| School & Medical Center | |
|---|---|
| Alumni Office | x53498 |
| Bard Hall | |
| Guard’s Desk | x*87002 |
| Housekeeper | x*87016 |
| Housing Office | x*87000 |
| P&S Club Office | x*87025 |
| Black Building Guard | x58103 |
| Blood Bank | x52673 |
| Bookstore | 923-2149 |
| Center for Student Wellness | 304-5564 |
| Chaplain | x55817 |
| Community Health Council | >. x56654 |
| Cont. Medical Education | 781-5990 |
| Dean of Student Affairs | x53806 |
| Facilities | x53753 |
| Financial Aid | x54100 |
| Health Service | x5-3400 |
| HHSC Guard | x58104 |
| Information | x5-2500 |
| Library (CUMC) | x53692 |
| Lost & Found (P&S) | x58100 |
| Lost & Found (PH) | x52222 |
| Mail Room | x53497 |
| Milbank Library | x52760 |
| Ombuds Office | 304-7026 |
| Page System (PH-voice call) | x52323 |
| Page System (Beeper) | x55880 |
| Patient Condition Report | x53101 |
| Patient Relations | x55904 |
| P&S Guard Desk | x54095 |
| External Relations | x57131 |
| Rape Crisis | x59060 |
| Public Safety | |
| Columbia University (Security & Escort) | x58100 |
| Presbyterian Hospital | x52222 |
| Shuttle-Harlem/Morningside | x58100 |
| Social Services | x52553 |
| Tennis Reservations (Baker Field) | 942-7100 |
| Volunteers | 52542 |
| Department & Course Offices (Years 1 & 2) | |
| Pathophysiology | x59306 |
| Anatomy | x53451 |
| Clinical Practice | 342-0461 |
| Genetics | x54011 |
| Human Development | x51591 |
| Neural Sciences | 543-5265 |
| Parasitology | 781-6670 |
| Pathology | x58393 |
| Pharmacology | x54197 |
| Physiology | x55798 |
| Psychiatry | 543-5552 |
| Society & Medicine | x54184 |
| Downtown CU Campus | |
| Information | 854-1754 |
| June 2008 | ||
|---|---|---|
| 22 | Sunday | Deadline to have completed USMLE I, Class of 2010. |
| 23-27 | Monday-Friday | Transition week for Class of 2010 (mandatory attendance). Official start of third year for the Class of 2010. |
| 27 | Friday | The Steven Z. Miller Student Clinician’s Ceremony for the Class of 2010 (2nd to 3rd year transition ceremony). |
| 30 | Monday | Class of 2010 reports to Major Clinical Year hospital rotations. Awarding of June degrees. |
| July | ||
| 1 | Tuesday/Monday | Class of 2009 reports to fourth year electives. |
| 4 | Friday | Independence Day Holiday observed for third and fourth year students. |
| August | ||
| 18-22 | Monday – Friday | Orientation for first year students, Class of 2012. |
| 22 | Friday | White Coat Ceremony for first year students, Class of 2012. |
| 25 | Monday | Academic year begins for first and second year students. |
| September | ||
| 1 | Monday | Labor day Holiday for first, second and third year students. |
| 30 | Tuesday | Deadline to have repeated USMLE, Step I, Class of 2010. |
| October | ||
| 15 | Wednesday | Awarding of October degrees. |
| November | ||
| 27 | Thursday | Thanksgiving holiday for third year students. |
| 27-28 | Thursday, Friday | Thanksgiving holiday for first and second year students. |
| 30 | Sunday | USMLE II, CK and CS must be taken by this date, Class of 2009. Passing CK and CS is a requirement for graduation from P&S. |
| December | ||
| 19 | Friday | Last “first semester” exam for first and second year students. |
| 20-January 4 | Saturday-Sunday | Vacation for first, second and third years. |
| January 2009 | ||
| 5 | Monday | Resumption of classes for first and second year students. Resumption of clerkships for third year students. |
| 19 | Monday | Martin Luther King’s Birthday (observed). Holiday for first and second year students. |
| February | ||
| 11 | Wednesday | Awarding of February degrees. |
| 16 | Monday | President’s Day (observed). Holiday for first and second year students. |
| 23 | Monday | Deadline to have re-taken USMLE Step II, CK and CS, Class of 2009 and to have taken Step II for MD/PhD students in Class of 2009. Passing CK and CS is a requirement for graduation from P&S. |
| March | ||
| 2-6 | Monday – Friday | Spring vacation for second year students. |
| 19 | Thursday | NRMP – Match Day |
| 30-April 3 | Monday – Friday | Spring vacation for first year students. |
| May | ||
| 1 | Friday | Last day of classes for second year students. |
| 6 | Wednesday | Last exam for second year students. |
| 13 | Wednesday | Last day of classes for first year students. Dean’s Day for Medical Student Research. |
| 22 | Monday | Last exam for first year students. End of first year. |
| 19 | Tuesday | Class Day, 3pm CUMC Garden. |
| 20 | Wednesday | Columbia University Commencement and Convocation of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. |
| 25 | Monday | Memorial Day holiday for second and third year students. |
| June | ||
| 21 | Sunday | Deadline to have completed USMLE I, Class of 2011. Official end of second year for Class of 2011. |
| 22-26 | Monday – Friday | Transition week for Class of 2011. Official start of third year for Class of 2011. |
| 26 | Friday | Major Clinical Year concludes for Class of 2010. The Steven Z. Miller Student Clinician’s Ceremony for the Class of 2011 (2nd to 3rd year transition ceremony). |
| 29 | Monday | Class of 2011 reports to rotations. |
| 30 | Tuesday | Awarding of June degrees. |
| July | ||
| 1 | Wednesday | Class of 2010 reports to fourth year electives. |
| 3 | Friday | Independence Day holiday observed for third and fourth year students. |
Holidays not specified on this calendar are decided by Course Directors in each course in first and second years, and by Course Directors in each course in each teaching hospital in third and fourth years.
