fbpx
Wikipedia

Bellevue Hospital

Bellevue Hospital (officially NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue and formerly known as Bellevue Hospital Center) is a hospital in New York City and the oldest public hospital in the United States.[2][4] One of the largest hospitals in the United States by number of beds, it is located at 462 First Avenue in the Kips Bay neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. Bellevue is also home to FDNY EMS Station 08, formerly NYC EMS Station 13.

Bellevue Hospital
NYC Health + Hospitals
The exterior of the hospital
Geography
Location462 First Avenue, Manhattan, New York, New York, United States
Coordinates40°44′21″N 73°58′31″W / 40.7393°N 73.9753°W / 40.7393; -73.9753Coordinates: 40°44′21″N 73°58′31″W / 40.7393°N 73.9753°W / 40.7393; -73.9753
Organization
FundingPublic hospital
TypeTeaching
Affiliated universityNew York University School of Medicine[1]
NetworkNYC Health + Hospitals
NYU Langone Health System[2]
Services
Emergency departmentLevel I trauma center
Beds844 (2015)[3]
HelipadEast 34th Street Heliport (IATA: TSS)
History
OpenedMarch 31, 1736 (286 years ago) (1736-03-31) [2]
Links
Websitewww.nychealthandhospitals.org/bellevue
ListsHospitals in New York
Other linksHospitals in Manhattan

Historically, Bellevue was popularly associated with its treatment of mentally ill patients such that "Bellevue" became a local pejorative slang term for a psychiatric hospital. The hospital has since developed into a comprehensive major medical center over the years, including outpatient, specialty, and skilled nursing care, as well as emergency and inpatient services. The hospital contains a 25-story patient care facility and has an attending physician staff of 1,200 and an in-house staff of about 5,500.

Bellevue is a safety net hospital, providing healthcare for individuals regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay. It handles over half a million patient visits each year.[3] In 2014 Bellevue was ranked 40th overall best hospital in the New York metro area and 29th in New York City by U.S. News & World Report.[5][4]

History

 
An engraving from 1866 showing the city's first morgue, located in Bellevue
 
The administration building in 1950
 
The original psychiatric hospital building

Founding

Bellevue traces its origins to the city's first permanent almshouse, a two-story brick building completed in 1736 on the city common, now City Hall Park.[6]

In 1798, the city purchased Belle Vue farm, a property near the East River several miles north of the settled city, which had been used to quarantine the sick during a series of yellow fever outbreaks. The hospital was formally named Bellevue Hospital in 1824.[7][8]

By 1787, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons had assigned faculty and medical students to Bellevue. Columbia faculty and students would remain at Bellevue for the next 181 years, until the restructuring of the academic affiliations of Bellevue Hospital in 1968. New York University faculty began to conduct clinical instruction at the hospital in 1819. In 1849, an amphitheater for clinical teaching and surgery opened. In 1861, the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, the first medical college in New York with connections to a hospital, was founded. By 1873, the nation's first nursing school based on Florence Nightingale's principles opened at Bellevue, followed by the nation's first children's clinic in 1874 and the nation's first emergency pavilion in 1876; a pavilion for the insane, an approach considered revolutionary at the time, was erected within hospital grounds in 1879. For that reason, the name Bellevue is sometimes used as a metonym for psychiatric hospitals. Mark Harris in New York called it "the Chelsea Hotel of the mad".[9]

Bellevue initiated a residency training program in 1883 that is still the model for surgical training worldwide. The Carnegie Laboratory, the nation's first pathology and bacteriology laboratory, was founded there a year later, followed by the nation's first men's nursing school in 1888. By 1892, Bellevue established a dedicated unit for alcoholics.[citation needed]

City reorganization

In 1902, the administrative Bellevue and Allied Hospitals organization were formed by the city, under president John W. Brannan. B&AH also included Gouverneur Hospital, Harlem Hospital, and Fordham Hospital.[10] B&AH opened doors to female and black physicians.[11] In the midst of a tuberculosis epidemic a year later, the Bellevue Chest Service was founded.

