Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Afya Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization based in Yonkers, New York. It was founded in 2007 by Danielle Butin, MPH, OTR after a trip to Tanzania , where she encountered the dire circumstances and severely limited medical resources of their medical clinics.
(The Foundation was later renamed the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America and is now the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation.) [13] [11] It was incorporated on December 17, 1965. [1] The Foundation serves millions of patients diagnosed [14] with IBD in the U.S., through its national headquarters in NYC, and more than 30 chapters nationwide. [15]
Pages in category "Medical and health organizations based in New York (state)" The following 102 pages are in this category, out of 102 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In 1933, the AMA's general medical guide the Standard Classified Nomenclature of Disease, (referred to as the Standard), was released. [45] Along with the New York Academy of Medicine, the APA provided the psychiatric nomenclature subsection. [46] A number of revisions were produced, with the last in 1961. [47]
In 1983, Krim, Joseph Sonnabend, Michael Callen, and several others launched the New York-based AIDS Medical Foundation. In Los Angeles, Michael S. Gottlieb and amfAR Founding National Chairman Elizabeth Taylor spearheaded the creation of the National AIDS Research Foundation with a $250,000 contribution from Rock Hudson shortly before his AIDS ...
From 2012 to 2014, AMHF responded to a need, noted by Paul Gionfriddo, [2] for the screening of several thousand youth in a county-wide catchment area. The organization collaborated with Astor Services for Children & Families to identify approximately 15 at-risk individuals who would receive a palliative prevention treatment.
Weill Cornell Medical Center (/ w aɪ l /; previously known as New York Hospital, [3] Old New York Hospital, and City Hospital) is a research hospital in New York City. It is the teaching hospital for Cornell University's medical school and is part of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. The hospital was founded in 1771 with a charter from George III.
The Medical Union published two volumes in New York City from January, 1873, with Egbert Guernsey as the editor. In the same period, the New York Journal of Homœopathy was established by the New York Homeopathic Medical College, edited by William Tod Helmuth and T. F. Allen as editors of volume one, and Dr. Samuel A. Jones as the general editor of volume two.