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Tag: mount sinai south nassau

  • Long Island hospitals earn top maternity care rankings | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • Four hospitals named “High Performing” in national .

    • Rankings reflect outcomes such as C-section rates and newborn complications.

    • Factors also include breast-milk support practices and WHO ‘birthing-friendly’ standards.

    Four of the hospitals ranked “High Performing in National Maternity Care” this year by are based on Long Island.

    They include Hospital in Oceanside and NYU Langone Hospital— Long Island in Mineola, as well as two in the system: in New Hyde Park and South Shore University Hospital in Bay Shore.

    The ranking is “a recognition of the labor and teamwork that takes place every day at Mount Sinai South Nassau,” Dr. Alan Garely, who chairs obstetrics and gynecology at the hospital, said in a news release. The hospital – more than 1,867 babies were born there so far this year – was recognized with the “High Performing” designation for the fourth consecutive year.

    “Our physicians, nurses, residents and support staff are committed to providing the best outcomes for mothers and their newborns,” Garely said.

    The rankings assess hospitals that deliver high-quality care for uncomplicated pregnancies, using measures such as C-section and severe newborn complication rates, vaginal birth after cesarean delivery rates, episiotomy rates, breast-milk–support practices, World Organization “birthing-friendly” criteria and tracking of outcome disparities. For the most recent list, 495 hospitals earned a “High Performing” designation for maternity care.

    Dr. Kevin Holcomb, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at and Long Island Jewish Medical Center, pointed out that maternity care is “one of life’s most transformative moments.

    “Our commitment goes beyond medical treatment – we strive to provide a holistic, patient-centered experience that supports mothers through every stage of their pregnancy and childbirth journey,” Holcomb said.

    has reduced our Caesarean section rate significantly in the past year,” Dr. Erika Banks, the hospital’s chair of obstetrics and gynecology, said in a written statement.

    “Importantly our primary [NTSV, or nulliparous, term, singleton, vertex] Caesarean rate is below 30 percent,” she said, “qualifying us for our designation as the only perinatal Center of Excellence on Long Island by the Joint Commission since 2019. This designation recognizes excellence in caring for mothers and babies before and after birth.”

    Other organizations on Long Island that have been recognized with Joint Commission perinatal care certification include Mount Sinai South Nassau, according to the hospital’s website; LIJ has been recognized with an Advanced Certification in Perinatal Care, according to the hospital.

    The full U.S. News and World Report list is available here.


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    Adina Genn

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  • Mount Sinai South Nassau gala raises $1M | Long Island Business News

    Mount Sinai South Nassau gala raises $1M | Long Island Business News

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    Mike Lucchesi, Assemblyman Brian Curran, Dawn Keilly, Robert Boccio, Congressman Anthony D’Esposito, Tony Cancellieri, Dr. Adhi Sharma, Hempstead Town Councilwoman Laura Ryder, Dr. Matthew Rifkin

    Mount Sinai South Nassau’s Sept. 23 gala raised more than $1 million, and brought in more than 400 supporters, the health system said on Thursday.  The event was held at The Lanin, the newly renovated and reopened venue at Eisenhower Park.

    The hospital said it was its most successful fundraiser in its almost 100-year history.  The funds raised will support the hospital and its comprehensive stroke program.

    This year’s honoree was Anthony Cancellieri, co-chair of Mount Sinai South Nassau’s board of directors and a longtime Rockville Centre resident and civic leader.

    The hospital also honored Dr.  Matthew Rifkin, chair of the Department of Radiology, and Dawn Keiley, senior director of nursing, with the hospital’s Mary Pearson and Cupola awards, respectively.

    A portion of the proceeds raised will offset the hospital’s investment in a $10 million upgrade of its comprehensive stroke program, which is designed to provide enhanced, round-the-clock coverage for interventional treatment of complex and life-threatening vascular diseases, including stroke and aneurysm.

