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Mount Sinai Morningside

Mount Sinai Morningside, formerly known as Mount Sinai St. Luke's, is a teaching hospital located in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It is affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Health System, a nonprofit hospital system formed by the merger of Continuum Health Partners and the Mount Sinai Medical Center in September 2013. It provides general medical and surgical facilities, ambulatory care, and a Level 2 Trauma Center, verified by the American College of Surgeons.[2] From 1978 to 2020, it was affiliated with Mount Sinai West as part of St. Luke's–Roosevelt Hospital Center.

Mount Sinai Morningside
Mount Sinai Health System
Mount Sinai Morningside
Geography
Location1111 Amsterdam Avenue, New York City, New York 10027, United States
Coordinates40°48′20″N 73°57′42″W / 40.8055°N 73.9618°W / 40.8055; -73.9618Coordinates: 40°48′20″N 73°57′42″W / 40.8055°N 73.9618°W / 40.8055; -73.9618
Organization
Care systemPrivate
TypeTertiary teaching hospital
Affiliated universityIcahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
NetworkMount Sinai Health System
Services
Emergency departmentLevel 2 trauma center
Beds495
History
Opened1850
Links
Websitewww.mountsinai.org/locations/morningside
ListsHospitals in the United States
Other linksHospitals in Manhattan
Mount Sinai Morningside
Built1896–1928
ArchitectErnest Flagg
Architectural styleFrench Renaissance Revival
NRHP reference No.100003934
NYCL No.2113
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 20, 2019
Designated NYCLJune 18, 2002 (Plant and Scrymser Pavilions only)[1]

Mount Sinai Morningside is the primary provider of health care serving the neighborhoods of the Upper West Side and western Harlem. It operates 21 clinics and as of 2020, is nationally ranked #23 for Diabetes and Endocrinology, and #25 for Nephrology by U.S. News & World Report. As of 2020, Arthur A. Gianelli is President[3] and Brian Radbill is Medical Officer and Senior Vice President of Medical Affairs.[4][5]

The structure was erected in 1896 as St. Luke's Hospital, and was designed by Ernest Flagg. Several additions were built in the early 20th century, and some of the original pavilions have been demolished. Parts of the facility have been designated as an official New York City landmark, and the remaining pavilions of the original hospital are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Services and academics

In addition to primary care, the hospital includes 21 specialty clinics. A partial list includes cardiology/cardiovascular surgery, cancer, bariatrics and diabetes, geriatrics, and neurology.[6]

The facility has 495 beds, and in 2019 had 97,000 days of patient care and 41,800 days of inpatient and ambulatory care with 14,000 discharges including newborns. There were 90,300 emergency department visits and 10,700 emergency department admissions.[6]

Emergency department

The Emergency department is staffed 24-hours by board-certified physicians, nurses, physician assistants, social workers, and case managers who specialize in emergency medicine. The hospital also provides pediatric emergency medicine, psychiatric emergency, and specialized services for victims of sexual assaults. The department has a 24-hour stroke team and Heart Attack (MI) Team, as well as a 24-hour on-call cardiac catheterization lab.[7]

Residency programs

Mount Sinai Morningside sponsors 30 accredited residency training programs.[8] The Department of Medicine trains 158 residents and an additional 39 fellows; one of the largest programs in New York State and in the top 10 largest nationally. Each program has full accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and the institution itself is accredited for the maximum 5-year cycle. The Internal Medicine Training Program uses strategies to ensure that residents can learn from every patient, including using a drip system for distributing admissions and prohibiting overnight calls anywhere in the training program. In addition, the department limits the number of patients that can be carried by an intern to no more than 10; by contrast, 83% of the programs in New York state, New Jersey and all of New England still allow interns to carry 12 patients. The program also has its own Simulation Lab for training residents. The residency program in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology uses Mount Sinai Beth Israel in addition to Mount Sinai Morningside and Mount Sinai West. Residents study over 70,000 cases, which cover a wide variety of disease processes, and range from routine to complex and unusual disease entities.[9]

History

Founding

St. Luke's was founded by William Augustus Muhlenberg, pastor of the Episcopal Church of the Holy Communion. In 1846, Muhlenberg had started raising funds for New York City residents who were both poor and ill.[10][11] St. Luke's was incorporated in 1850,[10][12][13] being only the fourth general hospital to open in New York City.[12] The hospital received its first patients in 1853, initially operating within the Church of the Holy Communion building at Sixth Avenue and 20th Street in present-day Chelsea.[12][13] The next year, the institution had acquired a plot on Fifth Avenue between 54th and 55th Streets, near St. Patrick's Cathedral.[12] John W. Ritch designed a new brick building in the Romanesque Revival style, which was composed of two wings flanking a central pavilion.[10][14]

St. Luke's Hospital moved to its Fifth Avenue location in 1858.[13][14][15] Muhlenberg continued his role as hospital superintendent until his death in 1877, upon which he was succeeded by the Rev. George S. Baker.[16] The surrounding area developed quickly, and by the late 19th century, the hospital's Fifth Avenue location was becoming increasingly outdated due to the expansion of the hospital facilities, as well as the increasing value of the land in Midtown.[14][15][17] A training school for nurses was founded in 1888, and three years later, tuberculosis patients were moved to a facility in Tremont, Bronx.[18] By 1892, St. Luke's Hospital had treated 36,050 patients throughout its history, of which 99% were Christians; the majority of these were Protestants.[19]

New campus

 
The 113th Street hospital under construction

In March 1891, a committee was established to search for a new site. George Macculloch Miller, who had led the purchase of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine's land in Morningside Heights, had been interested in a partnership with St. Luke's Hospital for five years.[14] By 1892, Miller had convinced the hospital to purchase the site directly north of the cathedral, between 113th and 114th Street.[10][14] The arrangement was expected to be mutually beneficial for both institutions. An annual report from St. Luke's lauded the proximity to Morningside Park, immediately to the east, as well as its elevated location on top of the Morningside Heights plateau.[10][20] The acquisition proved difficult, as St. Luke's had to take land from eight landowners.[20]

