NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital

Coordinates: 40°42′37″N 74°0′18″W / 40.71028°N 74.00500°W / 40.71028; -74.00500
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Lower Manhattan Hospital
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NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital
NewYork–Presbyterian Healthcare System
2011
Map
Geography
Location170 William St. New York, NY 10038,
NewYork–Presbyterian)
Links
Websitenyp.org/lowermanhattan
ListsHospitals in New York State
Other linksHospitals in Manhattan

NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital is a

nonprofit, acute care, teaching hospital in New York City and is the only hospital in Lower Manhattan south of Greenwich Village. It is part of the NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System and one of the main campuses of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
.

The Lower Manhattan Hospital operates 170 beds and offers a full range of

tourist attractions
.

History

1868 announcement of The Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary.
The hospital in 1893

The name and location of the hospital have gone through several changes since

Elizabeth Blackwell founded the New York Dispensary for Poor Women and Children in 1853. In 1857 she opened the hospital under the name of New York Infirmary for Indigent Women and Children[1] at East 7th Street near the present day Tompkins Square Park. As the hospital required more space it moved in 1858 to Stuyvesant Square.[2] One of the hospital's administrators, Anne Daniel, who headed the hospital from about 1894 to 1944[3] wrote a history of the hospital in the 1930s, entitled ′A cautious experiment.′ The history of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children and the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary, which was serialized in the Medical Woman’s Journal (46) between May 1939 and December 1939.[4]
Finally in 1981, merging with the Beekman Downtown Hospital, it relocated to its present site in Lower Manhattan under the name of New York Infirmary-Beekman Downtown Hospital.

In 1929 Narcissa Cox Vanderlip became the president of the hospital, which position she held for thirty-seven years.[5][6]

In 1991, the hospital was renamed New York Downtown Hospital. In 1997, after three years of affiliation with

NYU Medical Center ceased and the hospital reverted to the name New York Downtown Hospital. Following a full merger in 2013 with NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, it was renamed NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital.[7]

Staff residence building

In 2005 the hospital discharged nearly 12,000 inpatients. The hospital, an affiliate of

Weill Cornell Medical College, provides approximately 100,000 outpatient visits and 6,000 surgical procedures annually. In addition, as Lower Manhattan’s only emergency department, the hospital treats 32,000 patients annually in its emergency department and provides more than 5,000 ambulance
transports.

In 2006 the hospital introduced a new

September 11, 2001, when the hospital treated about 1,500 victims. Before the construction of the new facility, the hospital's small decontamination unit could handle about 20 patients an hour. The new unit can treat between 500 and 1,000 patients an hour. The design is based on the decontamination unit at Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem
.

In May 2018, a commemorative plaque was unveiled at the former location of the New York Infirmary for Indigent Women and Children.[8][9]

References

External links