    “We are very grateful to our honorees, the soiree co-chairs, our major sponsors, and all who attended and helped us reach our goal,” Dr. Adhi Sharma, president of Mount Sinai South Nassau, said in a statement. “The funds will be well spent to help improve care in our region.”

    Major sponsors included the Mount Sinai Health System, Feil Family Foundation, Shalom and Iris Maidenbaum and Maidenbaum Property Tax Reduction Group, Terri and Steve Gold, Mount Sinai South Nassau medical staff, NAPA, Central Orthopedic Group, B2K Development, MaryLou and Anthony Cancellieri, Mike and Eileen Sapraicone and Flagstar Bank.

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    Adina Genn

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  • Hospital gets $5M donation | Long Island Business News

    Hospital gets $5M donation | Long Island Business News

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    Oceanside-based Mount Sinai South Nassau received a $5 million gift to name the new patient care pavilion at the hospital.

    The gift, from The Louis Feil Charitable Lead Annuity Trust, is the single largest donation in the hospital’s history. The new four-story, 100,000-square-foot “Feil Family Pavilion” will open in the spring of 2024. It will double the size of the current Emergency Department, increase the critical and intensive care inpatient capacity to 40 beds, and add nine new operating rooms.

    “Mount Sinai South Nassau is our local hospital, and we are grateful for the expert care it provides to our communities on the South Shore,” Jeffrey J. Feil, CEO of the Feil Organization and a lRockville Centre resident, said in a statement. “We are so fortunate to have an outstanding medical center right in our backyard. The Feil family is honored to support the growth of Mount Sinai South Nassau.”

    Feil and his family, including his parents, the late Gertrude and Louis, have been longtime supporters of the hospital. With their latest gift, the family has donated a total of $17 million to benefit the hospital and the patients it serves.

    “This generous gift by the Feil family will have a direct impact on improving patient care on the South Shore. We are deeply thankful for their generosity and support,” Dr. Adhi Sharma, president of Mount Sinai South Nassau, said in a statement. “It will be the hospital’s distinct honor to name the new patient care tower in honor and recognition of the Feil Family and their longstanding commitment to Mount Sinai South Nassau.”

    “Their support and commitment has been vital to the growth of our emergency services and cancer care program as well as the hospital’s tradition of excellence in the delivery of advanced care services,” Dr. Sharma added.

    “The ultimate beneficiary of the Feil family’s generosity is our South Shore community that turns to Mount Sinai South Nassau for compassionate, quality health care,” Tony Cancellieri, co-chair of the hospital’s board of directors. “On behalf of the Hospital’s Board of Directors, we are grateful to our dear friends Jeffrey and Lee Feil and their entire family and are honored to name the pavilion as a permanent expression of gratitude for this gift and the ongoing support of the Feil family.”

    The family’s previous generosity includes a total of $2 million in 2019 and $1.5 million in 2018 to help centralize the hospital’s cancer care services and a $3 million donation to Mount Sinai South Nassau in the spring of 2011 that supported the continued growth and expansion of the Gertrude & Louis Feil Cancer Center.

    The Feil gift is the second major gift connected with the new four-story patient building currently under construction. Last year, the hospital’s immediate past chair of the board, Joseph Fennessy, made a major gift to the hospital to name the pedestrian entrance to the new Emergency Department after the Fennessy family.

    Additional naming opportunities remain within the new pavilion, including nursing stations, lobby areas, and surgical suites.

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    Adina Genn

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  • Hospital unveils new trauma unit and emergency treatment rooms | Long Island Business News

    Hospital unveils new trauma unit and emergency treatment rooms | Long Island Business News

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    In Oceanside, Mount Sinai South Nassau has unveiled its new trauma unit along with eight patient treatment rooms in its emergency department. This marks the completion of the second phase of the hospital’s $50 million, five-phase expansion project.

