Internship Residency Placement by Specialty
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2020 SWPONL Conference First Name Middle Last Name Degrees
2020 SWPONL Conference First name Middle Last name Degrees/Credentials Job Title Hospital / Company City, State Tammy Allison MSN, DNP Clinical Director, Education The Uniontown Hospital Uniontown, PA Heather Ambrose DNP, RN, NEA-BC, CPN Director of Nursing UPMC Presbyterian Shadyside Pittsburgh, PA Daniela Angeloni Infermiera CNO UPMC Salvator Mundi Roma, Italy Joe Archer MS, BS, RRT Territory Manager BD/BARD Pittsburgh, PA Amanda Barker Monitoring Sales Specialist Medtronic Pittsburgh, PA Lee Baron MSN, RN Assistant Vice President, Nursing Monongahela Valley Hospital Monongahela, PA Kim Bartolowits RN, MSN, NE-BC Magnet Program Director Allegheny General Hospital/AHN Pittsburgh, PA Deborah Beer DNP, RN-BC,CNE Director, Clinical & Operational UPMC Western Psychiatric Hospital Pittsburgh, PA Informatics Kimberly Belton MSN, RN Nurse Manager Allegheny General Hospital/AHN Pittsburgh, PA Janet Bischof PhD RN NE-BC CNE Director/Associate Professor Wheeling University Wheeling, WV Jodie M Blaha RN, MSN Unit Director UPMC Pittsburgh PA Jeffrey R Bomba MBA, MSN, RN, NE-BC Patient Care Manager AHN Jefferson Hospital Jefferson Hills, PA Karen Bray RN, MSN Vice-President, Patient Care Washington Health System Washington, PA Services Amy Bridgman MSN, RN-BC, CPN Advanced Clinical Education UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Aliquippa, PA Specialist Kimberly Brooks DNP, RN Director, Education/Magnet UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital Pittsburgh, PA 2020 SWPONL Conference Angela Brown RN, MSN, CCRN Nurse Manager Allegheny General Hospital/AHN Pittsburgh, PA Kristie Bruner MSN, RN, NE-BC Nurse Manager Allegheny General Hospital/AHN Pittsburgh, PA Lisa M Bryan-Morris MSN, RN, NEA-BC Chief Nursing Officer UPMC Passavant Hospital Pittsburgh, PA Helen Burns PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN Senior Vice President and Chief Excela Health Greensburg, PA Nursing Officer Diane M. -
2017 Match Day Results by Program
Class of 2017 Match Results Anesthesiology New York Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia University Medical Center University of Illinois College of Medicine-Chicago University of Texas Medical School-Houston Icahn School of Medicine/St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (New York) University of Florida College of Medicine-Shands Hospital New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center Einstein/Montefiore Medical Center (New York) New York Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia University Medical Center Dermatology University at Buffalo School of Medicine (New York) University of Buffalo School of Medicine (New York) Cleveland Clinic Foundation (OH) Emergency Medicine Einstein/Montefiore Medical Center (New York) University of Massachusetts Medical School Staten Island University Hospital (New York) Stanford University Programs (California) Stony Brook Teaching Hospitals (New York) New York Hospital Medical Center Queens (New York) Eastern Virginia Medical School University of Washington Affiliated Hospitals Icahn School of Medicine/St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (New York) University of Connecticut School of Medicine Rhode Island Hospital/Brown University Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center (North Carolina) Icahn School of Medicine/St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (New York) Einstein/Montefiore Medical Center (New York) Oregon Health and Science University Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (New Hampshire) Einstein/Montefiore Medical Center (New York) University of Washington Affiliated Hospitals Einstein/Montefiore Medical Center -
MGCRB FFY 2022 Individual Decisions
