The EQUIP Center for Learning Health System Science will support researchers working to improve patient safety, particularly among groups that experience persistent health care disparities.
Columbia's HHT Center for Excellence is working to increase awareness of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia, a rare condition that causes frequent nosebleeds and more serious complications.
An Electronic Health Record (EHR) system enables physicians to assist patients faster and more effectively while providing cohesive community data to promote public health.
The hospital — one of the largest and most comprehensive in the country, with nearly 2,600 beds — ranks third in the nation for cardiology and heart surgery, nephrology, and neurology and neurosurgery.
A medical ethicist who has worked at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center since the 1960s is featured in an article in TheAtlantic.com.
When doctors at a local community hospital were unable to diagnose a three-month-old baby’s illness, she was transferred to the Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center (MSCHONY), where she was quickly diagnosed with botulism and successfully treated.
New findings show that the more heart attack-induced PTSD symptoms a patient has, the worse their sleep likely was in the month following their heart attack.
A thumb-sized hearing aid worn behind the ear and held in place by a small magnet is available at NY-Presbyterian/Columbia to those who cannot wear conventional hearing aids.
The Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center has welcomed five new clinician-scientists specializing in leukemia.