| September 2008 | ||
|---|---|---|
| 2 | Tuesday | First Day of Ramadan |
| 29-Oct. 1 | Tuesday-Wednesday | Rosh Hashanah (begins eve of 9/29) |
| October | ||
| 1 | Wednesday | Eidl Fitr |
| 9 | Thursday | Yom Kippur (begins eve of the 8th) |
| 14 | Tuesday | Sukkot (begins eve of the 13th) |
| December | ||
| 9 | Tuesday | Eid al Adha |
| 25 | Thursday | Christmas |
| April 2009 | ||
| 9 | Thursday | Passover (begins eve of the 8th) |
| 10 | Friday | Good Friday |
| 12 | Sunday | Easter |
| May | ||
| 29 | Friday | Shavuot (begins eve of the 28th) |
| June 2008 | ||
|---|---|---|
| 22 | Sunday | Deadline to have completed USMLE I, Class of 2010. Passing a requirement for graduation from P&S. |
| September | ||
| 30 | Tuesday | Deadline to have repeated USMLE, Step I, Class of 2010. |
| November | ||
| 30 | Sunday | Deadline for USMLE II, CK and CS, Class of 2009 Passing USMLE II CK and CS is required for graduation from P&S. |
| February 2009 | ||
| 23 | Monday | Deadline for USMLE Step II, CK and CS, for MD/PhD students and for students in the class of 2009 who need to repeat Step II. |
Welcome to the Class of 2012. As dean of P&S, I am committed to your happiness and success from the time of your first interview through the celebrations that will accompany your commencement. As you progress through medical school, your reflections on what you are learning from our faculty, your classmates, and the more senior students and residents who mentor you will help us to make the educational experience more relevant and meaningful to your developing career goals. Your reflections as new graduates and alumni will be a legacy to the classes that follow you.
P&S offers a unique medical education by taking advantage of the depth and breadth of research, patient care, and community outreach programs conducted by Columbia University, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, New York State Psychiatric Institute, and our many affiliated partners throughout the city and beyond. The patients who receive their care from our faculty have conditions that span the full spectrum of illness and health. You will learn to examine, diagnose, and treat a diverse group of patients, varying from the most vulnerable populations with no other medical care alternatives to people who could choose to get their care anywhere in the world. Working with our faculty, all will receive world class care here.
During your time at P&S, we will be transforming two floors of the Hammer Building into a new educational facility that will provide more modern classrooms and study space. Work also continues on a new curriculum, one that will set you on a course of lifelong learning. Our nationally regarded advisory deans program and our Glenda Garvey Teaching Academy are two of the many resources that will support your educational experience at P&S.
But perhaps the top feature of our medical school is the students themselves. You are part of a diverse group of extraordinary individuals who share the aspiration of becoming the best you can be. Even as our entire faculty is committed to providing the best possible educational foundation, your fellow students will play an equally important role in inspiring you in the pursuit of your goals. If you take advantage of all that P&S, Columbia, and New York City offer, your time here will be stimulating, productive, and rewarding.
I hope to meet you soon as you start this exciting educational adventure.
With best wishes,
Lee Goldman, M.D.
Executive Vice President for Health and Biomedical Sciences
Dean of the Faculties of Health Sciences and Medicine
Your entry into medical school marks the beginning of a career path that we hope is exciting, inspiring and fulfilling. Millions of people throughout the world are in need of health care, including many in our own neighborhood in Washington Heights-Inwood. The challenges we face to provide universal healthcare, treat those with acute and chronic illness, and develop new technologies and treatments to effectively prevent and treat disease in our global world will become your challenges.