MGCRB FFY 2022 Individual Decisions Case Provider's Home Requested CBSA Number Case Name Priority CBSA Code Code Request Status 22C0001 Reid Health (15-0048) Primary Request 15 34620 Approved Secondary Request 15 34620 Dismissed Tertiary Request 15 17140 Dismissed 22C0003 Beaumont Hospital Dearborn (23-0020) Primary Request 19804 47664 Approved Secondary Request 19804 11460 Dismissed Tertiary Request 19804 19804 Dismissed 22C0004 Saint Thomas DeKalb Hospital (44-0148) Primary Request 44 34980 Approved 22C0005 Saint Thomas River Park Hospital (44-0151) Primary Request 44 34980 Approved 22C0006 Lake Charles Memorial Hospital (19-0060) Primary Request 29340 13140 Approved 22C0008 Bayhealth Hospital, Sussex Campus (08-0009) Primary Request 41540 20100 Approved 22C0009 Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital (31-0038) Primary Request 35154 35614 Approved 22C0010 Texoma Medical Center (45-0324) Primary Request 43300 19124 Approved Secondary Request 43300 43300 Dismissed 22C0011 Memorial Hospital (36-0156) Primary Request 36 45780 Approved 22C0012 Northeast Alabama Regional Medical Center (01-0078) Primary Request 11500 12060 Approved Secondary Request 11500 13820 Dismissed 22C0013 Scripps Mercy Hospital (05-0077) Primary Request 41740 41740 Approved 22C0014 Scripps Green Hospital (05-0424) Primary Request 41740 41740 Approved 22C0018 Reid Health (15-0048) Primary Request 15 17140 Withdrawn (Pre-Decision) 22C0019 Onslow Memorial Hospital (34-0042) Primary Request 27340 48900 Approved Secondary Request 27340 35100 Dismissed 22C0020 Lenoir Memorial -
CMO Update, Spring 2021
CMO A PUBLICATION FOR TBHC PHYSICIANSUPDATE AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS SPRING 2021 A Message from Dr. Kondamudi – Vasantha Kondamudi, MD, Chief Medical Officer In our last fall issue, I looked back on the COVID spring surge, how our clinicians and all of TBHC stepped up to the challenges, and the lessons we learned. This issue, I am so relieved and happy to report that I’m focusing on the future. And the future means the COVID-19 vaccine. Most of you know that the Pfizer vaccine (what TBHC is administering) is 95% effective after two doses and has gotten high marks for safety. You can access the Pfizer published trial at: https:// www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2034577 We also now have the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Join these physicians below, just some of many who got vaccinated. Pratibha “Prat” Vemulapalli, MD, Sylvie de Souza, MD, Chair, Chair, Surgery Leonard Berkowitz, MD, Chief, Infectious Diseases Emergency Medicine Nabil Mesiha, MD, Attending, Pulmonary Sumeet Bahl, MD, Attending, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Introducing The Brooklyn Cancer Center New York Cancer & Blood Specialists (NYCBS), one of the leading oncology practices in the nation, has partnered with The Brooklyn Hospital Center (TBHC), to create a new comprehensive cancer care program, The Brooklyn Cancer Center. NYCBS is a leading practice in the national OneOncology partnership, the network of independent community oncology practices. With access to OneOncology technology, integration support and capital, NYCBS provides access to cutting-edge oncology care, including clinical trial research across Brooklyn. A new facility is planned for the end of 2021, but the community does not have to wait for the excellent care this partnership provides. -
New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation
NEW YORK CITY HEALTH AND HOSPITALS CORPORATION NEW YORK CITY HEALTH AND HOSPITALS CORPORATION Bronx Kings County Hospital Center Metropolitan Hospital Center Jacobi Medical Center 451 Clarkson Avenue 1901 First Avenue 1400 Pelham Parkway South Brooklyn, New York 11203 New York, New York 10029 Bronx, New York 10461 718-245-3131 212-423-6262 212-918-5000 Woodhull Medical and Mental Renaissance Health Care Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center Network Diagnostic Health Center 760 Broadway & Treatment Center 234 East 149th Street Brooklyn, New York 11206 215 West 125th Street Bronx, New York 10451 718-963-8000 New York, New York 10027 718-579-5000 212-932-6500 Manhattan Morrisania Diagnostic Bellevue Hospital Center Queens & Treatment Center 462 First Avenue Elmhurst Hospital Center 1228 Gerard Avenue New York, New York 10016 79-01 Broadway Bronx, New York 10452 212-562-4141 Elmhurst, New York 11373 718-960-2777 Coler Goldwater Specialty 718-334-4000 North Central Bronx Hospital Hospital Queens Hospital Center 3424 Kossuth Avenue Roosevelt Island 82-70 164th Street Bronx, New York 10467 New York, New York 10044 Jamaica, New York 11432 718-519-5000 212-848-6000 718-883-3000 Segundo Ruiz Belvis Diagnostic Gouverneur Healthcare Services & Treatment Center 227 Madison Street Staten Island 545 East 142nd Street New York, New York 10002 Sea View Hospital Bronx, New York 10454 212-238-7000 Rehabilitation Center & Home 718-579-4000 460 Brielle Avenue Harlem Hospital Center Staten Island, New York 10314 506 Lenox Avenue Brooklyn 718-317-3000 New York, New York 10037 Coney Island Hospital 212-939-1000 2601 Ocean Parkway Brooklyn, New York 11235 718-616-30000 Cumberland Diagnostic & Treatment Center 100 North Portland Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11205 718-260-7500 Dr. -