Bellevue opened the nation's first ambulatory cardiac clinic in 1911, followed by the Western Hemisphere's first ward for metabolic disorders in 1917. New York City's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner began on the second floor in 1918. German spy and saboteur Fritz Joubert Duquesne escaped the hospital prison ward in 1919 after having feigned paralysis for nearly two years.[12]

PS 106, the first public school for the emotionally disturbed children located in a public hospital, opened at Bellevue in 1935. In 1939, David Margolis began work on nine Work Projects Administration murals in entrance rotunda titled Materials of Relaxation, which were completed in 1941. Bellevue became the site of the world's first hospital catastrophe unit the same year; the world's first cardiopulmonary laboratory was established at Bellevue by Andre Cournand and Dickinson Richards a year later, and the nation's first heart failure clinic opened, staffed by Eugene Braunwald, in 1952. In 1960. New York City's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner moved out of the second floor and into its new building at 520 First Avenue, but still maintained close relations with Bellevue. In 1962, Bellevue established the first intensive care unit in a municipal hospital, and in 1964, Bellevue was designated as the stand-by hospital for treatment of visiting presidents, foreign dignitaries, injured members of the city's uniformed services, and United Nations diplomats. Bellevue joined the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation as one of 11 acute care hospitals in 1970.

In 1981, Bellevue was certified as an official heart station for cardiac emergencies; a year later it was designated as a micro-surgical reimplantation center for the City of New York, by 1983 as a level one trauma center, and by 1988 as a head and spinal cord injury center. In 1990, it established an accredited residency training program in Emergency Medicine. The building that formerly served as the hospital's psychiatric facility started to be used as a homeless intake center and a men's homeless shelter in 1998. The publication of the Bellevue Literary Review, the first literary magazine to arise from a medical center, commenced in 2001; Bellevue Literary Press was founded six years later as a sister organization of the Bellevue Literary Review.

In April 2010, plans to redevelop the former psychiatric hospital building as a hotel and conference center connected to NYU Langone Medical Center fell through.[13] The aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in October 2012 required evacuation of all patients due to power failure and flooding in the basement generators.[14][15] Bellevue was renamed NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue in November 2015 as a reflection of its parent organization's rebranding.[16]

Medical firsts

Multiple firsts were performed at Bellevue in its early years. In 1799, it opened the first maternity ward in the United States. By 1808, the world's first ligation of the femoral artery for an aneurysm was performed there, followed by the first ligation of the innominate artery ten years later.

Bellevue physicians promoted the "Bone Bill" in 1854, which legalized dissection of cadavers for anatomical studies; two years later they started to also popularize the use of the hypodermic syringe. In 1862, the Austin Flint murmur was named for Austin Flint, prominent Bellevue Hospital cardiologist.

By 1867, Bellevue physicians were instrumental in developing New York City's sanitary code, the first in the world. One of the nation's first outpatient departments connected to a hospital (the "Bureau of Medical and Surgical Relief for the Out of Door Poor") was established at Bellevue that year. In 1868, Bellevue physician Stephen Smith became first commissioner of public health in New York City; he initiated a national campaign for health vaccinations. A year later, Bellevue established the second hospital-based, emergency ambulance service in the United States.[17]

In 1889, Bellevue physicians were the first to report that tuberculosis is a preventable disease; five years later was the successful operation of the abdomen for a pistol shot wound. William Tillett discovered streptokinase, later used for the acute treatment of myocardial infarction, at Bellevue in 1933. Nina Starr Braunwald performed the first mitral valve replacement in 1960 at the hospital. In 1967, Bellevue physicians perform the first cadaver kidney transplant. In 1971, the first active immunization for hepatitis B was developed by Bellevue physicians. Bellevue played a key role in the development of the "Triple Drug Cocktail" or HAART, a breakthrough in the treatment of AIDS, in 1996.

In October 2014, Bellevue took in an Ebola patient, Craig Spencer, an individual who worked with Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) in Guinea a month prior during the 2014 Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa.