The building committee headed a design competition for the project,[10] in which eighty firms participated.[15] Five prominent architects Heins & LaFarge, James Brown Lord, George Edward Harney, James Renwick Jr., and Charles W. Clinton, were offered $400 to submit designs.[15][20] Renwick and Clinton declined to enter the competition, and other architects submitted plans without receiving compensation.[20] Most of these schemes worked to harmonize the hospital's design with the Gothic Revival style of the cathedral.[20] The competition was mildly controversial: the Real Estate Record and Guide said that because competitors could not use pseudonyms, the judges could more easily identify the architects that they favored.[21] The commission was ultimately given to Ernest Flagg.[22][23] His proposal was the only design that deviated significantly from the cathedral's design, as it was in the French Renaissance Revival style.[23] Flagg likely benefited from favoritism:[10][23][24] he had been described as a "surrogate son" of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, who was part of St. Luke's executive and building committees,[25] and had no previous design experience.[10][23] Though the building committee initially had reservations about the selection, it appointed Flagg and Charles Clinton jointly as architects for the project, with the stipulation that the committee could revise the plan at any time.[10][23]

St. Luke's began work on the project in May 1893[26][27] and sold their Fifth Avenue building the next month.[28] In the initial round of construction, five pavilions were constructed.[29][30] The project was beset by delays and disputes due to Flagg's combativeness toward suppliers: he objected to the quality of such materials as the marble, steel, and stained glass.[29][31] The hospital's trustees expressed concerns, because they had promised to leave the old building by July 1894. Despite this, the trustees chose to remain within part of its Fifth Avenue campus and turn the rest over to the new owners,[32] the Union Club of the City of New York.[33] In December 1895, the old building stopped accepting patients.[34] The following month, the first patients started to move into the new building.[32][35] Construction was not completed until late 1896.[32] The total cost of construction was $1.7 million.[29]

Expansion

In its early years, St. Luke's suffered from a lack of funding, and did not have a pavilion for private patients.[36] Initially, patients were housed in two stories of the Vanderbilt Pavilion, which had been intended for nurses. Affluent patients at first avoided St. Luke's due to the lack of a private pavilion, hurting its business.[32] Furthermore, it was nominally affiliated with the Episcopal Church despite only a minority of patients being Episcopal, thus limiting potential donors to wealthy Episcopalians.[32][37] By 1901, St. Luke's board was preparing plans for a private patients' pavilion, though such a structure could not be built until funds were provided.[37] The money for an expansion was finally provided in a donation from Margaret J. Plant, wife of the late railroad magnate Henry B. Plant, and was announced in November 1903.[37][38] Though Flagg submitted designs for the Plant Pavilion,[37] there is insufficient evidence to determine whether he supervised the construction process.[39] After Flagg submitted plans in early 1904, work started on the Plant Pavilion in April 1904,[40][41] and after a delay caused by a labor strike,[41] it was completed in 1906.[41][39][42]

Two further additions were made afterward. The first was Travers Pavilion on 114th Street, which was built between 1908 and 1911.[39][41] A decade later, Flagg was hired to design another pavilion for private patients, the Scrymser Pavilion. Money for this pavilion was provided by communications magnate James Alexander Scrymser, who left money for the structure in his will.[41][43] Plans for the pavilion were filed in June 1926, and construction began that October; the pavilion was completed in 1928.[39]

Later history

After World War II, numerous modern buildings were erected, and two pavilions were removed. The first structure to be built in this modern wave of development was the Clark Building along the two undeveloped plots on Amsterdam Avenue; this was designed by York & Sawyer and built in 1952–1954.[44][45] Woman's Hospital was merged with St. Luke's Hospital in 1952, forming St. Luke's Hospital Center,[46] and the hospital center also became partially affiliated with Columbia University.[44] The Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions were demolished in replaced with plain brick buildings. The Norrie Pavilion was replaced with the Stuyvesant Building, designed by York & Sawyer and built in 1956–1957, while the Vanderbilt Pavilion was replaced by the Service and Research Building, built in 1966–1968 to a design by Harry M. Prince.[39][44] The observation dome on the administration building was destroyed in 1966.[39]

St. Luke's Hospital became fully affiliated with Columbia in 1971.[44] St. Luke's Hospital merged its services with Roosevelt Hospital in 1978, becoming St. Luke's–Roosevelt Hospital Center.[47] On January 9, 1997, St. Luke's-Roosevelt entered into a partnership with Beth Israel Medical Center and New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, forming the Greater Metropolitan Health Systems, Inc. In April 1998, Greater Metropolitan Health Systems, Inc. was renamed Continuum Health Partners.[48]

The Plant and Scrymser Pavilions for Private Patients were designated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as official city landmarks in 2002.[1][49] In 2013, Continuum Health Partners merged with Mount Sinai Medical Center to become the Mount Sinai Health System,[50] and two years later, St. Luke's Hospital became Mount Sinai St. Luke's.[51] Four of the original pavilions—Plant, Scrymser, Travers, and Minturn—were sold in 2016 and converted to a complex of 300 rental apartments. The conversion was undertaken by the architecture firm CetraRuddy.[52] In 2019, the original pavilions were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[53] In 2020, the hospital was renamed Mount Sinai Morningside.[54][55][56][3]

Campus

 
Modern buildings on Amsterdam Avenue

Flagg designed St. Luke's Hospital with nine pavilions: four 4+12-story pavilions each on 113th and 114th Streets, respectively to the south and north, and a 6-story central administration building in the middle, facing 113th Street to the south.[29][57][58] The side streets' pavilions were designed with brick and stone facades as well as mansard roofs.[57] The plan was a continuation of previous hospital designs that had split the wings into several pavilions connected by arcades.[29][30] In St. Luke's, the arcades were elevated, with arches beneath to allow air to pass through.[59][60] Patient wards were on 113th Street, while nurses' quarters and private patients' wings were on 114th Street.[30][60] Each pavilion was designed around a central courtyard with a staircase and elevator.[60]

