Rotation Sites

CohenChildrensCohen Children’s Medical Center

A 202-bed children’s hospital that is consistently ranked among the nation’s best. It serves as the largest ACS pediatric level 1 trauma center in New York and offers a wide array of pediatric trauma, congenital, and complex craniofacial cases.

 


LongIslandJewish

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

LIJMC is a 524-bed teaching hospital. As the site of the Northwell Health Cancer Institute as well as the New York Head and Neck Institute, residents gain extensive experience in reconstruction of the breast, and head & neck in addition to an assortment of general plastic surgery. LIJMC is also the site of educational conferences and grand rounds.


lenoxhill-1.jpgLenox Hill Hospital / Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital

Lenox Hill is a 652-bed hospital located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan that treats more than 325,000 patients a year. Residents participate in breast and head & neck reconstruction, as well as a variety of body contouring cases. Additionally, at the Manhattan Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital, a division hospital of Lenox Hill, residents work with some of the world’s leading experts in aesthetic plastic surgery and have their own comprehensive cosmetic clinic.


NorthShoreNorth Shore University Hospital

NSUH is an 806-bed hospital and ACS level 1 trauma center. Additionally, as the replantation center for the Northwell Health system, residents participate in the care of complex hand, facial, and lower extremity traumas.


StatenIslandStaten Island University Hospital

This 714-bed hospital spans two campuses and houses both the regional burn center and the newly constructed Comprehensive Breast Center. Here, residents experience a more apprenticeship-based teaching model.


jacobiJacobi Medical Center

We added a new County Hospital rotation at Jacobi Medical Center for which R4’s and R5’s will now spend 3 months during each year. The addition of the Jacobi Medical Center, a municipal hospital rotation, allows our senior residents a more autonomous experience in treating all types of hand conditions to restore hand and finger function, as well as serious head and neck conditions. These include traumatic injuries from assaults, gunshot wounds, vehicular accidents and the like, neoplastic conditions involving benign and malignant tumors, and congenital problems such as cleft palates. Although residents will be under the supervision of attendings, there is a high-volume of cases. These opportunities are ongoing.

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