Facilities

 
Front gate of the hospital
 
The "Cube", built in 1971-74 along FDR Drive at the East River

One of the largest hospitals in the United States by number of beds,[18] it handles nearly 460,000 non-ER outpatient clinic visits, nearly 106,000 emergency visits and some 30,000 inpatients each year.[3] More than 80 percent of Bellevue's patients come from the city's medically underserved populations. Bellevue is a safety net hospital, in that it will provide healthcare for individuals regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay.[1]

The hospital occupies a 25-story patient care facility with an ICU, digital radiology communication and an outpatient facility. The hospital has an attending physician staff of 1,200 and an in-house staff of about 5,500.[1]

Bellevue features separate pediatric (0-25) and adult (25+) emergency departments.[19]

In popular culture

Bellevue has entered popular consciousness through its status as a major hospital in the largest city in the United States. The hospital notably treated the author Norman Mailer, who was taken to Bellevue after he stabbed his wife; and Mark David Chapman, who shuttled between Bellevue and the jail complex on Rikers Island after he shot and killed musician John Lennon. The poet Allen Ginsberg, also a former patient, mentioned the hospital by name in his famous poem "Howl" (1955).[20][4]

The hospital was mentioned or featured in the end of the music video of the Van Halen song "Hot for Teacher" in which lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen becomes a psychiatric hospital patient after he (fictionally) graduated from school.[21]

Bellevue is referenced by the character Amy in the 1970 Broadway musical Company by Stephen Sondheim. The character, experiencing cold feet on her wedding day, threatens to move into the "hopeless cases" section at the hospital.[citation needed]

In 2000, rapper Wyclef Jean referenced Bellevue in the song "Where Fugees At?" on his album The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book, saying "I send psychos to Bellevue."[22]

Bellevue has been the subject of recent books, including Bellevue: Three Centuries of Medicine and Mayhem at America's Most Storied Hospital (2016), by historian David Oshinsky,[20] Twelve Patients: Life and Death at Bellevue Hospital (2012), by Dr. Eric Manheimer, a former Bellevue medical director,[23]and Singular Intimacies: Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue (2002), by Dr. Danielle Ofri, a long-time physician at Bellevue.[24]

The ABC television sitcom series Barney Miller (1975-1982), and the NBC television sitcom series Night Court (1984-1992), both frequently mentioned "Bellevue" as it was the hospital where many of the mentally ill, or unstable, criminals were sent. Both series were set in New York City.

The NBC television series New Amsterdam (2018-) takes place at a fictionalized version of Bellevue, renamed "New Amsterdam" in the show. Based on Manheimer's book, the series has filmed scenes at Bellevue and other New York City public hospitals.[23]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "History". City of New York. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "About Bellevue". City of New York. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c "Bellevue Hospital Facts". Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c "Is It Checkout Time at Bellevue Hospital?". New York. November 14, 2008. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
  5. ^ "Best Hospitals". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
  6. ^ Burrows, Edwin G.; Wallace, Mike (1998). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. Oxford University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-19-974120-5.
  7. ^ Frusciano, Thomas J.; Pettit, Marilyn H. (1997). New York University and the City: An Illustrated History. Rutgers University Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-8135-2347-7.
  8. ^ Carlisle, Robert J. (1893). An Account of Bellevue Hospital: With a Catalogue of the Medical and Surgical Staff from 1736 to 1894. Society of the Alumni of Bellevue Hospital. pp. 1–17.
  9. ^ Harris, Mark (November 14, 2008). "Checkout Time at the Asylum". New York.
  10. ^ Annual Report, Volume 1, by New York (State). Dept. of Social Welfare, 1908, page 268
  11. ^ Opdycke, Sandra. No One Was Turned Away: The Role of Public Hospitals in New York City since 1900, p. 67 (Oxford University Press, 1999), Focused on the history of Bellevue Hospital online
  12. ^ "'Paralytic' Flees from Prison Ward; Captain Fritz Duquesne, Who Feigned Helplessness, Escapes from Bellevue". The New York Times. May 28, 1919. p. 16. Retrieved July 16, 2010.
  13. ^ Rubinstein, Dana (April 15, 2010). . The New York Observer. Archived from the original on April 26, 2010. Retrieved July 16, 2010.
  14. ^ Ashley Jennings (October 31, 2012). "New York City's Bellevue Hospital Forced to Evacuate Patients After Sandy". ABC News. Retrieved October 31, 2012.
  15. ^ Bernstein, Nina; Hartocollis, Anemona (October 31, 2012). "Bellevue Hospital Evacuates Patients After Backup Power Fails". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  16. ^ Gamble, Molly (November 10, 2015). "A new name for NYC Health and Hospitals Corp.: 5 things to know". Becker's Hospital Review. Becker's Healthcare. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  17. ^ Bell, Ryan Corbett (2009). The Ambulance: A History. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co. ISBN 978-0-7864-3811-2.
  18. ^ "50 Largest Hospitals in America". Beckers Hospital Review. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
  19. ^ "Emergency/Trauma". Retrieved April 6, 2020.
  20. ^ a b Smith, Nathan (December 3, 2016). "Book Review: Bellevue by David Oshinsky". The Nation. Retrieved March 19, 2020.
  21. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Van Halen - Hot For Teacher (Official Music Video)". YouTube.
  22. ^ "Wyclef Jean – Where Fugees At?".
  23. ^ a b Klein, Melissa (October 28, 2018). "New Amsterdam filming pumps money into city's hospitals". New York Post. Retrieved March 19, 2020.
  24. ^ "Review: Singular Intimacies: Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue". Publishers Weekly. February 24, 2003. Retrieved January 25, 2021.