Ultimately, eight of Flagg's pavilions were built.[29][30] Of these, six remain, four of which are no longer part of the hospital.[44] In the final design, the board decided to move the administration building closer to the street and to remove the proposed gatehouses. Staircases were placed in the arcades between pavilions so that the individual wards could be more easily quarantined.[30] The revised plan also allowed the construction of a chapel behind the administration building.[61] When it opened, the hospital was composed of the administration building; the Minturn, Chapel, Norrie, and Vanderbilt Pavilions; an ambulance stable; and a pathology building.[29] The total patient capacity of the building was estimated at 350 persons when it was completed.[58]

Administration building

The central administration building—also called the Muhlenberg Pavilion, for the hospital's founder—is set back from 113th Street.[61] It was one of the five original pavilions opened in 1896.[37] The building was topped by a dome, which rose 140 feet (43 m) and was compared to that of the Luxembourg Palace,[57][58][60] though St. Luke's dome was demolished in 1966.[39] West–east corridors ran across each floor, and elevators connected the floors, allowing sick patients to be transported more easily. As planned, the first (ground) floor was to be a lobby and offices; the second to fourth floors, a children's ward; the fifth floor, dining rooms; and the sixth floor, operating theaters.[62] An open court was placed in front of the central pavilion.[30]

Chapel Pavilion

The Chapel Pavilion, one of the original pavilions opened in 1896, is located on 114th Street, just north of the administration building. The pavilion was not in the initial design.[63]

Flagg designed a chapel at the hospital, as well as the stained glass windows in the chapel.[64][65] As designed, a tower was to rise above the chapel.[63] The space measures 70 feet (21 m) long by 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and 34 feet (10 m) tall.[66] It was consecrated in 1896.[67]

Travers Pavilion

The Travers Pavilion was built northeast of the administration building, to the east of Chapel Pavilion, in 1908–1911.[39][41] It was used for outpatient treatment and as a female hospital staffers' dormitory.[41][52][68] It was later used for administrative offices before being converted to apartments.[52]

Plant and Scrymser Pavilions

The Plant and Scrymser Pavilions are located on Morningside Drive, on the eastern part of the hospital site.[1] Plant, named after donor Margaret J. Plant, opened on the southeast corner of the site in 1906. Scrymser, named after donor Mary Catherine Prime Scrymser, opened on the northeast corner in 1928.[41][39] They were initially used as wings where wealthy patients could be treated separately from the rest of the hospital's patients.[1] Plant, eight stories tall, had rooms for the hospital's superintendent as well.[39][44] Scrymser, one of Flagg's final commissions in Manhattan, was nine stories tall and differed from the other pavilions, in that it contained upper terraces with loggias (rather than a mansard roof), as well as a brick facade with muted ornamentation.[44] They were converted to apartments starting in 2016.[52]

Minturn Pavilion

The Minturn Pavilion, one of the original pavilions opened in 1896,[37] is located on 113th Street, just southeast of the administration building.[63] Named for the hospital's founding president Robert Minturn, it initially served as a women's surgical ward.[61] It was later used for administrative offices and then converted to apartments.[52]

Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions

The Norrie Pavilion was located at the northwest corner of the site, while the Vanderbilt Pavilion was located at the southwest corner; both were west of the administration building[63] and were among the original pavilions opened in 1896.[37] The Norrie Pavilion, named after hospital treasurer Gordon Norrie was used as a men's surgical ward[61] and opened in March 1896.[69] The Vanderbilt Pavilion—named for benefactor William Henry Vanderbilt, who had paid for the original building's annex—was used as staff dormitories[61] and opened in January 1896.[35] They were demolished in the 1950s.[39]

Other constituent hospitals

Woman's Hospital

 
Woman's Hospital, New York City, 1870.

Woman's Hospital was founded by J. Marion Sims with financial backing from Sarah Platt Doremus, who ultimately became president of the hospital.[70] From South Carolina, Sims had developed a revolutionary approach to treating vesico-vaginal fistulas, a catastrophic complication from obstructed childbirth. The hospital was first located in a rented house at Madison Avenue and 29th Street. Thomas Addis Emmet, who served at the hospital, published the first comprehensive textbook in English on gynecology.[71]

In 1867 Woman's Hospital moved to a new location on Park Avenue, at the present site of the Waldorf Astoria New York. The location had been used as a burial ground during the 1832 cholera outbreak, and 47,000 coffins were dug up to make way for the new construction.[71] In 1906 Woman's Hospital moved to 110th Street and Amsterdam; the new structure, designed by Frederick R. Allen of Allen & Collens, was expanded in 1913.[72] Woman's Hospital was merged with St. Luke's Hospital in 1952, forming St. Luke's Hospital Center,[46] and the old Woman's Hospital building at 110th Street and Amsterdam Avenue was destroyed.[44][46] Finally, in 1965, it was moved to 114th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, just across the street from St. Luke's.[71][46]

St. Luke's Hospital Training School for Nurses

The nurses training school operated from 1888 until its last class was graduated in 1974. The school shuttered due to competition from increasingly available four-year bachelor's degree programs. It was founded by Annie Ayres, a devotee of St. Luke's founder Muhlenberg and graduated 4,000 nurses during its 80-year run.[73][74][75]

Partial list of innovations

  • 1935 – Surgeons Alexander Ada and Henry Lyle performed one of the earliest successful removals of a cancerous lung.[76]
  • 1956 – Hugh Fitzpatrick performed the first open heart repair of a septal defect in New York City.[77]
  • 1958 – Doris L. Wethers became first black attending physician; head of pediatrics (1961–1973) director of pediatrics, Foundation for Research and Education in Sickle Cell Disease (1979), and called for testing for sickle cell disease in all children, whether or not African-American, and it became standard practice in all 50 states by 2006.[78][79]
  • 1960 – Sami Hashim and Van Itallie published the use of cholestyramine in the treatment of hypercholesterolemia and primary biliary cirrhosis, the first drug developed to lower cholesterol.[80]
  • 1967 – Robert Zickel described a new fixation device for subtrochanteric femur fracture, the precursor of intramedullary devices.[81]
  • 1968 – John Bertles, a co-investigator and first to describe red cells from individuals with sickle cell disease that remain sickled even when oxygen levels are restored ("irreversibly sickled cells").[82]
  • 1974 – Robert Neuwirth performed the first hysteroscopic resection of uterine submucous myomas in the world.[83]
  • 1975 – Founded the first NIH-funded obesity research center in the United States, by Theodore VanItallie.[84]
  • Chaplain Carlton Sweetser and Samuel Klagsbrun founded the first hospital-based hospice program in the United States.[85]
  • 1982 – Michael Lange and Michael Grieco published the first recognition of an unexplained immunological deficit in homosexual men, later discovered to be HIV.[86][87]