Jacobi Medical Center
. June 10, 2015 Dear Manufacturers, I am writing on behalf of Jacobi Medical Center, 340B ID DSH330127, to inform manufacturers that Jacobi Medical Center recently underwent an audit by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of Jacobi Medical Center’s compliance with 340B Drug Pricing Program (340B) requirements. As background, Jacobi Medical Center qualified for the 340B Program as a Disproportionate Share Hospital at 1400 Pelham Parkway South, Bronx, New York 10461 and has participated in the 340B Program since 1992. Through the audit process, Jacobi Medical Center was found to have non-compliance within their 340B Program and responsible for repayment as a result of the following findings: Jacobi Medical Center dispensed 340B drugs to ineligible providers, as prohibited by 42 USC 256b(a)(5)(B). The sample revealed that Jacobi’s contract pharmacies deemed two prescriptions 340B-eligible even though they should not have been eligible. The prescriptions were written by providers at ineligible sites (private offices which were not reimbursable on Jacobi’s Medicare cost report) without an arrangement demonstrating that responsibility of care provided remained at Jacobi. In addition, the auditor found that the 12 month eligibility period did not screen the patient-provider relationship or the patient referral process. It was also noted that the electronic medical record system did not update the billing software, thus allowing the third party pharmacy benefits manager to consider deactivated providers as eligible prescribers. Jacobi Medical Center reversed the 2 prescriptions from contract pharmacies that should not have been eligible, and removed the ineligible providers from Jacobi medical Center’s list of eligible providers. -
New York Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy the Spring Course
New York Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy The Spring Course: Best of DDW 2021 Saturday, June 5, 2021 8:00 am – 3:15 pm Virtual Event The Spring Course: Best of DDW 2021 is jointly provided by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine – Montefiore Medical Center and the New York Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy Page 1 of 10 Course Description The Spring Course is devoted to a review of the most compelling topics discussed during Digestive Disease Week® 2021. Faculty will present critically important information on new drugs, the etiology and pathophysiology of disease states, the epidemiology of diseases, the medical, surgical and endoscopic treatment of disease, and the social impact of disease states pertaining to gastroenterology, endoscopy, and liver disease. The program includes a video forum of new endoscopic techniques as well as a summary of the major topics presented at the most important academic forum in gastroenterology, making for an invaluable educational experience for those who were unable to attend Digestive Disease Week® and an excellent summary review for all others. Learning Objectives • Discuss the spectrum of gastrointestinal diseases such as motility disorders and colorectal cancer and outline the enhancement and effectiveness of related treatment options such as the use of artificial intelligence in the detection and resection of polyps during colonoscopy • Evaluate advances in the methods of assessing disease status in patients with inflammatory bowel disease and discuss the application of these techniques -
Tobacco Settlement Report: FY 2017-18