Further reading

External links

  • Official website
  • NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue at NYU Medical Center
  • NYU School of Medicine / Library and Archives with Bellevue related collections
  • NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue Psychiatry Inpatient Services
  • Smith, Dinitia (October 2, 2002). "A Literary Review at Bellevue? Believe it". The New York Times. Arts.

bellevue, hospital, center, redirects, here, hospital, lebanon, bellevue, medical, center, officially, health, hospitals, bellevue, formerly, known, center, hospital, york, city, oldest, public, hospital, united, states, largest, hospitals, united, states, num. Bellevue Hospital Center redirects here For the hospital in Lebanon see Bellevue Medical Center Bellevue Hospital officially NYC Health Hospitals Bellevue and formerly known as Bellevue Hospital Center is a hospital in New York City and the oldest public hospital in the United States 2 4 One of the largest hospitals in the United States by number of beds it is located at 462 First Avenue in the Kips Bay neighborhood of Manhattan New York City Bellevue is also home to FDNY EMS Station 08 formerly NYC EMS Station 13 Bellevue HospitalNYC Health HospitalsThe exterior of the hospitalGeographyLocation462 First Avenue Manhattan New York New York United StatesCoordinates40 44 21 N 73 58 31 W 40 7393 N 73 9753 W 40 7393 73 9753 Coordinates 40 44 21 N 73 58 31 W 40 7393 N 73 9753 W 40 7393 73 9753OrganizationFundingPublic hospitalTypeTeachingAffiliated universityNew York University School of Medicine 1 NetworkNYC Health HospitalsNYU Langone Health System 2 ServicesEmergency departmentLevel I trauma centerBeds844 2015 3 HelipadEast 34th Street Heliport IATA TSS HistoryOpenedMarch 31 1736 286 years ago 1736 03 31 2 LinksWebsitewww wbr nychealthandhospitals wbr org wbr bellevueListsHospitals in New YorkOther linksHospitals in ManhattanHistorically Bellevue was popularly associated with its treatment of mentally ill patients such that Bellevue became a local pejorative slang term for a psychiatric hospital The hospital has since developed into a comprehensive major medical center over the years including outpatient specialty and skilled nursing care as well as emergency and inpatient services The hospital contains a 25 story patient care facility and has an attending physician staff of 1 200 and an in house staff of about 5 500 Bellevue is a safety net hospital providing healthcare for individuals regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay It handles over half a million patient visits each year 3 In 2014 Bellevue was ranked 40th overall best hospital in the New York metro area and 29th in New York City by U S News amp World Report 5 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 City reorganization 2 Medical firsts 3 Facilities 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory Edit An engraving from 1866 showing the city s first morgue located in Bellevue The administration building in 1950 The original psychiatric hospital building Founding Edit Bellevue traces its origins to the city s first permanent almshouse a two story brick building completed in 1736 on the city common now City Hall Park 6 In 1798 the city purchased Belle Vue farm a property near the East River several miles north of the settled city which had been used to quarantine the sick during a series of yellow fever outbreaks The hospital was formally named Bellevue Hospital in 1824 7 8 By 1787 Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons had assigned faculty and medical students to Bellevue Columbia faculty and students would remain at Bellevue for the next 181 years until the restructuring of the academic affiliations of Bellevue Hospital in 1968 New York University faculty began to conduct clinical instruction at the hospital in 1819 In 1849 an amphitheater for clinical teaching and surgery opened In 1861 the Bellevue Hospital Medical College the first medical college in New York with connections to a hospital was founded By 1873 the nation s first nursing school based on Florence Nightingale s principles opened at Bellevue followed by the nation s first children s clinic in 1874 and the nation s first