See also

References

Citations

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  80. ^ Van Itallie, Theodore B.; Hashim, Sami A.; Crampton, Richard S.; Field, Mavis C.; Cozanitis, Despina A. (1961). "Enteric Sequestration of Bile Acids in Management of Patients With Primary Biliary Cirrhosis". Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association. 72: 97–109. ISSN 0065-7778. PMC 2249162. PMID 13779997.
  81. ^ "Robert E. Zickel's research works | Saint Luke's Hospital (NY, USA), New York City and other places". ResearchGate. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  82. ^ Bertles, John F.; Milner, Paul F. A. (August 1, 1968). "Irreversibly sickled erythrocytes: a consequence of the heterogeneous distribution of hemoglobin types in sickle-cell anemia". The Journal of Clinical Investigation. 47 (8): 1731–41. doi:10.1172/JCI105863. PMC 297333. PMID 5666109.
  83. ^ Neuwirth, Robert S. (May 1, 1978). "A new technique for and additional experience with hysteroscopic resection of submucous fibroids". American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 131 (1): 91–94. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(78)90481-7. ISSN 0002-9378. PMID 645789.
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Sources

External links

  • Mount Sinai Morningside

mount, sinai, morningside, luke, roosevelt, hospital, center, redirects, here, former, roosevelt, hospital, mount, sinai, west, formerly, known, mount, sinai, luke, teaching, hospital, located, morningside, heights, neighborhood, manhattan, york, city, affilia. St Luke s Roosevelt Hospital Center redirects here For the former Roosevelt Hospital see Mount Sinai West Mount Sinai Morningside formerly known as Mount Sinai St Luke s is a teaching hospital located in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City It is affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Health System a nonprofit hospital system formed by the merger of Continuum Health Partners and the Mount Sinai Medical Center in September 2013 It provides general medical and surgical facilities ambulatory care and a Level 2 Trauma Center verified by the American College of Surgeons 2 From 1978 to 2020 it was affiliated with Mount Sinai West as part of St Luke s Roosevelt Hospital Center Mount Sinai MorningsideMount Sinai Health SystemMount Sinai MorningsideGeographyLocation1111 Amsterdam Avenue New York City New York 10027 United StatesCoordinates40 48 20 N 73 57 42 W 40 8055 N 73 9618 W 40 8055 73 9618 Coordinates 40 48 20 N 73 57 42 W 40 8055 N 73 9618 W 40 8055 73 9618OrganizationCare systemPrivateTypeTertiary teaching hospitalAffiliated universityIcahn School of Medicine at Mount SinaiNetworkMount Sinai Health SystemServicesEmergency departmentLevel 2 trauma centerBeds495HistoryOpened1850LinksWebsitewww wbr mountsinai wbr org wbr locations wbr morningsideListsHospitals in the United StatesOther linksHospitals in ManhattanMount Sinai MorningsideU S National Register of Historic PlacesNew York City Landmark No 2113Built1896 1928ArchitectErnest FlaggArchitectural styleFrench Renaissance RevivalNRHP reference No 100003934NYCL No 2113Significant datesAdded to NRHPMay 20 2019Designated NYCLJune 18 2002 Plant and Scrymser Pavilions only 1 Mount Sinai Morningside is the primary provider of health care serving the neighborhoods of the Upper West Side and western Harlem It operates 21 clinics and as of 2020 is nationally ranked 23 for Diabetes and Endocrinology and 25 for Nephrology by U S News amp World Report As of 2020 Arthur A Gianelli is President 3 and Brian Radbill is Medical Officer and Senior Vice President of Medical Affairs 4 5 The structure was erected in 1896 as St Luke s Hospital and was designed by Ernest Flagg Several additions were built in the early 20th century and some of the original pavilions have been demolished Parts of the facility have been designated as an official New York City landmark and the remaining pavilions of the original hospital are listed on the National Register of Historic Places Contents 1 Services and academics 1 1 Emergency department 1 2 Residency programs 2 History 2 1 Founding 2 2 New campus 2 3 Expansion 2 4 Later history 3 Campus 3 1 Administration building 3 2 Chapel Pavilion 3 3 Travers Pavilion 3 4 Plant and Scrymser Pavilions 3 5 Minturn Pavilion 3 6 Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions 4 Other constituent hospitals 4 1 Woman s Hospital 4 2 St Luke s Hospital Training School for Nurses 5 Partial list of innovations 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksServices and academics EditIn addition to primary care the hospital includes 21 specialty clinics A partial list includes cardiology cardiovascular surgery cancer bariatrics and diabetes geriatrics and neurology 6 The facility has 495 beds and in 2019 had 97 000 days of patient care and 41 800 days of inpatient and ambulatory care with 14 000 discharges including newborns There were 90 300 emergency department visits and 10 700 emergency department admissions 6 Emergency department Edit The Emergency department is staffed 24 hours by board certified physicians nurses physician assistants social workers and case managers who specialize in emergency medicine The hospital also provides pediatric emergency medicine psychiatric emergency and specialized services for victims of sexual assaults The department has a 24 hour stroke team and Heart Attack MI Team as well as a 24 hour on call cardiac catheterization lab 7 Residency programs Edit Mount Sinai Morningside sponsors 30 accredited residency training programs 8 The Department of Medicine trains 158 residents and an additional 39 fellows one of the largest programs in New York State and in the top 10 largest nationally Each program has full accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and the institution itself is accredited for the maximum 5 year cycle The Internal Medicine Training Program uses strategies to ensure that residents can learn from every patient including using a drip system for distributing admissions and prohibiting overnight calls anywhere in the training program In addition the department limits the number of patients that can be carried by an intern to no more than 10 by contrast 83 of the programs in New York state New Jersey and all of New England still allow interns to carry 12 patients The program also has its own Simulation Lab for training residents The residency program in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology uses Mount Sinai Beth Israel in addition to Mount Sinai Morningside and Mount Sinai West Residents study over 70 000 cases which cover a wide variety of disease processes and range from routine to complex and unusual disease entities 9 History EditFounding Edit St Luke s was founded by William Augustus Muhlenberg pastor of the Episcopal Church of the Holy Communion In 1846 Muhlenberg had started raising funds for New York