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NYU Langone Medical Center

(Non-profit)  
Healthcare - Health Services
10,000 - 25,000 employees  |  
Overview
Located in the heart of New York City, NYU Langone Medical Center is one of the nation's premier centers of excellence in health care, biomedical research, and medical education.

Legacy of Innovation

The origins of the Langone Medical Center date back more than a century and a half to the founding of NYU School of Medicine in 1841. Since those days, NYU physicians and researchers have made countless contributions to the practice and science of health care, from the establishment of the first outpatient clinic in the U.S. just after the Civil War, to the creation of the first department of rehabilitation medicine in the 1940s, to Dr. Baruf Benacerraf's Nobel prize-winning studies of the genetics of the immune system in the 1960s.

That legacy of innovation continues today with state-of-the-art clinical programs in virtually every medical specialty and subspecialty, including aging and dementia; arthritis and rheumatology; breast, skin, and prostate cancer; child mental health; ear, nose and throat disorders; epilepsy; kidney and liver transplantation; minimally invasive cardiovascular surgery; neurology and neurosurgery; reconstructive and plastic surgery; stroke; and weightloss surgery, among other areas.

As an integral part of an academic medical center, NYU's clinical services are continually informed and enhanced by hundreds of ongoing basic and clinical research projects. Laying the foundation for further advances in health care, NYU has opened the Joan and Joel Smilow Research Center, part of a major initiative in translational research that promises to speed the transfer of laboratory discoveries to the patient's bedside.

Our Family

Today, the Medical Center consists of NYU School of Medicine and the three hospitals of NYU Hospitals Center, including Tisch Hospital, a 726-bed acute-care general hospital, Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, the first and largest facility of its kind, and NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, a leader in musculoskeletal care.

The Medical Center is also home to the NYU Cancer Institute, one of 41 National Institutes of Health (NIH)-designated comprehensive cancer centers; the NYU Center for AIDS Research, one of only 20 centers funded by the NIH to promote interdisciplinary studies of HIV/AIDS; and the NYU Child Study Center, which is dedicated to advancing the field of child mental health through evidence-based practice, science, and education. Other NYU Centers & Institutes.

Our Friends

The strengths of NYU Medical Center extend far beyond the walls of the Hospitals Center and the School of Medicine. The Medical Center is also closely allied with the storied Bellevue Hospital Center and the Department of Veterans Affairs New York Harbor Health Care System, forming a "biomedical corridor" that stretches from 17th Street to 36th Street along First Avenue on Manhattan's East Side. Only slightly farther afield, the Medical Center has close ties to various health-related components of New York University's Washington Square Campus, including the Center for Neural Science, the College of Dentistry, the College of Nursing, Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, and the Courant Institute of Mathematics - creating an assemblage of clinicians, scientists, educators, and policy experts with few peers in the U.S. or abroad.

Befitting its location in the most diverse city in the world, NYU Medical Center maintains extensive programs in urban and global health, immigrant health, and health disparities research, attracting investigators, clinicians, teachers, students, and patients from all over the globe.
Benefits
NYU Langone Medical Center provides its staff with far more than just a place to work. Rather, we are an institution you can be proud of, an institution where you’ll feel good about devoting your time and your talents. And just as our employees invest so much in us, we invest in our employees. We’re pleased to have one of the most competitive compensation packages not only among New York’s hospitals and healthcare institutions, but within the corporate sector as well. We begin with exceptional medical, dental, and drug coverage. We enhance this basic coverage with comprehensive wellness programs, and supplement those with retirement investment and benefits plans, and generous paid time off allowances. Add to that a very attractive tuition program, and you’ll see just some of the ways that NYU Medical Center demonstrates our commitment to our employees.
Career Opportunities
Ninth Annual Child Advocacy Award Dinner Raises More Than $6.5 Million to Battle Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders

Stanley and Fiona Druckenmiller Honored for Their Commitment to Children Academy Award-Nominated Director Nathaniel Kahn Debuts Film At Dinner

NEW YORK, December 5, 2006 – The NYU Child Study Center hosted its Ninth Annual Child Advocacy Award Dinner on Monday, December 4, 2006 at Cipriani 42nd Street honoring philanthropists Stanley and Fiona Druckenmiller for their deep commitment to organizations and programs that foster the success and well-being of New York’s children. Chaired by Goldman Sachs President and COO Gary Cohn and his wife Lisa Pevaroff-Cohn, this year’s dinner raised more than $6.5 million to support the Child Study Center’s work to improve the research necessary to advance the prevention, identification, and treatment of mental health disorders in children and adolescents.