THE TOBACCO SETTLEMENT ANNUAL REPORT TO THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY JULY 1, 2017 – JUNE 30, 2018 Tom Wolf Teresa D. Miller Governor Secretary of Human Services THE TOBACCO SETTLEMENT ANNUAL REPORT TO THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY JULY 1, 2017 – June 30, 2018 Page Executive Summary 3 Uncompensated Care for Hospitals (2017-2018) 4 Attachment 1 – Hospitals eligible for tobacco payment 7 Attachment 2 – Hospitals qualified to receive UC payments 12 Attachment 3 – Hospitals qualified to receive EE payments 16 Attachment 4 – Hospitals affiliations for tobacco payments 19 Attachment 5 – Hospitals with potential DSH-UPL issues 24 Attachment 6 – Total expenditures for each fiscal year 25 Attachment 7 – Uncompensated care (UC) payment method 28 Home and Community-Based Services to Older Pennsylvanians 30 Chart 1 - Aging Waiver Allocation Direct Service Costs 31 Table 1 - Summary of the Aging Waiver 32 Table 2 - Number of Applicants 33 Table 3 - Funded Individuals (Aging Waiver Program) 35 Table 4 - Total Expenditure by PSA 37 Table 5 - Aging Waiver Costs, Number of Claims and Consumers by Service Category for Fiscal Year 2017-2018 39 Table 6 - Costs, Number of Claims and Number of Unduplicated Consumers by Service Category for FY 2017-2018 40 Table 7 - Average State and Federal Costs per Individual 40 Medical Assistance for Workers with Disabilities (MAWD) 41 2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania joined 45 other states in November 1998 in a master settlement agreement (MSA) with the tobacco industry, estimated to total $206 billion over the first 25 years. Pennsylvania’s share was estimated to be about $11 billion between the years 2000 and 2025. -
NYSNA Pension Plan New Participant Information • (877) RN BENEFITS [762-3633] • Rnbenefits.Org
NYSNA Pension Plan New Participant Information • (877) RN BENEFITS [762-3633] • rnbenefits.org Defined benefit plan • Once a participant has completed five years of credited service, that participant will be VESTED and upon retirement will receive a monthly pension benefit for the rest of his/her life. Employer makes all contributions • RN contributes nothing Portable between more than 30 participating facilities in the New York City area (see back) How the pension benefit is calculated • Mathematical formula that recognizes earnings (base salary and experience differential only) and years of credited service • Based on the highest final average earnings for any five complete calendar years during the last 10 years of covered employment immediately before termination 3 retirement options to choose from For more detailed information on these options, please refer to your Welcome to the Pension Plan folder Normal retirement starting at age 65 Early retirement (unreduced) Must retire from active covered employment between the ages of 60 and 64 and have at least 20 years of credited service Early retirement Must retire between the ages of 55 and 64 (reduced by 1/2% for each month that early retirement precedes normal retirement at age 65) The information contained herein should not be viewed as a substitute for the Plan document, the most recent Summary Plan Description, and any relevant Summary of Material Modifications. In case of discrepancies or contradictions, the language and terms of the Plan document, the SPD, and SMMs shall prevail. 9/2020 Deferred Vested Benefit • Available to participants who are vested and leave the Plan prior to being eligible for retirement reductions • Payable at Normal Retirement age 65 with no reductions or between age 55 and 64 with early retirement reductions The Preretirement Survivor Benefit • If a vested participant dies before she/he retires • If married, the spouse is automatically the beneficiary. -
Macra Apm Practice Sign on Letter 12 2 20
December 2, 2020 The Honorable Mitch McConnell The Honorable Nancy Pelosi Majority Leader Speaker United States Senate United States House of Representatives United States Capitol Building S-230 United States Capitol Building H-232 Washington, DC 20510 Washington, DC 20515 The Honorable Charles E. Schumer The Honorable Kevin McCarthy Minority Leader Minority Leader U.S. Senate United States House of Representatives United States Capitol Building S-255 United States Capitol Building H-204 Washington, DC 20510 Washington, DC 20515 Re: Advanced Alternative Payment Model Thresholds Dear Senate Majority Leader McConnell, Speaker Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Schumer, and House Minority Leader McCarthy: On behalf of the 501 undersigned health care practices and accountable care organizations (ACOs), we