emergency pavilion in 1876 a pavilion for the insane an approach considered revolutionary at the time was erected within hospital grounds in 1879 For that reason the name Bellevue is sometimes used as a metonym for psychiatric hospitals Mark Harris in New York called it the Chelsea Hotel of the mad 9 Bellevue initiated a residency training program in 1883 that is still the model for surgical training worldwide The Carnegie Laboratory the nation s first pathology and bacteriology laboratory was founded there a year later followed by the nation s first men s nursing school in 1888 By 1892 Bellevue established a dedicated unit for alcoholics citation needed City reorganization Edit In 1902 the administrative Bellevue and Allied Hospitals organization were formed by the city under president John W Brannan B amp AH also included Gouverneur Hospital Harlem Hospital and Fordham Hospital 10 B amp AH opened doors to female and black physicians 11 In the midst of a tuberculosis epidemic a year later the Bellevue Chest Service was founded Bellevue opened the nation s first ambulatory cardiac clinic in 1911 followed by the Western Hemisphere s first ward for metabolic disorders in 1917 New York City s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner began on the second floor in 1918 German spy and saboteur Fritz Joubert Duquesne escaped the hospital prison ward in 1919 after having feigned paralysis for nearly two years 12 PS 106 the first public school for the emotionally disturbed children located in a public hospital opened at Bellevue in 1935 In 1939 David Margolis began work on nine Work Projects Administration murals in entrance rotunda titled Materials of Relaxation which were completed in 1941 Bellevue became the site of the world s first hospital catastrophe unit the same year the world s first cardiopulmonary laboratory was established at Bellevue by Andre Cournand and Dickinson Richards a year later and the nation s first heart failure clinic opened staffed by Eugene Braunwald in 1952 In 1960 New York City s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner moved out of the second floor and into its new building at 520 First Avenue but still maintained close relations with Bellevue In 1962 Bellevue established the first intensive care unit in a municipal hospital and in 1964 Bellevue was designated as the stand by hospital for treatment of visiting presidents foreign dignitaries injured members of the city s uniformed services and United Nations diplomats Bellevue joined the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation as one of 11 acute care hospitals in 1970 In 1981 Bellevue was certified as an official heart station for cardiac emergencies a year later it was designated as a micro surgical reimplantation center for the City of New York by 1983 as a level one trauma center and by 1988 as a head and spinal cord injury center In 1990 it established an accredited residency training program in Emergency Medicine The building that formerly served as the hospital s psychiatric facility started to be used as a homeless intake center and a men s homeless shelter in 1998 The publication of the Bellevue Literary Review the first literary magazine to arise from a medical center commenced in 2001 Bellevue Literary Press was founded six years later as a sister organization of the Bellevue Literary Review In April 2010 plans to redevelop the former psychiatric hospital building as a hotel and conference center connected to NYU Langone Medical Center fell through 13 The aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in October 2012 required evacuation of all patients due to power failure and flooding in the basement generators 14 15 Bellevue was renamed NYC Health Hospitals Bellevue in November 2015 as a reflection of its parent organization s rebranding 16 Medical firsts EditMultiple firsts were performed at Bellevue in its early years In 1799 it opened the first maternity ward in the United States By 1808 the world s first ligation of the femoral artery for an aneurysm was performed there followed by the first ligation of the innominate artery ten years later Bellevue physicians promoted the Bone Bill in 1854 which legalized dissection of cadavers for