most likely took the image, possibly from the second story of a building that housed one of Chatham’s competitive daguerreotype studios. The Chatham Square Post Office and Purdy’s National Theatre are featured alongside other nineteenth-century structures. Railroad tracks and commercial signage indicate the industrial nature of the neighborhood, built at one of the city’s oldest intersections, a former Indian trail.1 FIG. 2 Untitled [Urban Street Scene], Brooklyn, ca.
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  • Chatham Square Plans &
    Background After the attacks of September 11, 2001, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) implemented a security plan to protect a group of buildings in the Civic Center that primarily includes its headquarters at One Police Plaza, as well as Federal and State Court buildings, and the Metropolitan Detention Center. The security plan established checkpoints and installed provisional booths and vehicle interdiction devices, closing several streets to general traffic. Because part of Park Row was closed as part of this plan, a north-south connection between Chinatown and the Civic Center was no longer available to through traffic and vehicular access for residents of the Chatham Towers and Chatham Green residential complexes was constrained. A series of legal challenges were mounted against the security plan, which resulted in the preparation of a detailed Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) by the NYPD. The EIS identifies significant impacts in several areas including: traffic, noise, air, and visual resources and urban design. The environmental review process recommended implementation of two major mitigation measures in order to address these significant adverse impacts: the reconfiguration of Chatham Square and the creation of pedestrian promenade on Park Row. Even with these mitigation measures, however, the EIS indicated that not all significant adverse impacts would be mitigated. The existing Chatham Square intersection was built in 1999, when it was aligned to facilitate the north-south movement between the Bowery and Park Row. When Park Row was closed, north- south traffic was shifted to St. James Place, sending motorists along a serpentine path through the square. Pedestrians crossing through Chatham Square must contend with long crossings, inadequate sight lines and multiple simultaneous turning movements through crosswalks.
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