City residents who were both poor and ill 10 11 St Luke s was incorporated in 1850 10 12 13 being only the fourth general hospital to open in New York City 12 The hospital received its first patients in 1853 initially operating within the Church of the Holy Communion building at Sixth Avenue and 20th Street in present day Chelsea 12 13 The next year the institution had acquired a plot on Fifth Avenue between 54th and 55th Streets near St Patrick s Cathedral 12 John W Ritch designed a new brick building in the Romanesque Revival style which was composed of two wings flanking a central pavilion 10 14 St Luke s Hospital moved to its Fifth Avenue location in 1858 13 14 15 Muhlenberg continued his role as hospital superintendent until his death in 1877 upon which he was succeeded by the Rev George S Baker 16 The surrounding area developed quickly and by the late 19th century the hospital s Fifth Avenue location was becoming increasingly outdated due to the expansion of the hospital facilities as well as the increasing value of the land in Midtown 14 15 17 A training school for nurses was founded in 1888 and three years later tuberculosis patients were moved to a facility in Tremont Bronx 18 By 1892 St Luke s Hospital had treated 36 050 patients throughout its history of which 99 were Christians the majority of these were Protestants 19 New campus Edit The 113th Street hospital under construction In March 1891 a committee was established to search for a new site George Macculloch Miller who had led the purchase of the Cathedral of St John the Divine s land in Morningside Heights had been interested in a partnership with St Luke s Hospital for five years 14 By 1892 Miller had convinced the hospital to purchase the site directly north of the cathedral between 113th and 114th Street 10 14 The arrangement was expected to be mutually beneficial for both institutions An annual report from St Luke s lauded the proximity to Morningside Park immediately to the east as well as its elevated location on top of the Morningside Heights plateau 10 20 The acquisition proved difficult as St Luke s had to take land from eight landowners 20 The building committee headed a design competition for the project 10 in which eighty firms participated 15 Five prominent architects Heins amp LaFarge James Brown Lord George Edward Harney James Renwick Jr and Charles W Clinton were offered 400 to submit designs 15 20 Renwick and Clinton declined to enter the competition and other architects submitted plans without receiving compensation 20 Most of these schemes worked to harmonize the hospital s design with the Gothic Revival style of the cathedral 20 The competition was mildly controversial the Real Estate Record and Guide said that because competitors could not use pseudonyms the judges could more easily identify the architects that they favored 21 The commission was ultimately given to Ernest Flagg 22 23 His proposal was the only design that deviated significantly from the cathedral s design as it was in the French Renaissance Revival style 23 Flagg likely benefited from favoritism 10 23 24 he had been described as a surrogate son of Cornelius Vanderbilt II who was part of St Luke s executive and building committees 25 and had no previous design experience 10 23 Though the building committee initially had reservations about the selection it appointed Flagg and Charles Clinton jointly as architects for the project with the stipulation that the committee could revise the plan at any time 10 23 St Luke s began work on the project in May 1893 26 27 and sold their Fifth Avenue building the next month 28 In the initial round of construction five pavilions were constructed 29 30 The project was beset by delays and disputes due to Flagg s combativeness toward suppliers he objected to the quality of such materials as the marble steel and stained glass 29 31 The hospital s trustees expressed concerns because they had promised to leave the old building by July 1894 Despite this the trustees chose to remain within part of its Fifth Avenue campus and turn the rest over to the new owners 32 the Union Club of the City of New York 33 In December 1895 the old building stopped accepting patients 34 The following month the first patients started to move into the new building 32 35 Construction was not completed until late 1896 32 The total cost of construction was 1 7 million 29 Expansion Edit In its early years St Luke s suffered from a lack of funding and did not have a pavilion for private patients 36 Initially patients were housed in two stories of the Vanderbilt Pavilion which had been intended for nurses Affluent patients at first avoided St Luke s due to the lack of a private pavilion hurting its business 32 Furthermore it was nominally affiliated with the Episcopal Church despite only a minority of patients being Episcopal thus limiting potential donors to wealthy Episcopalians 32 37 By 1901 St Luke s board was preparing plans for a private patients pavilion though such a structure could not be built until funds were provided 37 The money for an expansion was finally provided in a donation from Margaret J Plant wife of the late railroad magnate Henry B Plant and was announced in November 1903 37 38 Though Flagg submitted designs for the Plant Pavilion 37 there is insufficient evidence to determine whether he supervised the construction process 39 After Flagg submitted plans in early 1904 work started on the Plant Pavilion in April 1904 40 41 and after a delay caused by a labor strike 41 it was completed in 1906 41 39 42 Two further additions were made afterward The first was Travers Pavilion on 114th Street which was built between 1908 and 1911 39 41 A decade later Flagg was hired to design another pavilion for private patients the Scrymser Pavilion Money for this pavilion was provided by communications magnate James Alexander Scrymser who left money for the structure in his will 41 43 Plans for the pavilion were filed in June 1926 and construction began that October the pavilion was completed in 1928 39 Later history Edit After World War II numerous modern buildings were erected and two pavilions were removed The first structure to be built in this modern wave of development was the Clark Building along the two undeveloped plots on Amsterdam Avenue this was designed by York amp Sawyer and built in 1952 1954 44 45 Woman s Hospital was merged with St Luke s Hospital in 1952 forming St Luke s Hospital Center 46 and the hospital center also became partially affiliated with Columbia University 44 The Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions were demolished in replaced with plain brick buildings The Norrie Pavilion was replaced with the Stuyvesant Building designed by York amp Sawyer and built in 1956 1957 while the Vanderbilt Pavilion was replaced by the Service and Research Building built in 1966 1968 to a design by Harry M Prince 39 44 The observation dome on the