6 results match your criteria: "From Mount Sinai Medical Center[Affiliation]"
South Med J
August 2022
From Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, Florida.
South Med J
February 2019
From Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, Florida.
South Med J
January 2019
From Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, Florida and Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Health Professions Division, College of Pharmacy, Nova Southeastern University, Davie, Florida.
Objectives: In this study, we determined patients' attitudes toward discussing firearms and issues of firearms safety with emergency department physicians. We assessed whether patients feel discriminated against should physicians discuss firearms safety, and whether they believed that physician counseling may change how patients store firearms.
Methods: From June to October 2017, we conducted a cross-sectional institutional review board-approved survey of 200 consenting adult patients (convenience sample) not requiring critical care presenting to the emergency department of Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida.
Top Magn Reson Imaging
December 2014
From Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY.
N Engl J Med
May 2014
From Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York (D.H.A.), and St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn (N.R., G.P.) - both in New York; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston (J.J.P.); Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart and Vascular Center (M.J.R., N.S.K.), and Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke's Medical Center (J.S.C.) - both in Houston; Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus, OH (S.J.Y.); University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor (G.M.D., S. Chetcuti), and Spectrum Health Hospitals, Grand Rapids (J.H., W.M.) - both in Michigan; University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh (T.G.G.); Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Palo Alto, CA (M.B.); St. Vincent Medical Center, Indianapolis (J.H.); University of Kansas Hospital, Kansas City (G.Z., P.T.); Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (G.C.H., J.K.H.); Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore (J.C.); Pinnacle Health, Harrisburg, PA (B.M., M.M.); and Medtronic, Minneapolis (S. Chenoweth), and Mayo Clinical Foundation, Rochester (J.K.O.) - both in Minnesota.
Background: We compared transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR), using a self-expanding transcatheter aortic-valve bioprosthesis, with surgical aortic-valve replacement in patients with severe aortic stenosis and an increased risk of death during surgery.
Methods: We recruited patients with severe aortic stenosis who were at increased surgical risk as determined by the heart team at each study center. Risk assessment included the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predictor Risk of Mortality estimate and consideration of other key risk factors.