anatomical studies two years later they started to also popularize the use of the hypodermic syringe In 1862 the Austin Flint murmur was named for Austin Flint prominent Bellevue Hospital cardiologist By 1867 Bellevue physicians were instrumental in developing New York City s sanitary code the first in the world One of the nation s first outpatient departments connected to a hospital the Bureau of Medical and Surgical Relief for the Out of Door Poor was established at Bellevue that year In 1868 Bellevue physician Stephen Smith became first commissioner of public health in New York City he initiated a national campaign for health vaccinations A year later Bellevue established the second hospital based emergency ambulance service in the United States 17 In 1889 Bellevue physicians were the first to report that tuberculosis is a preventable disease five years later was the successful operation of the abdomen for a pistol shot wound William Tillett discovered streptokinase later used for the acute treatment of myocardial infarction at Bellevue in 1933 Nina Starr Braunwald performed the first mitral valve replacement in 1960 at the hospital In 1967 Bellevue physicians perform the first cadaver kidney transplant In 1971 the first active immunization for hepatitis B was developed by Bellevue physicians Bellevue played a key role in the development of the Triple Drug Cocktail or HAART a breakthrough in the treatment of AIDS in 1996 In October 2014 Bellevue took in an Ebola patient Craig Spencer an individual who worked with Medecins Sans Frontieres Doctors Without Borders in Guinea a month prior during the 2014 Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa Facilities Edit Front gate of the hospital The Cube built in 1971 74 along FDR Drive at the East River One of the largest hospitals in the United States by number of beds 18 it handles nearly 460 000 non ER outpatient clinic visits nearly 106 000 emergency visits and some 30 000 inpatients each year 3 More than 80 percent of Bellevue s patients come from the city s medically underserved populations Bellevue is a safety net hospital in that it will provide healthcare for individuals regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay 1 The hospital occupies a 25 story patient care facility with an ICU digital radiology communication and an outpatient facility The hospital has an attending physician staff of 1 200 and an in house staff of about 5 500 1 Bellevue features separate pediatric 0 25 and adult 25 emergency departments 19 In popular culture EditBellevue has entered popular consciousness through its status as a major hospital in the largest city in the United States The hospital notably treated the author Norman Mailer who was taken to Bellevue after he stabbed his wife and Mark David Chapman who shuttled between Bellevue and the jail complex on Rikers Island after he shot and killed musician John Lennon The poet Allen Ginsberg also a former patient mentioned the hospital by name in his famous poem Howl 1955 20 4 The hospital was mentioned or featured in the end of the music video of the Van Halen song Hot for Teacher in which lead guitarist Eddie Van Halen becomes a psychiatric hospital patient after he fictionally graduated from school 21 Bellevue is referenced by the character Amy in the 1970 Broadway musical Company by Stephen Sondheim The character experiencing cold feet on her wedding day threatens to move into the hopeless cases section at the hospital citation needed In 2000 rapper Wyclef Jean referenced Bellevue in the song Where Fugees At on his album The Ecleftic 2 Sides II a Book saying I send psychos to Bellevue 22 Bellevue has been the subject of recent books including Bellevue Three Centuries of Medicine and Mayhem at America s Most Storied Hospital 2016 by historian David Oshinsky 20 Twelve Patients Life and Death at Bellevue Hospital 2012 by Dr Eric Manheimer a former Bellevue medical director 23 and Singular Intimacies Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue 2002 by Dr Danielle Ofri a long time physician at Bellevue 24 The ABC television sitcom series Barney Miller 1975 1982 and the NBC television sitcom series Night Court 1984 1992 both frequently mentioned Bellevue as it