Childhood: Lost and Found, a short film produced exclusively for the Child Study Center by Nathaniel Kahn, Academy Award-nominated director of My Architect (2004), premiered at the gala. The film featured a series of short vignettes with patients and families treated at the NYU Child Study Center. It tells the emotional story of children and families impacted by autism, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depression, selective mutism, dyslexia, bipolar disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder and how they have found a path to wellness through the NYU Child Study Center.

"When Dr. Koplewicz and the board started building the Child Study Center, donors seemed hesitant to contribute for fear that their children would be labeled as having a mental health disorder," said dinner co-chair Gary Cohn. "Now, just a few years later – and I believe as a result of the Center’s visibility and public awareness programs – we are breaking past records and attracting astute donors who are impressed with the Center’s track record and see a real need for meaningful research and quality treatment to help give children back their childhood."

Attended by 600 guests, the $6.5 million raised to support the Center’s work represents a 63 percent increase from funds raised at the 2005 gala.

Founder and director Harold S. Koplewicz cautioned, "Despite all our success, the stigma of mental illness remains all too prevalent. Our dream is the day when mental health is thought of as simply another part of one’s physical health. We are extraordinarily lucky to have donors who are passionate about fighting childhood mental disorders – and are proud to do so."

Fiona and Stanley Druckenmiller join a distinguished group of past recipients of the Child Advocacy Award. Past honorees include: Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg; then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton; Mayor Rudolph Giuliani; Tipper Gore; Governor George E. Pataki; Whoopi Goldberg; then Senator Jon S. Corzine and Joanne Corzine; Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D.; Lawrence Summers, President of Harvard University; Leonard N. Stern; and Bob and Suzanne Wright, co-founders of Autism Speaks.

In addition to raising funds for the Center, the gala increases awareness of the devastating effects of childhood mental disorders and demonstrates that the movement to battle these disorders and reduce stigma surrounding the issue is gaining ground.

Attendees included Ellen Barkin; Stephanie Seymour and Peter Brant; Jimmy and Jane Buffett; Governor Jon S. Corzine; Erica Jong; Dr. Joel Kassimir; Kenneth and Elaine Langone; Cynthia McFadden; Jamie Niven; Michael Nouri; Lisa Perry; Lloyd and Laura Blankfein; Faith Popcorn; Nathaniel Kahn; Oscar-nominated director of My Architect; Dr. Harold S. Koplewicz and Linda Sirow; and members of the NYU Child Study Center’s Board of Directors including Board Chair Brooke Garber Neidich and Daniel Neidich; Linda Carter, Ph.D., and Arthur Carter; Elizabeth and Michael Fascitelli; Phyllis Green and Randolph Cowen; Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff; Lori and George Hall; Richard and Marcia Mishaan; Ann Tenenbaum; Anne Welsh McNulty; Linda and Richard Schaps; Klara and Larry Silverstein; Robert C. Smith; Michael Recanati and Ira Statfeld; Alice Tisch; and Claude Wasserstein.

A live auction conducted by Sotheby’s Jamie Niven raised $247,000 and consisted of a Z100 Jingle Ball concert package; a "Cheeseburger in Paradise" Jimmy Buffett concert package; an exclusive chartered evening on a 115-foot Benetti Yacht was auctioned three times; a sports package with premium seats to eight New York professional sports events; and a movie package with a walk-on role in a Barry Levinson film. In addition, Mr. Niven raised 31 contributions for a research fund totaling $490,000. The table centerpieces were designed and donated by artist Richard Tuttle, furthering his vision of art crossing over into life.

High-resolution photos for the media will be available at: http://www.aboutourkids.org/makeadif/child_advocacy_dinner/index.html

NYU Child Study Center – Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
The NYU Child Study Center is dedicated to increasing the awareness of child mental health issues and improving the research necessary to advance the prevention, identification and treatment of mental illness in children and adolescents on a national scale. The Center offers expert psychiatric services for children and families with emphasis on early diagnosis and intervention. The Center's mission is to bridge the gap between science and practice, integrating the finest research with patient care and state-of-the-art training, utilizing the resources of the New York University School of Medicine. The NYU Child Study Center offers a variety of mental health services for children, adolescents, young adults and their families. Child and Family Associates is the clinical arm of the NYU Child Study Center and the point of entry for all clinical programs. Its goal is to bring together research-supported evaluations and treatments with an individualized and family-centered approach. The Child Study Center was founded in 1997 and established as the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry within the NYU School of Medicine in 2006.
Contact
NYU Langone Medical Center
Human Resources - Recruitment & Staffing Services
One Park Avenue, 16th Floor
New York, NY 10016
Fax: (212) 263-4570