administration building was destroyed in 1966 39 St Luke s Hospital became fully affiliated with Columbia in 1971 44 St Luke s Hospital merged its services with Roosevelt Hospital in 1978 becoming St Luke s Roosevelt Hospital Center 47 On January 9 1997 St Luke s Roosevelt entered into a partnership with Beth Israel Medical Center and New York Eye and Ear Infirmary forming the Greater Metropolitan Health Systems Inc In April 1998 Greater Metropolitan Health Systems Inc was renamed Continuum Health Partners 48 The Plant and Scrymser Pavilions for Private Patients were designated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as official city landmarks in 2002 1 49 In 2013 Continuum Health Partners merged with Mount Sinai Medical Center to become the Mount Sinai Health System 50 and two years later St Luke s Hospital became Mount Sinai St Luke s 51 Four of the original pavilions Plant Scrymser Travers and Minturn were sold in 2016 and converted to a complex of 300 rental apartments The conversion was undertaken by the architecture firm CetraRuddy 52 In 2019 the original pavilions were listed on the National Register of Historic Places 53 In 2020 the hospital was renamed Mount Sinai Morningside 54 55 56 3 Campus Edit Modern buildings on Amsterdam Avenue Flagg designed St Luke s Hospital with nine pavilions four 4 1 2 story pavilions each on 113th and 114th Streets respectively to the south and north and a 6 story central administration building in the middle facing 113th Street to the south 29 57 58 The side streets pavilions were designed with brick and stone facades as well as mansard roofs 57 The plan was a continuation of previous hospital designs that had split the wings into several pavilions connected by arcades 29 30 In St Luke s the arcades were elevated with arches beneath to allow air to pass through 59 60 Patient wards were on 113th Street while nurses quarters and private patients wings were on 114th Street 30 60 Each pavilion was designed around a central courtyard with a staircase and elevator 60 Ultimately eight of Flagg s pavilions were built 29 30 Of these six remain four of which are no longer part of the hospital 44 In the final design the board decided to move the administration building closer to the street and to remove the proposed gatehouses Staircases were placed in the arcades between pavilions so that the individual wards could be more easily quarantined 30 The revised plan also allowed the construction of a chapel behind the administration building 61 When it opened the hospital was composed of the administration building the Minturn Chapel Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions an ambulance stable and a pathology building 29 The total patient capacity of the building was estimated at 350 persons when it was completed 58 Administration building Edit The central administration building also called the Muhlenberg Pavilion for the hospital s founder is set back from 113th Street 61 It was one of the five original pavilions opened in 1896 37 The building was topped by a dome which rose 140 feet 43 m and was compared to that of the Luxembourg Palace 57 58 60 though St Luke s dome was demolished in 1966 39 West east corridors ran across each floor and elevators connected the floors allowing sick patients to be transported more easily As planned the first ground floor was to be a lobby and offices the second to fourth floors a children s ward the fifth floor dining rooms and the sixth floor operating theaters 62 An open court was placed in front of the central pavilion 30 Chapel Pavilion Edit The Chapel Pavilion one of the original pavilions opened in 1896 is located on 114th Street just north of the administration building The pavilion was not in the initial design 63 Flagg designed a chapel at the hospital as well as the stained glass windows in the chapel 64 65 As designed a tower was to rise above the chapel 63 The space measures 70 feet 21 m long by 30 feet 9 1 m wide and 34 feet 10 m tall 66 It was consecrated in 1896 67 Travers Pavilion Edit The Travers Pavilion was built northeast of the administration building to the east of Chapel Pavilion in 1908 1911 39 41 It was used for outpatient treatment and as a female hospital staffers dormitory 41 52 68 It was later used for administrative offices before being converted to apartments 52 Plant and Scrymser Pavilions Edit The Plant and Scrymser Pavilions are located on Morningside Drive on the eastern part of the hospital site 1 Plant named after donor Margaret J Plant opened on the southeast corner of the site in 1906 Scrymser named after donor Mary Catherine Prime Scrymser opened on the northeast corner in 1928 41 39 They were initially used as wings where wealthy patients could be treated separately from the rest of the hospital s patients 1 Plant eight stories tall had rooms for the hospital s superintendent as well 39 44 Scrymser one of Flagg s final commissions in Manhattan was nine stories tall and differed from the other pavilions in that it contained upper terraces with loggias rather than a mansard roof as well as a brick facade with muted ornamentation 44 They were converted to apartments starting in 2016 52 Minturn Pavilion Edit The Minturn Pavilion one of the original pavilions opened in 1896 37 is located on 113th Street just southeast of the administration building 63 Named for the hospital s founding president Robert Minturn it initially served as a women s surgical ward 61 It was later used for administrative offices and then converted to apartments 52 Norrie and Vanderbilt Pavilions Edit The Norrie Pavilion was located at the northwest corner of the site while the Vanderbilt Pavilion was located at the southwest corner both were west of the administration building 63 and were among the original pavilions opened in 1896 37 The Norrie Pavilion named after hospital treasurer Gordon Norrie was used as a men s surgical ward 61 and opened in March 1896 69 The Vanderbilt Pavilion named for benefactor William Henry Vanderbilt who had paid for the original building s annex was used as staff dormitories 61 and opened in January 1896 35 They were demolished in the 1950s 39 Other constituent hospitals EditWoman s Hospital Edit Not to be confused with Women s Hospital Woman s Hospital of Texas or Woman s Hospital of Philadelphia Woman s Hospital New York City 1870 Woman s Hospital was founded by J Marion Sims with financial backing from Sarah Platt Doremus who ultimately became president of the hospital 70 From South Carolina Sims had developed a revolutionary approach to treating vesico vaginal fistulas a catastrophic complication from obstructed childbirth The hospital was first located in a rented house at Madison Avenue and 29th Street Thomas Addis Emmet who served at the hospital published the first comprehensive textbook in English on gynecology 71 In 1867 Woman s Hospital moved to a new location on Park Avenue at the present site