was the hospital where many of the mentally ill or unstable criminals were sent Both series were set in New York City The NBC television series New Amsterdam 2018 takes place at a fictionalized version of Bellevue renamed New Amsterdam in the show Based on Manheimer s book the series has filmed scenes at Bellevue and other New York City public hospitals 23 See also EditList of the oldest hospitals in the United StatesReferences Edit a b c History City of New York Retrieved April 15 2017 a b c About Bellevue City of New York Retrieved April 15 2017 a b c Bellevue Hospital Facts Retrieved May 31 2020 a b c Is It Checkout Time at Bellevue Hospital New York November 14 2008 Retrieved March 17 2020 Best Hospitals U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 26 2015 Burrows Edwin G Wallace Mike 1998 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 Oxford University Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 19 974120 5 Frusciano Thomas J Pettit Marilyn H 1997 New York University and the City An Illustrated History Rutgers University Press p 88 ISBN 978 0 8135 2347 7 Carlisle Robert J 1893 An Account of Bellevue Hospital With a Catalogue of the Medical and Surgical Staff from 1736 to 1894 Society of the Alumni of Bellevue Hospital pp 1 17 Harris Mark November 14 2008 Checkout Time at the Asylum New York Annual Report Volume 1 by New York State Dept of Social Welfare 1908 page 268 Opdycke Sandra No One Was Turned Away The Role of Public Hospitals in New York City since 1900 p 67 Oxford University Press 1999 Focused on the history of Bellevue Hospital online Paralytic Flees from Prison Ward Captain Fritz Duquesne Who Feigned Helplessness Escapes from Bellevue The New York Times May 28 1919 p 16 Retrieved July 16 2010 Rubinstein Dana April 15 2010 Bellevue Redevelopment Officially Dead The New York Observer Archived from the original on April 26 2010 Retrieved July 16 2010 Ashley Jennings October 31 2012 New York City s Bellevue Hospital Forced to Evacuate Patients After Sandy ABC News Retrieved October 31 2012 Bernstein Nina Hartocollis Anemona October 31 2012 Bellevue Hospital Evacuates Patients After Backup Power Fails The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 28 2020 Gamble Molly November 10 2015 A new name for NYC Health and Hospitals Corp 5 things to know Becker s Hospital Review Becker s Healthcare Retrieved December 15 2015 Bell Ryan Corbett 2009 The Ambulance A History Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co ISBN 978 0 7864 3811 2 50 Largest Hospitals in America Beckers Hospital Review Retrieved March 17 2020 Emergency Trauma Retrieved April 6 2020 a b Smith Nathan December 3 2016 Book Review Bellevue by David Oshinsky The Nation Retrieved March 19 2020 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Van Halen Hot For Teacher Official Music Video YouTube Wyclef Jean Where Fugees At a b Klein Melissa October 28 2018 New Amsterdam filming pumps money into city s hospitals New York Post Retrieved March 19 2020 Review Singular Intimacies Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue Publishers Weekly February 24 2003 Retrieved January 25 2021 Further reading EditHolland Julie 2009 Weekends at Bellevue Nine Years on the Night Shift at the Psych ER New York Bantam Books ISBN 978 0 553 80766 0 Nolen William A 1990 The Making of a Surgeon Denver Mid List Press ISBN 0 922811 46 6 Ofri Danielle 2009 Singular Intimacies Becoming a Doctor at Bellevue Boston Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 7252 3 Oshinsky David 2016 Bellevue Three Centuries of Medicine and Mayhem at America s Most Storied Hospital New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 307 38671 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bellevue Hospital Center Official website NYC Health Hospitals Bellevue at NYU Medical Center NYU School of Medicine Library and Archives with Bellevue related collections NYC Health Hospitals Bellevue Psychiatry Inpatient Services Smith Dinitia October 2 2002 A Literary Review at Bellevue Believe it The New York Times Arts Portal New York City Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bellevue Hospital amp oldid 1134959131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.