There are superb faculty at P&S to teach you basic science and clinical care. They take pride in our outstanding medical center and participating in your education. Your fellow students, whose interests and accomplishments are impressive like yours, will provide a community for learning, and some will become lifelong friends. You will have opportunities to conduct research with mentors who have made substantial discoveries themselves and learn in an environment that values inquiry and discovery. Many of you will participate in our international health opportunities, or one of our dual degree programs. The international nature of New York City and our community offers numerous opportunities for you to develop as physicians skilled in understanding and treating patients from diverse backgrounds and cultures.
Our goal in the Office of Student Affairs is to foster your development as outstanding physicians and leaders. Each student is assigned an advisory dean who provides mentoring and career counseling by meeting with you individually and in small groups throughout medical school. We also encourage active involvement in P&S activities, including the programs that address student life. The P&S Club offers a variety of activities to meet the interests of our students, including the unique Bard Hall Players theater group, specialty interest groups, service groups, and programs in advocacy. We have an expanded Student Health Service, renovated library and student lounge, and a new teaching academy.
You are entering medicine at a time of unprecedented discovery in research and focus on global health. You are the future of medicine and will make a difference for countless others. We welcome you to P&S.
Lisa A. Mellman, M.D.
Senior Associate Dean for Student Affairs
Email lam3@columbia.edu
I am delighted to welcome you to P&S. Our goal is to prepare you to become an outstanding physician. We have designed a curriculum which will evolve to improve the quality of your education and to help you meet the challenges of the future. My office is available to each of you to help in every way to make your experience at P&S meet all your expectations.
Ronald E. Drusin, M.D.
Interim Senior Associate Dean for Education
Email red3@columbia.edu
It is with pride and enthusiasm that I welcome you to P&S. As a new member of the P&S family, you join a group of talented, diverse and dedicated leaders in the fields of biomedical research, health care policy and medical care. The next few years will be challenging yet exciting, rewarding and memorable. It will be my honor to help you in any way I can to reach your goals. My door is always open.
Hilda Y. Hutcherson, M.D.
Associate Dean for Diversity Affairs
Email hyh1@columbia.edu
One of the most rewarding aspects of being an admissions officer is the opportunity it affords of meeting a large number of unusually able and attractive people. To learn something about their lives, and to have some part in their being admitted to P&S, is a very great privilege. For those of you that I already know, I look forward with enthusiasm to seeing you again when you arrive in the fall. And for all of you, if I or the people in the Admissions Office can be of help in any way, please do not hesitate to drop by.
Welcome to P&S!
Andrew Frantz, M.D.
Associate Dean for Admissions
Home away from home. The next four years will be a time of wonder and challenge probably unsurpassed in your life to date. You will learn about the infinite mysteries of the human organism, its functions and dysfunction, and participate in the medical advances of the new millennium. You will find mentors on the faculty, among the alumni, and make lifelong friends among your classmates. Let the Alumni Office be your touchstone, your home base. Please stop by and meet the members of the Alumni Office.
I look forward to seeing you.
Anke Nolting, Ph.D.
Associate Dean and Executive Director
for Alumni Relations and Development
Email aln1@columbia.edu
| 1767 | King’s College opens a medical school, the first in New York and only the second in the Colonies. |
| 1770 | King’s College awards first M.D. degree in the Colonies. |
| 1776 | The College closes due to the American Revolution. |
| 1784 | King’s reopens as Columbia College. |
| 1791 | Columbia revives the Medical School with Samuel Bard as Dean. |
| 1807 | The College of Physicians and Surgeons founded with a charter from the New York State Board of Regents; Dr. Bard becomes President in 1811. |
| 1813 | P&S moves to Barclay Street near City Hall. |
| 1814 | The Columbia Medical School, after years of decline, is merged into the College of Physicians and Surgeons. |
| 1837 | P&S moves to Crosby Street. |
| 1856 | P&S moves to the corner of Fourth Avenue (now Park Avenue South) and 23rd St. |
| 1860 | P&S severs its relationship with the Board of Regents and forges a nominal connection with Columbia; it still retains its independence. |