of the Waldorf Astoria New York The location had been used as a burial ground during the 1832 cholera outbreak and 47 000 coffins were dug up to make way for the new construction 71 In 1906 Woman s Hospital moved to 110th Street and Amsterdam the new structure designed by Frederick R Allen of Allen amp Collens was expanded in 1913 72 Woman s Hospital was merged with St Luke s Hospital in 1952 forming St Luke s Hospital Center 46 and the old Woman s Hospital building at 110th Street and Amsterdam Avenue was destroyed 44 46 Finally in 1965 it was moved to 114th Street and Amsterdam Avenue just across the street from St Luke s 71 46 St Luke s Hospital Training School for Nurses Edit The nurses training school operated from 1888 until its last class was graduated in 1974 The school shuttered due to competition from increasingly available four year bachelor s degree programs It was founded by Annie Ayres a devotee of St Luke s founder Muhlenberg and graduated 4 000 nurses during its 80 year run 73 74 75 Partial list of innovations Edit1935 Surgeons Alexander Ada and Henry Lyle performed one of the earliest successful removals of a cancerous lung 76 1956 Hugh Fitzpatrick performed the first open heart repair of a septal defect in New York City 77 1958 Doris L Wethers became first black attending physician head of pediatrics 1961 1973 director of pediatrics Foundation for Research and Education in Sickle Cell Disease 1979 and called for testing for sickle cell disease in all children whether or not African American and it became standard practice in all 50 states by 2006 78 79 1960 Sami Hashim and Van Itallie published the use of cholestyramine in the treatment of hypercholesterolemia and primary biliary cirrhosis the first drug developed to lower cholesterol 80 1967 Robert Zickel described a new fixation device for subtrochanteric femur fracture the precursor of intramedullary devices 81 1968 John Bertles a co investigator and first to describe red cells from individuals with sickle cell disease that remain sickled even when oxygen levels are restored irreversibly sickled cells 82 1974 Robert Neuwirth performed the first hysteroscopic resection of uterine submucous myomas in the world 83 1975 Founded the first NIH funded obesity research center in the United States by Theodore VanItallie 84 Chaplain Carlton Sweetser and Samuel Klagsbrun founded the first hospital based hospice program in the United States 85 1982 Michael Lange and Michael Grieco published the first recognition of an unexplained immunological deficit in homosexual men later discovered to be HIV 86 87 See also Edit Architecture portal National Register of Historic Places portal New York City portalArchitecture in New York City Healthcare in New York City List of hospitals in New York City National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan above 110th StreetReferences EditCitations Edit a b c d Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 1 Trauma Centers American College of Surgeons Retrieved February 7 2020 a b West Melanie Grayce February 7 2020 St Luke s Hospital Rebrands as Mount Sinai Morningside After 250 Million Overhaul Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved February 7 2020 admin April 2019 Arthur Gianelli President of Mount Sinai St Luke s Morningside Area Alliance Retrieved February 7 2020 Patients more satisfied when doctors treat fewer people Reuters April 13 2018 Retrieved February 7 2020 a b Mount Sinai St Luke s Facts and Figures Mount Sinai New York Mount Sinai Health System Retrieved February 7 2020 Mount Sinai St Luke s Roosevelt Hospital Center A408048 www emra org Retrieved February 7 2020 ACGME Home www acgme org Archived from the original on May 29 2019 Retrieved May 25 2019 Internal Medicine Residency Program at Mount Sinai St Luke s amp Mount Sinai West PDF Archived PDF from the original on February 1 2019 Retrieved February 7 2020 a b c d e f g h i Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 2 Flagg 1893 p 9 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 85 a b c Flagg 1893 p 11 a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 86 a b c d Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 402 Flagg 1893 p 12 King Moses 1893 King s handbook of New York City an outline history and description of the American Metropolis with over one thousand illustrations Boston Mass p 472 Retrieved November 12 2019 via Internet Archive Flagg 1893 p 13 Flagg 1893 p 14 a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 87 St Luke s Competition PDF The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 50 1274 208 August 13 1892 via columbia edu Architects for St Luke s New York Tribune November 25 1892 p 2 Retrieved December 25 2019 via newspapers com a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 88 St Luke s New Hospital Plans Offered in Competition by Ten Architects Varying Designs for the Million Dollar Structure Efforts to Conform to the Cathedral Plans the Selection Not to Be Made for Several Weeks The New York Times August 17 1892 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Bacon Mardges 1986 Ernest Flagg Beaux arts Architect and Urban Reformer American monograph series Architectural History Foundation p 63 ISBN 978 0 262 02222 4 Retrieved December 25 2019 New St Luke s Hospital Brooklyn Daily Eagle May 7 1893 p 2 Retrieved December 25 2019 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com Cornerstone Of St Luke s Laid On The Morningside Site By Bishop Potter The New York Times May 7 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 The Hospital Property What Real Estate Men Say Of The St Luke s Sale The New York Times June 2 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 3 a b c d e f Dolkart 1998 pp 90 91 Dolkart 1998 p 93 a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 94 Union Club May Move Part of St Luke s Hospital Site Selected The New York Times May 22 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 New St Luke s Is Nearly Ready No Patients to be Received at the Old Hospital After Dec 31 The New York Times December 16 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 a b St Luke s Partly Moved Forty Patients Transferred to Morningside Heights The New York Times January 25 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 4 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 5 False Fire Alarms Arouse Wall Street Broad Street Brokers and Luncheon Crowds Scattered The New York Times November 6 1903 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k Dolkart 1998 p 96 Dolkart 1998 p 95 a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 6 The New Wing at St Luke s Hospital Plant Pavilion a Valuable Addition to the Resources and Usefulness of the Institution The New York Times October 21 1906 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 1 000 000 to Red Cross St Luke s Hospital to Get Equal Share In Scrymser Estate The