thank you for your continued leadership during the COVID-19 public health emergency. As you know, practices taking performance-based risk in advanced alternative payment model (APM) arrangements continue to fight on the pandemic’s frontlines. We have deployed vital care coordination and management services that enhance patient care while reducing health care costs. We have taken innovative actions to advance public health in our local communities, such as scheduling telehealth visits for patients with chronic conditions; setting up drive-through COVID-19 testing centers; and helping patients access the appropriate level of care based on their symptoms. As Congress considers future health care legislation that will continue to bolster and advance the care delivery system, we urge you to take action to ensure that value-based care providers can continue to provide these important services by modifying the unrealistic threshold tests included in the bipartisan Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015. -
NAVIGATING the HEALTH CARE SYSTEM in the USA August 2014
MEDICAL SERVICES DIVISION NAVIGATING THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IN THE USA August 2014 NAVIGATING THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IN THE USA 1 Table of Contents FOREWORD .............................................................................................................................................. 4 TERMINOLOGY ......................................................................................................................................... 6 HOW TO CHOOSE AN INSURANCE PLAN ............................................................................................... 9 WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU VISIT A PHYSICIAN’S OFFICE ................................................................ 10 PRIMARY CARE ...................................................................................................................................... 11 SPECIALIST CARE ................................................................................................................................... 13 PREVENTIVE CARE .................................................................................................................................. 14 EMERGENCY AND URGENT CARE ......................................................................................................... 15 WOMEN’S HEALTH CARE ....................................................................................................................... 16 OTHER ISSUES ....................................................................................................................................... -
Hospitals Locations at a Glance
Hospitals Locations at a glance Nassau County Syosset Hospital Zucker Hillside Hospital Glen Cove Hospital 221 Jericho Turnpike 75-59 263rd Street 101 St. Andrews Lane Syosset, NY 11791 Glen Oaks, NY 11004 Glen Cove, NY 11542 (516) 496-6400 (718) 470-8100 (516) 674-7300 Suffolk County Manhattan Long Island Jewish (LIJ) Huntington Hospital Lenox Hill Hospital Valley Stream 270 Park Avenue 100 East 77th Street 900 Franklin Avenue Huntington, NY 11743 New York, NY 10075 Valley Stream, NY 11580 (631) 351-2000 (212) 434-2000 (516) 256-6000 Mather Hospital Manhattan Eye, Ear North Shore University Hospital 75 North Country Road & Throat Hospital 300 Community Drive Port Jefferson, NY 11777 210 East 64th Street Manhasset, NY 11030 (631) 473-1320 New York, NY 10065 (516) 562-0100 (212) 838-9200 Peconic Bay Medical Center Long Island Jewish 1300 Roanoke Avenue Bronx Medical Center Riverhead, NY 11901 St. Barnabas Hospital 270-05 76th Avenue (631) 548-6000 4487 Third Avenue New Hyde Park , NY 11040 Bronx, NY 10457 (718) 470-7000 South Oaks Hospital (718) 960-9000 400 Sunrise Highway Plainview Hospital Amityville, NY 11701 Kings 888 Old Country Road (631) 264-4000 Maimonides Medical Center Plainview, NY 11803 4802 Tenth Avenue (516) 719-3000 Southside Hospital Brooklyn, NY 11219 301 East Main Street (718) 285-3300 Steven & Alexandra Cohen Bay Shore, NY11706 Children’s Medical Center of (631) 968-3000 Wyckoff Heights Medical Center New York 374 Stockholm Street 269-01 76th Avenue Queens Brooklyn, NY 11237 New Hyde Park , NY 11040 Long Island Jewish