| 1884 | William Henry Vanderbilt gives P&S land on 59th Street between Ninth and Tenth Avenues and $300,000 to erect a new building. It is the largest donation to a medical school up to that time. |
| 1886 | Vanderbilt family members give funds to establish the Sloane Hospital for Women and the Vanderbilt Clinic. All three structures are finished in 1887. |
| 1891 | P&S completely merges with Columbia. |
| 1911 | Formal Agreement of Alliance between Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital. |
| 1928 | Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, the world’s first medical center to combine complete facilities for patient care, medical education and research in a single complex, opens in Washington Heights on a site donated by Edward S. Harkness. Joining the Center are Babies Hospital (founded 1887), the Neurological Institute of New York (founded 1909) and the New York State Psychiatric Institute (founded 1896). |
| 1931 | Bard Hall opens. |
| 1933 | Harkness Institute of Ophthalmology opens. |
| 1950 | New York Orthopedic Hospital (est. 1866) moves to the Medical Center. |
| 1965 | Alumni Auditorium dedicated. |
| 1966 | William Black Medical Research Building dedicated. |
| 1976 | Hammer Health Sciences Center, housing the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library as well as classrooms and laboratories, opens. |
| 1989 | Milstein Hospital Building opens. |
| 1996 | First building of the Audubon Research Park opens. |
| 1998 | Russ Berrie Medical Science Pavilion completed. Construction completed on the new New York State Psychiatric Institute. |
| 2001 | 390 Ft. Washington Avenue Residence completed, October. |
| 2003 | Irving Cancer Research Center completed, fall. Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital of NY- Presbyterian’s new bed tower completed, November 2003 and opens its doors. |
| 2005 | Irving Cancer Research Center dedicated. |
| 2006 | Glenda Garvey Teaching Academy inducts its first 13 faculty members. |
| 2007 | P&S Faculty Club renamed in honor of Donald F. Tapley, MD |
| Lee C. Bollinger, J.D. | President of the University |
| Alan Brinkley, Ph.D. | Provost of the University and Dean of the Faculties |
| Lee Goldman, M.D. | Executive Vice President for Health and Biomedical Sciences, Dean of the Faculties of Health Sciences and Medicine |
| David Hirsh, Ph.D. | Executive Vice President for Research |
| Ira Lamster, D.D.S. | Dean, College of Dental Medicine |
| Linda Fried, M.D., M.P.H. | Dean, Mailman School of Public Health |
| Mary Mundinger, Dr. PH , RN | Dean, School of Nursing |
| Lisa Hogarty, M.S. | Chief Operating Officer |
| Joanne Quan, M.A. | Chief Financial Officer |
| Louis Lemieux , M.B.A | Chief Human Resources Officer |
| Robert V. Sideli, M.D. | Chief Information Officer |
| Patricia Sachs Catapano, J.D., M.P.H. | Associate General Counsel |
| Susan S. Stalcup, B.A., CFP | Vice President for Development |
| Ross Frommer, J.D. | Deputy Vice President for Government and Community Affairs |
| Francine Caracappa, M.B.A., CPA | Controller |
| Amador Centeno, M.S. | Associate Vice President for Facilities Management |
| Rosemary Keane, B.A. | Associate Vice President, Chief Communications Officer |
| Diane Lloyd Yaeger, J.D. | Associate Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer |
| Kathleen Crowley, M.P.H. | Associate Vice President, Environmental Health & Safety/Environmental Health and Radiation Safety |
| Karen Pagliaro-Meyer | Associate Vice President for HIPAA Compliance/Privacy Officer |
| Herman Matte, M.A. | Assistant Vice President, Campus Operations |
| Jean Ford Keane, B.A. | Assistant Vice President, Development |
| Robin Rosenbluth, B.A. | Assistant Vice President, Development |
| Ann Viney, B.A. | Assistant Vice President, Development |
| Bonita Eaton Enochs, M.A. | Assistant Vice President for Communications and Director of Publications |
| George Gasparis, B.S. | Executive Director, Institutional Review Board |
| Robert Fishbein | Executive Director, Student Administrative Services |
| Steven Elliott, M.B.A. | Executive Director of Budget and Financial Analysis |
| Thomas Garrett, M.D. | Director, Glenda Garvey Teaching Academy |
| Anne Jacobs McWilliams, M.A. | Director, Finance and Administration, ITS |
| Ellen Spilker | Director, Student Financial Planning, P&S and CDM |
| Alena Ptak-Danchak | Director, Health Sciences Library |
| Jeannine Jennette, M.P.A. | Associate Director for Public Safety |
| Lee Goldman | Dean |
| Steven Shea, M.D. | Senior Vice Dean of the Faculty of Medicine |
| Robert Kass, Ph.D. | Vice Dean for Research |
| Martha Hooven | Vice Dean for Administration |
| Anne Taylor, MD | Vice Dean for Academic Affairs |
| Alfred Ashford, M.D., M.B.A. | Senior Associate Dean, Harlem Hospital Center |
| Donald Kornfeld, M.D. | Senior Associate Dean, Continuing Medical Education |