New York Times November 12 1918 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 2002 p 7 St Luke s Hospital Dedicates Addition The New York Times October 19 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 101 Sullivan Ronald May 24 1978 Roosevelt and St Luke s Hospitals Announce Plan to Merge Services The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 24 2019 Hartocollis Anemona July 16 2013 2 Hospital Networks Agree to Merge Raising Specter of Costlier Care The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 6 2018 Retrieved February 7 2020 Matloff Judith February 3 2002 Neighborhood Report Morningside Heights Hospital Pledges to Protect Buildings It Once Planned to Cast Aside The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Continuum Mount Sinai complete merger in N Y Modern Healthcare September 30 2013 Retrieved February 7 2020 Dunlap David W December 4 2015 Mount Sinai Sheds Roosevelt Name as Hospital Moves On The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 24 2019 a b c d e Laterman Kaya December 2 2016 St Luke s Hospital Buildings Convert to Apartments The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 24 2019 Weekly List 20190524 U S National Park Service May 24 2019 Retrieved June 2 2019 GmbH finanzen net Mount Sinai St Luke s Renamed Mount Sinai Morningside New Name Clarifies the Key Role the Hospital Plays in the Mount Sinai Health System Markets Insider markets businessinsider com Retrieved February 7 2020 Mount Sinai Hospital to Drop St Luke s Name www ny1 com Retrieved February 7 2020 Mount Sinai St Luke s Renamed Mount Sinai Morningside Mount Sinai New York Mount Sinai Health System Retrieved February 7 2020 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 89 a b c Plans for a New St Luke s Ground to Be Broken for a Well Equipped Hospital Architect Flagg Explains the Ar Rangement of the Buildings to the Committee Gift of a Con Valescent Home at Hastings on the Hudson The New York Times January 31 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Flagg 1893 p 18 a b c d Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 403 a b c d e Dolkart 1998 p 92 Flagg 1893 p 23 a b c d Flagg 1893 p 19 Dunlap David W 2004 From Abyssinian to Zion A Guide to Manhattan s Houses of Worship New York Columbia University Press p 223 ISBN 0 231 12543 7 New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Dolkart Andrew S Postal Matthew A 2009 Postal Matthew A ed Guide to New York City Landmarks 4th ed New York John Wiley amp Sons p 73 ISBN 978 0 470 28963 1 Flagg 1893 p 22 St Luke s Hospital Chapel To be Consecrated Next Saturday by Bishop Potter The New York Times October 14 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Massachusetts Medical Society New England Surgical Society 1911 The New England Journal of Medicine Massachusetts Medical Society p 659 Retrieved December 24 2019 A NEW WING OF ST LUKE S OPENED The Norrie Pavilion of the Hospital Receives Patients The New York Times March 17 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 25 2019 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Doremus Sarah Platt Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton a b c St Luke s Roosevelt Hospital Center Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2007 History of the Department Archived from the original on July 25 2010 Retrieved March 18 2010 Dolkart 1998 p 100 Anne Ayres Biography InfoPlease Retrieved February 7 2020 Alumnae Association of the St Luke s Hospital School of Nursing Historical Review www slhson org Archived from the original on September 3 2016 Retrieved February 7 2020 St Luke s Hospital New York N Y School of Nursing Records 1938 2016 Icahn School of Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Archived from the original on August 1 2019 Retrieved February 7 2020 Lyle Col Henry H M MD Collection of World War I Photographs and Documents 1916 1943 Icahn School of Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Archived from the original on August 1 2019 Retrieved February 7 2020 Waggoner Walter H August 27 1980 Dr Hugh F Fitzpatrick 61 Dies A Leader in Open Heart Surgery Served in Navy During War The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 7 2020 Dr Doris L Wethers led breakthroughs in sickle cell anemia amsterdamnews com February 21 2019 Retrieved February 10 2020 J532 NY State Senate February 22 2019 Retrieved February 10 2020 Van Itallie Theodore B Hashim Sami A Crampton Richard S Field Mavis C Cozanitis Despina A 1961 Enteric Sequestration of Bile Acids in Management of Patients With Primary Biliary Cirrhosis Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association 72 97 109 ISSN 0065 7778 PMC 2249162 PMID 13779997 Robert E Zickel s research works Saint Luke s Hospital NY USA New York City and other places ResearchGate Retrieved February 7 2020 Bertles John F Milner Paul F A August 1 1968 Irreversibly sickled erythrocytes a consequence of the heterogeneous distribution of hemoglobin types in sickle cell anemia The Journal of Clinical Investigation 47 8 1731 41 doi 10 1172 JCI105863 PMC 297333 PMID 5666109 Neuwirth Robert S May 1 1978 A new technique for and additional experience with hysteroscopic resection of submucous fibroids American Journal of Obstetrics amp Gynecology 131 1 91 94 doi 10 1016 0002 9378 78 90481 7 ISSN 0002 9378 PMID 645789 Heymsfield Steven February 1 2020 Theodore B Van Itallie Doctor of Medicine 1919 2019 The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 111 2 239 doi 10 1093 ajcn nqz266 ISSN 0002 9165 PMID 31868200 Test Your Cancer IQ Medscape Archived from the original on December 4 2015 Retrieved February 7 2020 Infectious Diseases History Icahn School of Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Archived from the original on August 1 2019 Retrieved February 7 2020 Information Reed Business May 21 1987 New Scientist Reed Business Information a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Sources Edit Dolkart Andrew S 1998 Morningside Heights A History of its Architecture and Development New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 07850 4 OCLC 37843816 Flagg Ernest 1893 History of St Luke s Hospital with a Description of the New Buildings Wynkoop amp Hallenbeck printers Retrieved December 24 2019 Plant and Scrymser Pavilions for Private Patients Saint Luke s Hospital PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission June 18 2002 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Gregory Massengale John Montague 1983 New York 1900 Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890 1915 New York Rizzoli ISBN 0 8478 0511 5 OCLC 9829395 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Sinai Morningside Mount Sinai Morningside Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mount Sinai Morningside amp oldid 1121238876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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