    The project began in 2016, and once fully completed, it will nearly double the size of the hospital’s emergency department. It will also increase capacity from 65,000 annual emergency patient visits to an estimated 80,000, according to Mount Sinai South Nassau.

    “The new, larger trauma unit and emergency treatment area will help us provide even better, more advanced treatment to our patients in more comfortable surroundings,” Dr. Adhi Sharma,  president of Mount Sinai South Nassau. “The new trauma unit includes advanced equipment to diagnose and treat the most critically ill patients who come to our Emergency Department.”

    The new trauma unit consists of three spacious trauma care bays to facilitate the flow of trauma team members as they care for patients with life-threatening injuries. Each trauma bay is equipped with cutting-edge technologies, including imaging systems that provide unobstructed viewing for intubations, difficult and emergent airway management, and bronchoscopy procedures. The unit can surge to six treatment areas in the event of a mass casualty incident.

    The new patient care unit, referred to as “ED Central,” features eight patient treatment rooms, including two for pediatric patients, as well as one negative pressure room to treat patients with contagious, airborne disease.

    “The entire South Shore of Nassau County depends upon our emergency department during a medical crisis and these new units will help fulfill our mission to provide the best, most modern level of emergency care,” Anthony Cancellieri, co-chair of the Mount Sinai South Nassau board of directors, said in a statement. “This is yet another milestone in our $400 million construction campaign.”

    Approximately $13 million of the $50 million cost of the emergency department renovation is being funded by private donations and fundraising efforts, according to the hospital.

    “This is another significant step in our mission and vision to remain the region’s leading provider of emergency medical care, 24-hours-a-day, 365 days a year,” Dr. Jay Itzkowitz, chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine, said in a statement. “When the expansion is completed, our neighboring communities will have an Emergency Department and a Trauma Center that will provide a more streamlined and efficient flow of care, improving outcomes and patient experience.”

    Phase 1 of the expansion was completed in the first quarter of 2017 with the opening a 16-bed, $4.5 million extension to the ED that has been designed to reduce wait times, while maintaining service capacity as other parts of the department are renovated and expanded, according to the hospital.  The extension features a floor design that facilitates communication between patients and companions and emergency department staff.  The unit’s station faces the semi-private treatment bays that allows doctors and nurses clear lines of sight.  The treatment bays are equipped with monitored beds, cardiac monitors, bedside laboratory testing capability and are furnished with high-definition, flat-screen TVs.  Additional features of the extension include a dedicated waiting area for families and loved ones, restrooms and access to free Wi-Fi.

    Expansion plans call for a centralized nursing station for direct oversight of patient rooms, bedside triage, an adjoining radiology area, expanded decontamination treatment facility, dedicated observation area for behavioral health and an enlarged waiting area.

    Mount Sinai South Nassau is designated a Level II Trauma Center by the American College of Surgeons. The verification is designated to hospitals that are committed to ensure that patients with severe injuries receive priority access to its full array of trauma care resources, including in-house coverage for trauma surgery and anesthesia. The hospital’s trauma team consists of a multidisciplinary group of specially trained health care experts that includes specialists in emergency medicine, trauma surgery, orthopedics, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, and anesthesiology, as well as emergency certified nurses, social workers, and rehabilitation therapists.

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    Adina Genn

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  • Long Islanders are struggling to find mental health services: Poll | Long Island Business News

    Long Islanders are struggling to find mental health services: Poll | Long Island Business News

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    If you are struggling to access mental health services on Long Island, you’re not alone. Even those with health insurance face challenges when trying to access care.

    That’s according to the findings in the latest Mount Sinai South Nassau “Truth in Medicine” poll, released Tuesday.

    “We have a crisis on Long Island when it comes to the lack of mental health services,” Dr. Adhi Sharma, president of Mount Sinai South Nassau, said in a statement about the findings.

    Sponsored by Bethpage Credit Union, the poll was conducted between July 24 and July 28 via landlines and cell phones with 600 Long Islanders. The findings have a margin of era of plus or minus 3.9%.