| Lisa A. Mellman, M.D. | Senior Associate Dean for Student Affairs |
| Ronald E. Drusin, M.D. | Senior Associate Dean for Education (Interim) |
| Jeanine D’Armiento, M.D., Ph.D. | Associate Dean for Gender Equity and Career Development |
| Walter Franck, M.D. | Associate Dean, Bassett Healthcare |
| Andrew Frantz, M.D. | Associate Dean for Admissions |
| Ernest Hart, J.D. | Associate Dean, Chief Operating Officer, Harlem Hospital Center |
| Michael Herman, M.D. | Associate Dean, St. Vincent’s Hospital in Bridgeport |
| Hilda Hutcherson, MD | Associate Dean for Diversity and Minority Affairs |
| Anke Nolting, Ph.D. | Associate Dean for Alumni Relations and Development |
| Noel Robin, M.D. | Associate Dean, Stamford Health System |
| Richard B. Robinson, Ph.D. | Associate Dean for Graduate Affairs |
| William Rosner, M.D. | Associate Dean, St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center |
| Fred Loweff, M.P.A. | Assistant Dean for Graduate Affairs |
| Richard U. Levine, M.D. | President, Faculty Practice Organization |
| Michael Duncan, B.S. | Executive Director, Faculty Practice Organization |
| Roe Long, M.B.A, RN | Chief Operating Officer, Faculty Practice Organization |
| Aren Laljie, M.B.A., CPA | Executive Director for Finance |
| Anesthesiology | Margaret Wood, M.D. |
| Biochemistry & Molecular Biophysics | Arthur G. Palmer, Ph.D. (interim) |
| Biomedical Informatics | George Hripscak, M.D., M.S. |
| Dermatology | David R. Bickers, M.D. |
| Genetics & Development | Gerard Karsenty, M.D., Ph.D. |
| Medicine | Donald Landry., M.D., Ph.D. (interim) |
| Microbiology | Aaron Mitchell, Ph.D. (interim) |
| Neurological Surgery | Robert A. Solomon, M.D. |
| Neurology | Timothy Pedley, M.D. |
| Neuroscience | John Koester, Ph.D. (interim) |
| Obstetrics & Gynecology | Mary E. D’Alton, M.D. |
| Ophthalmology | Stanley Chang, M.D. |
| Orthopedic Surgery | Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. |
| Otolaryngology/Head & Neck Surgery | Lanny Garth Close, M.D. |
| Pathology | Michael Shelanski, M.D., Ph.D. |
| Pediatrics | Lawrence Stanberry, M.D., Ph.D. |
| Pharmacology | Robert Kass, Ph.D. |
| Physiology & Cellular Biophysics | Andrew Marks, M.D. |
| Psychiatry | Jeffrey Lieberman, M.D. |
| Radiation Oncology | K.S. Clifford Chao, M.D. |
| Radiology | Ronald L. Van Heertum, M.D. (interim) |
| Rehabilitation Medicine | Nancy E. Strauss, M.D. (interim) |
| Urology | Mitchell Benson, M.D. |
| Institute/Center | Director(s) |
|---|---|
| Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center | Robin S. Goland, M.D., Rudolph L. Leibel, M.D. |
| Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics | Andrea Califano, Ph.D, Barry Honig, Ph.D. |
| Center for Family and Community Medicine | Kathleen Klink, M.D. Robert Lewy, M.D. |
| Center for Molecular Recognition | Arthur Karlin, Ph.D. |
| Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease | Darryl DeVivo, M.D., Christopher Henderson, Ph.D., Serge Przedborski, M.D., Ph.D., Lewis Rowland, M.D., Honorary Director |
| Center for Radiological Research | David Brenner, Ph.D., D.Sc. |
| Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research | Robert A. Glick, M.D. |
| Center for the Study of Society and Medicine | David J. Rothman, Ph.D. |
| Center on Medicine as a Profession | David J. Rothman, Ph.D. |
| Institute for Cancer Genetics | Riccardo Dalla-Favera, M.D. |
| Institute for Cancer Research | Maxwell Gottesman, M.D., Ph.D. |
| Institute of Comparative Medicine | Thomas Martin, DVM, Ph.D. |
| Institute of Human Nutrition | Richard J. Deckelbaum, M.D. |
| Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center | Riccardo Dalla-Favera, M.D. |
| Irving Institute for Clinical and Translational Research | Henry N. Ginsberg, M.D. |
| Kavli Institute for Brain Science | Eric Kandel, M.D. |
| Morton A. Kreitchman PET Center | Ronald Van Heertum, M.D. |
| Sackler Institute for Developmental Psychobiology | Myron Hofer, M.D. |
| Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center | Richard Mayeux, M.D., M.Sc. |
| Morris W. Stroud Center for Study of Quality of Life | Barry Gurland, FRC Physicians (London) and FRC Psychiatry |
| Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain | Richard Mayeux, M.D., M.Sc. Michael Shelanski, M.D., Ph.D. |
| Clyde and Helen Wu Center for Molecular Cardiology | Andrew Marks, M.D. |
All the following hospitals, with which the College of Physicians and Surgeons has major affiliations, are teaching centers with fully accredited residency programs and attending staffs that hold faculty appointments at Columbia University. Starting with the Clinical Practice course in the first year, students may rotate through some - or all - of the hospitals. The institutions offer an extraordinary range and diversity of experiences for students - from a rural hospital in upstate New York, to a municipal hospital in Harlem, to one of the leading medical centers in the world.
