NYU Langone Health

Table of Contents

Tours

  1. Manhattan Campus

    • PM&R Sports Medicine Fellowship Program

      Stops

      1. Kimmel Pavilion

        Opened in 2018, NYU Langone’s Kimmel Pavilion features 374 private patient rooms, a suite of 30 flexible operating and procedure rooms equipped with the latest technology, and procedural floors that connect directly to Tisch Hospital. In 2019, the building received LEED Platinum certification in recognition of innovation in sustainable design, construction, operations, and maintenance, the first newly constructed hospital in New York state of its kind to receive this honor.

         

        Medical students, residents, and fellows at NYU Grossman School of Medicine have access to conference rooms, workspaces, and call rooms at this location. Students in the MD degree program complete clerkships, electives, and selectives at the Kimmel Pavilion and learn from the diversity of patients who receive acute general and subspecialty surgical care at this ultramodern location.

         

        Kimmel Pavilion is also a main inpatient training location for our graduate medical education programs. Most of our residencies and fellowships offer training experiences here. For example, residents in our Emergency Medicine Residency staff the emergency department, those in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Residency provide inpatient and postoperative surgical care, and trainees in the Internal Medicine Residency perform inpatient rotations on medicine floors.

      2. NYU Langone Tisch Hospital

        Medical students, residents, and fellows benefit from training at NYU Langone’s Tisch Hospital. The diversity of patient experiences, 300 inpatient beds, and more than 60 state-of the-art operating rooms provide an unparalleled setting for clinical education.

         

        Students in the MD degree program at NYU Grossman School of Medicine complete clerkships, electives, and selectives that are integral parts of the MD curriculum at Tisch Hospital. As resident or fellow, the majority of general inpatient and intensive care unit (ICU) experiences take place here, as well as subspecialty training for many of our large residencies. The hospital is home to NYU Langone’s Comprehensive Stroke Center and the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Emergency Services. It is also connected to procedural floors at Kimmel Pavilion, offering a seamless experience for treating patients who require acute care for general and subspecialty surgical services.

      3. NYU Langone Science Building

        NYU Langone’s Science Building provides medical students, residents, fellows, and postdoctoral candidates with ample space to pursue cutting-edge clinical, basic science, and translational research, including more than 385,000 square feet of space and 10 floors. Facilities include a wet laboratory space, core facilities, a new vivarium, conference spaces, and public amenities with LEED Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.

         

        The state-of-the-art building is home to NYU Langone’s Institute for Computational Medicine, Institute for Systems Genetics, and Neuroscience Institute. With features including preclinical imaging labs and the latest MRI and PET scanners, the building serves as a research hub for the many divisions in the Department of Medicine.

      4. NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue

        Founded in 1736 to treat New York City’s immigrants, NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue continues to provide high-quality care to people from all walks of life. As the oldest public hospital in the United States, Bellevue is beloved by the many NYU Grossman School of Medicine medical students, residents, and fellows who train here.

         

        Students in the MD degree program become part of the hospital’s storied history, completing clerkships, electives, and selectives with instruction from experienced faculty. More than 1,200 residents and fellows in more than 80 of NYU Langone graduate medical education programs train and work at Bellevue, providing safety-net healthcare to underserved New Yorkers. Our Internal Medicine Residency trainees rotate on the medicine floor and intensive care unit (ICU), those in the Emergency Medicine Residency gain experience working in a busy Level 1 Trauma Center, and participants in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Residency work in both inpatient and outpatient settings, as well as perform surgical obstetric and gynecologic procedures. All residents have access to conference rooms, workspaces, and call rooms at the hospital.

      5. NYU Langone Orthopedic Hospital

        Ranked as one of the top 10 hospitals in the country for orthopedics by U.S. News & World Report, NYU Langone Orthopedic Hospital offers world-class medical and surgical care to prevent, treat, and rehabilitate patients with musculoskeletal, rheumatic, and neurological conditions, as well as other related diseases and injuries in this 34,000-square-foot surgical facility.

         

        Medical students with an interest in orthopedics, as well as residents and fellows who train at this location, also work with a team of physiatrists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, rehabilitation nurses, and speech–language pathologists at NYU Langone’s Rusk Rehabilitation. Together we provide specialized care for brain injury rehabilitation, joint pain, osteoporosis, and overuse injuries.

      6. NYU Langone Orthopedic Center

        NYU Langone Orthopedic Center is a 40,000-square-foot ambulatory care center with 4 operating rooms and a 12-bed recovery unit that offers personalized sports medicine and outpatient care for conditions related to the muscles, bones, and joints, as well as same-day surgery for orthopedic conditions.

         

        An extension of NYU Langone Orthopedic Hospital, which is ranked among the top 10 in the country for orthopedics, rheumatology, and rehabilitation by U.S. News & World Report, this location brings together more than 400 orthopedists, rheumatologists, neurologists, physiatrists, radiologists, pain management doctors, physical and occupational therapists, exercise physiologists, sports nutritionists, sports psychologists, pharmacists, nurses, and support staff.

         

        Medical students who are interested in pursuing careers in orthopedics, rheumatology, and rehabilitation specialties spend significant time at this facility as part of the elective, selective, and clerkship portions of the MD curriculum, as well as house staff in our radiology residencies and fellowships, Orthopedic Surgery Residency and fellowships, and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Residency and fellowships.

      7. NYU Langone Ambulatory Care Center- 38th Street

        NYU Langone Ambulatory Care Center East 38th Street offers a wide range of multidisciplinary outpatient services including dermatology, gastroenterology, otolaryngology, endoscopy, and pain management, along with the offices of Perlmutter Cancer Center, Rusk Rehabilitation, and the Helen L. and Martin S. Kimmel Hyperbaric and Advanced Wound Healing Center.

         

        At this location, NYU Grossman School of Medicine students take part in training for the ambulatory care clerkship and various elective and outpatient training opportunities that are part of the MD curriculum. This is also where outpatient training experiences take place for many of our graduate medical education programs, including our Ophthalmology Residency and fellowships, Dermatology Residency and fellowships, and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Residency and fellowships.

      8. NYU Langone Hospital- Brooklyn

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      9. NYSIM Center

        New York Simulation Center for the Health Sciences(NYSIM) is a 25,000 square foot simulation-based learning space. Four separate wings are dedicated to simulation education. NYSIM is one of the largest and most advanced medical simulation facilities in the nation, providing state-of-the-art training for medical students, nursing students, residents, staff nurses, and physicians. 

        Facilities include examining rooms for student/standardized patient encounters, ICU beds, operating rooms, a trauma bay, a neonatal unit, a labor and delivery room, and a wet room for disaster training. Our state-of-the-art mannequins are also central to the simulation curriculum. They are controlled/voiced by supervising staff behind one-way mirrors, and simulations are designed to replicate various clinical encounters. Participants can administer drugs to the patient, ask for updated vitals, EKGs, listen to heart/lung sounds, and evaluate pulses, among many other things. These mannequins are also designed with attention to detail, such that their pupils can constrict/dilate, and they can even sweat. 

        The NYSIM Center consists of a north wing with five simulation rooms, each with a control room where instructors can operate mannequins and record the event for student/teacher analysis. An east wing has 14 office style examination rooms most commonly used to interact with standardized patients. The west winghouses the flex room, also known as the multi-purpose room; it also features classrooms and small conference rooms for debriefing sessions.