    People seek mental health services for a host of reasons. But since the pandemic, anxiety, depression, social isolation and fear of contracting COVID-19 were the most prevalent, according to the poll.

    Among those surveyed, 92% have health insurance. Still, of those seeking care, 36% said that getting the help they wanted or needed was “challenging” mostly because of difficulty scheduling capacity or lack of coverage by their health insurers. Additional challenges include proximity of providers and affordability.

    And institutions – including government, municipalities and schools – could do more to increase the scope of mental health services in the region, survey respondents said. Of those surveyed, 46% said government does not do enough to help, while 32% said government does.

    “The poll results strongly indicate that providers are working at or beyond capacity,” Sharma said. “This calls for an aggressive expansion of mental health screening, prevention and intervention services to meet the present and future demand for them.”

    Since the pandemic, about 84% of mental health providers have seen an increase in demand for treatment of anxiety, compared with 74% a year ago, while 72% of providers have seen an increase in demand for treatment of depression, compared with 60% in 2020.

    School officials have reported spikes in demand for mental health services among students, including elementary and middle-schoolers, according to Mount Sinai South Nassau. Meanwhile, some psychiatrists and psychologists report high demand for services but difficulty finding adequate staff to meet demand.

    Some local school leaders have called on government officials to do more to address mental health needs in the schools and local communities.

    In the event of a mental health emergency, 64% of respondents and 80% of respondents with children said they know where to find services, while 20% disagreed, and 17% were unsure.

    Mount Sinai South Nassau has a 36-bed inpatient mental health unit and offers behavioral health services at its Mental Health Counseling Center in Baldwin, as well as its Center for Primary and Behavioral Healthcare in Hempstead.

    And across Long Island, health systems  do offer mental health services, including NYU Langone Hospital Long Island, Stony Brook Medicine, Catholic Health and Northwell Health, which now features several pediatric behavioral health urgent care centers. Other organizations that provide mental health services or access to support include North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center as well as Family & Children’s Association and Family Service League, among others.

    Meanwhile, the recent Truth in Medicine Poll found a mixed response as to whether the region’s mental health services are adequate. In the survey, 36% said they are satisfactory, 29% said they are not and 35% were unsure. About 50% who used mental health services said they suffice.

    “The stressors of modern life are challenging for most of us and have been made that much harder by the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and the hardship and grief that it has caused,” Dr. Aaron Glatt, chair of the Department of Medicine and Chief of Infectious Diseases at Mount Sinai South Nassau, said in the statement.

    “There are actions that we can take to live confidently and safely during the pandemic. If you or someone you love is struggling emotionally and that is interfering with daily life, don’t wait to get help,” Glatt said.

    A full 89% of respondents and 97% of those who have used mental health services since the start of the pandemic say mental healthcare should be a priority for hospitals, just as cancer and heart health are.

    While the rate of children and teenagers receiving therapy for mental health issues related to stress, anxiety, bullying, or substance abuse has increased, it was exacerbated by COVID-19. In the past year, 15% with young children and 20% with a child under 12 sought professional help for a child’s mental health, the poll found.

    Recognizing that many children with psychiatric disorders remain unidentified and untreated, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recently issued a recommendation calling for anxiety screening of asymptomatic children ages eight to 18 who have not been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder and screening of children ages 12 to 18 for major depressive disorder.

    Of those who accessed mental health care for a child, 25% say it was in person, 21% say they used telemedicine, and 43% used both. Among those who used telemedicine, most rate it as only fair. Those who did not use telemedicine expressed little interest in doing so in the future.

    “The key to knowing when to seek out help is to determine how the symptoms are affecting overall functioning,” Dr. Stanley Reddy, chair of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health at Mount Sinai South Nassau said in a statement. “Marked decreases in functioning at work, school, and home should be evaluated by a professional promptly before it becomes an emergency.”

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    Adina Genn

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