Location New York, NY 10032
Phone (212)305-2500
The original P&S hospital affiliate (1911), today a 1,200 bed tertiary care center, one of the world’s foremost medical centers. The 800-bed Milstein Hospital Building opened in 1989
Location
5141 Broadway,
New York, NY 10034
Phone (212)932-5000
This 300-bed community hospital at the northern tip of Manhattan opened in 1988.
Location 1051 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10032
Phone (212)543-5000
State hospital, among the leading psychiatric centers in the world. A new building opened in June, 1998.
In 1979, Roosevelt Hospital merged with St. Luke’s (incorporated Woman’s Hospital in 1965) to form St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, the largest voluntary nonprofit private hospital in the United States.
Location 1000 Tenth Avenue,
New York, NY 10019
Phone (212)523-4000
Location 1111 Amsterdam
Avenue, New York, NY 10025
Phone (212)523-4000
Location 1111 Amsterdam
Avenue, New York, NY 10025
Phone: (212)523-4000
Location
506 Lenox Avenue,
New York, NY 10037
Phone (212)939-1000
A modern, up-to-date municipal hospital, serves the entire Northern region of Manhattan.
Location Cooperstown, NY 13326
Phone (607)547-3456
One of the finest rural hospitals in the country, serving ten counties in upstate New York, with a full-time faculty of 140 physicians in a multi-specialty group practice setting with over 250,000 outpatient visits annually.
Location West Haverstraw, NY 10993
Phone (914)947-3000
New York State Hospital, specializing in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Leading center for laboratory and clinical investigation of bone disease.
Location Shelburne Road at West Broad Street, Stamford, CT 06904-9317
Phone (203)276-1000
The Stamford Hospital is a 305-bed, not-for-profit, teaching acute care hospital which is part of Stamford Health System. The Stamford Hospital offers inpatient and outpatient services in medicine, surgery, obstetrics/gynecology, and psychiatry, and is fully accredited. Special features include a Level II Trauma Center/Emergency Department; the Carl & Dorothy Bennett Cancer Center, which offers a full range of outpatient cancer services for patients and families; a bone marrow transplant unit; cancer genetic assessment and risk prevention.
The Stamford Hospital offers medical residency training programs in Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Surgery, Psychiatry and Family Medicine in conjunction with Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. The hospital also offers a School of Radiology, Clinical Pastoral Education Program and EMS Institute for emergency medical training.
Location 2800 Main St,
Bridgeport, CT 06606
Phone (203) 576-6000
St. Vincent’s Medical Center is a 391-bed, tertiary-level hospital serving Fairfield and New Haven Counties. It specializes in cardiovascular, oncology, women’s and family, behavioral health and senior services and has a medical staff of 450 physicians.
The College of Physicians and Surgeons is one of 16 schools in the University. A significant advantage of studying is the ability to take advantage of classes and other opportunities throughout the University. Formal Dual Degree arrangements exist with P&S and the School of Public Health (MD/MPH), the College of Dental Medicine (MD/DDS), GSAS (MD/PhD) and the School of Business (MD/MBA).
The Columbia University Medical School Campus includes, in addition to the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the following graduate divisions:
The College of Dental Medicine, one of the first dental colleges in the nation to become fully integrated with a research university in a world-renowned medical center, has origins dating to 1852. The College offers the D.D.S. degree as well as postdoctoral specialty education and dual degrees with other schools of the University, including the M.S. with certain specialties, the M.B.A., the M.P.H., and a Ph.D. and M.A. in the MA in Science Education and the M.A. in Biomedical Informatics. Over 2200 applicants recently sought positions in the class of 75 students. The four-year pre-doctoral curriculum is heavily biomedical. The students share much of the first two years of the P&S curriculum; this strong biomedical base serves well to support the medically oriented clinical years of the curriculum.
Community activities are extensive. The College has several off-site community-based facilities and a van for Head Start centers. The College is the major source of oral health care for the northern Manhattan area and offers that care at a reasonable cost. Special populations, including those with complex medical histories, are served through the College's clinics.
Approximately 96% of the D.D.S. students continue into postdoctoral education. Only 2 of the 57 other U.S. dental schools approach that percentage, and only one in three dental graduates in the U.S. match postdoctoral programs. The student body is rich in its diversity; 50% are women, 20% of the Year I class are "under-represented in dentistry" students, and a significant number of matriculating students hold advanced degrees, e.g. M.D., Ph.D., M.A., etc.
The College has a long tradition of excellence in research and supports research experiences with both internal and external short term training grants. Both the D.D.S. and specialty candidates are encouraged to be active participants in on-going clinical and basic science research within the Columbia University Medical Center.
The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University offers doctoral (Ph.D.) programs in basic sciences. The Coordinated Doctoral Program in Biomedical Sciences consists of four programs, each with a number of specializations. The Graduate Program in Cellular, Molecular, Structural and Genetic Studies offers specialized study in: Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics; Cell Biology; Genetics and Development; and Microbiology, Immunology and Infection. The Graduate Program in Mechanisms of Health and Disease offers specialized study in: Cellular Physiology and Biophysics; Nutritional and Metabolic Biology; Pathobiology and Molecular Medicine; and Pharmacology and Molecular Signaling. The Graduate program in Neurobiology and Behavior offers specialized study in: Animal Models of Nervous System Disorders; Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience; Neural Development; Neurobiology of Behavior and Cognition; and Theoretical Neuroscience. The Graduate Program in Biomedical Informatics offers specialized study in: Bioinformatics; Clinical Informatics; Public Health Informatics; and Translational Informatics. A Master's Degree Program in Biomedical Informatics is also available. In addition, through one or more of these doctoral programs students can receive training in multidisciplinary areas in which there is strong expertise across multiple programs, including cancer biology, cardiovascular disease, computational biology, stem cell biology and vision sciences.
All students in the Coordinated Doctoral Program receive full support for tuition, student health services and medical insurance. Students also receive a generous stipend for their personal use that begins at registration and normally continues throughout the period of graduate study. Both international students and U.S. students are eligible for this support. Currently there are almost 400 Ph.D. students in the Coordinated Doctoral Programs. Over fifty percent are women and over twenty-five percent are international students from all parts of the world.
The Coordinated Doctoral Programs allow the students to become part of the exciting and highly interactive research community of faculty, graduate students and postdoctoral fellows at the Medical Center. Courses are generally concentrated in the first two years. The first year curriculum emphasizes research rotations in three different laboratories to allow students to experience a range of research topics and potential Ph.D. mentors. At the beginning of the second year, students choose their mentors and begin their research for the Ph.D. degree. The basic sciences faculty are committed to providing a complete graduate education that emphasizes intellectual challenge, supportive guidance, independence and sophisticated training in research. Ph.D. graduates from the Coordinated Doctoral Programs have consistently gone on to become world leaders in biomedical research.
The School of Nursing, a leader in nursing education for over 110 years, offers programs in advanced practice nursing, research and health policy. Today, students study alongside faculty members who have earned the highest authority of any advanced practice nurses anywhere. It was the first school of nursing to adopt a universal faculty practice plan, the first to award a Master's degree in a clinical nursing specialty, and the first to offer the Doctor of Nursing Practice degree.
The combined degree program allows non-nurse college graduates to accelerate study in baccalaureate nursing and concentrate on master's level courses in advanced practice. The Master of Science degree program offers eleven areas of clinical specialization and six sub-specialties, encompassing primary and specialty care, and prepares skilled practitioners with the research and clinical foundation necessary for leadership in academic nursing and practice. A University Statutory Certificate program is offered to master's prepared advanced practice nurses who wish an additional area of clinical specialization. The DNSc program is a research-intensive curriculum preparing nurse scholars who are ready to conduct research in outcomes and health policy, independently and as part of interdisciplinary teams. The DNP program focuses on the clinical practice of nursing and represents the highest academic preparation for nursing practice. The School has an enrollment of approximately 580 students. Joint degree programs are offered with the School of Public Health (MS/MPH) and the Business School (MS/MBA).
The School maintains four academic research centers: The Center for AIDS Research, the Center for Health Policy, the World Health Organization Collaborating Center for International Development in Advanced Nursing Practice, and the Center for Evidence-Based Practice in the Underserved.
The Institute of Human Nutrition, founded in 1954, is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute serves to conduct, coordinate, and lead nutrition research and education activities throughout Columbia University and its affiliated institutions. These activities include basic research, clinical research, public health-preventive medicine programs, and education and training at many levels. A long-standing mission of the Institute is to train individuals for scholarly activities and for positions in universities and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science. In addition, the Institute seeks to augment the training of physicians and other health specialists who are interested in emphasizing nutrition in their professions. The Institute functions to coordinate academic nutrition activities being carried out within many administrative units (Faculties, Departments, Centers) within the Columbia University system.
The specific aims of each of these units, the research being conducted within them, and the programs of instruction offered are outlined in other sections of this handbook. Although each unit conducts its own program of research and training, its work is coordinated to achieve two basic goals: conduct research to advance knowledge of nutrition and training in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and scientist. To achieve this coordination, collaborative research projects among the faculty are frequent, and joint seminars and courses are conducted regularly involving faculty members and students in different departments.
Members of the Institute of Human Nutrition hold appointments in over 18 academic departments and centers within the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public Health, and other divisions of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. These faculty members, in addition to expertise in their own disciplines, have research and teaching interests in the area of human nutrition relevant to the mission of the Institute of Human Nutrition.
The Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University has been on the cutting edge of public health education since its inception over three-quarters of a century ago. It has assumed leadership in disease prevention and, with equal emphasis, in the active promotion of health for all. It is one of thirty-nine schools of public health in the United States accredited by the Council on Education in Public Health. Currently more than 900 students are enrolled in the degree programs leading to the Master in Public Health (MPH), Master of Science (MS), Doctor of Public Health (DrPH), or Doctor of Philosophy (PhD). Public health, as a profession, naturally interfaces with most professional disciplines that affect the lives of people. The School developed its dual degree programs to encourage students to integrate public health training with other clinical or professional studies. Dual degree programs currently enroll students in a variety of the University’s professional schools, including medicine, dentistry, nursing, occupational therapy, social work, international and public affairs, urban planning, business, and law. Among the overall educational objectives for all graduates of the School is the development of individual competence and improved skills, particularly in;
Public health is inherently interdisciplinary in its research, teaching and service programs. The School is unique in its extensive involvement in direct service delivery programs. The School and several of its Departments are involved in a number of substantial programs that provide public health services directly to populations in need, and in programs that provide ongoing technical assistance to other service-delivery organizations. Furthermore, as is appropriate for a school of public health, many of the School’s research projects focus explicitly on topics that are directly applicable to the delivery of public health services. More and more frequently, the problems and issues that engage the efforts of those working in public health are played out at “center stage” in the global community — the challenges of AIDS, environmental carcinogens, inequities in health care delivery systems, advances in genetics that may radically affect health behavior, the plight of populations displaced by natural disasters or civil strife. These problems are enormous in scope and require our best efforts. They are being addressed daily in the academic programs at the Mailman School of Public Health, and by our faculty and students in their research and in their service activities. At the same time, the Mailman School of Public Health, located in a multi ethnic neighborhood of New York City with a medically underserved population, delivers care at the most immediate local level. Our outreach includes a model Head Start program with a health component, school-based health clinics that aim to provide basic health care and prevent early pregnancy and school dropout, and community health promotion programs to screen for cancer and provide self-help education for the growing number of asthma sufferers in our urban neighborhoods
The Programs in Occupational Therapy have a long and celebrated history at Columbia University. Consistently being ranked by U.S. News and World Report among the best occupational therapy educational programs in the country, our program has also exceeded accreditation standards (Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education) since its inception in 1941. Our faculty is nationally and internationally recognized.
Columbia University’s Occupational Therapy Programs are known for educating individuals who have distinguished themselves as leaders in the profession, working as master clinicians, educators, researchers, administrators, and consultants. Through the offerings of an entry-level M.S. degree, a post-professional M.S. degree, and the first joint M.S./M.P.H. degree (with the Mailman School of Public Health) in the country, students receive a strong foundation across all practice areas, and work in a variety of clinical and community settings. In addition, we are partnered with Teachers College and offer an Ed.D. program in occupational therapy and motor learning.
Through cutting edge programs, our faculty and students have led the way in defining emerging practice areas and in promoting evidence-based practice and research. The structure of each program, which combines principles of adult learning with professional education, allows for didactic experiences that will prepare occupational therapists to work in and contribute to an ever-changing healthcare arena. Stressing multidisciplinary learning, students are prepared to work collaboratively with professionals of all disciplines. The close faculty-student interactions further allow for solid professional mentorship. Strong ties to fieldwork sites in New York City and across the country facilitate the continuum from theoretical and scientific knowledge, to practical application. Currently, the Programs enroll approximately 100 students each year.
Columbia offers an entry-level Clinical Doctorate in Physical Therapy (DPT). The goal of the program is to prepare graduates who are self-directed generalists with clinical problem solving skills. Students graduate with a comprehensive foundation of basic principles in the art and science of physical therapy. With 10.5 full-time faculty and a roster of distinguished adjunct instructors and laboratory assistants from Columbia University Medical Center, students are ensured individualized attention. In recognition of the varied abilities, interests and learning styles of graduate students, the professional curriculum is designed to be flexible and innovative, using a wide variety of learning styles. Emphasis is on an adult methodology that incorporates clinical decision-making, evidence-based practice and self-directed learning activities. Students design and complete a capstone project, collaborating with scientists and clinicians from many parts of the University. The curriculum provides for some specialized skill development through advanced seminars and electives offered during the third year of study. The concept that learning is a lifelong process pervades the educational program. Physical therapists with generalist capabilities are prepared to develop specialty skills, contribute to the leadership and growth of physical therapy, and advance the quality of health care through clinical research. All students participate in a clinical mentorship program during the second year of the curriculum and complete 36 weeks of full-time clinical education. The DPT degree is awarded upon successful completion of both the academic and clinical education components of the curriculum. The program is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education and is registered with the Department of Education of the State of New York. Class size is limited to approximately 50 students per year.