Montefiore is a primary clerkship site for third-year and fourth-year medical students at the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Einstein offers joint residency programs between Montefiore Medical Center and
Jacobi Medical Center in Internal medicine, child neurology, dermatology, emergency medicine, general surgery, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology, ophthalmology, orthopedic surgery, otolaryngology, plastic surgery, rehabilitation medicine, urology, and vascular surgery, as well as other sub-specialties. As one of the largest medical residency programs in the country, Montefiore provides postgraduate clinical training to more than 1,400 residents across 150 accredited residency and fellowship programs. Montefiore School of Nursing was also established in 2017 at New Rochelle Hospital and has since then graduated over 250 Registered Nurses.
Residency Program in Social Medicine The
Montefiore Residency Program in Social Medicine is one of the oldest
primary care training programs in the United States. It is located in
Bronx, New York which contains some of the poorest urban districts in the United States. It is managed by the Montefiore Department of Family and Social Medicine and offers training in 3 primary care specialties:
internal medicine,
family medicine and
pediatrics. It has trained over 700 physicians in primary care with a focus on
medically underserved populations. The program was founded in 1970 by Drs. Harold Wise and David Kindig. In 1973 family practice was added as a third track. Residents worked in partnerships and maintained their continuity practices at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Health Center, which Dr. Wise had begun in 1968. The RPSM was their response to the difficulty of recruiting physicians to MLK who could work effectively with the community and other members of the health care team. At the time MLK was the flagship of the
neighborhood health center movement of the
Office of Economic Opportunity, the main federal agency coordinating
Lyndon Johnson's
War on Poverty. In 1973 Dr. Jo Ivey Boufford, one of the residency program's first pediatric graduates, became its director and began developing the social medicine curriculum in which all three disciplines shared. This included
health systems skills, such as medical care organization and economics; community and organizational skills, such as
medical anthropology, Spanish and community-based projects; research and evaluation skills, such as
epidemiology,
biostatistics, and
health services research; and educational and teaching skills, including patient education and curriculum development. In 1977 the family practice track moved its continuity practice from the Martin Luther King Health Center to
North Central Bronx Hospital and in 1980 the Montefiore Family Health Center was opened and became the primary site for residency training and faculty practice in family medicine. Because of MLK's fiscal problems, the pediatrics and internal medicine tracks moved to
St. Barnabas Hospital in 1986. In 1990 several independent community health centers affiliated with MMC were organized into the Montefiore Ambulatory Care Network under Dr. Robert Massad. In 1991 pediatrics and internal medicine moved to the Ambulatory Care Network, now divided between the Comprehensive Health Care Center in the
South Bronx and the Comprehensive Family Care Center in the East Bronx. In 1997, when the Comprehensive Health Care Center moved into a new facility, the social internal medicine and pediatrics tracks were again consolidated there. The Comprehensive Health Care Center, Comprehensive Family Care Center, and Family Health Center are all
federally qualified health centers. In 1992 the Department of Family Medicine at Montefiore, which administers the Residency Program in Social Medicine, became an academic department at the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine with a Division of Research, a required third year clerkship for medical students, and its own inpatient ward at Montefiore. Dr. Massad became the first Chairman of Family Medicine at Einstein with affiliated residencies at
Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center. In 1993 Dr. Massad received national recognition awards from both the
National Association of Community Health Centers and the
Society of Teachers of Family Medicine. In 1995 the Residency Program in Social Medicine became the first organization to receive the National Primary Care Achievement Award in Education from the
Pew Charitable Trust. In 1996 the Ambulatory Care Network merged with the Montefiore Medical Group and another graduate of the Social Medicine residency program, Dr. Kathryn Anastos, was recruited as its first medical director. Family practice residents began work at the Castle Hill and Valentine Lane family practices, where medical students had been rotating since 1993. In 1998 Dr. Massad was succeeded by another Social Medicine residency graduate, Dr. Peter Selwyn, as Chair of the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. Dr. Selwyn enlarged the Research Division and initiated a Palliative Care Service, including inpatient hospice beds. In 2000 the Valentine Lane Family Practice was transferred to the St. John's Riverside Hospital System in
Yonkers, and half of the family practice residency moved to the Williamsbridge Family Practice. In 2001 members of the department established the first Hispanic Center of Excellence in New York State at the medical school. In 2003 the department established the Bronx Center to Reduce and Eliminate Ethnic and Racial Health Disparities, the first National Institutes of Health Center of Excellence in a department of family medicine. After the Einstein Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine was renamed the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health in 2004, the residency program was housed under the Department of Family and Social Medicine in 2005.
Notable alumni and faculty •
Peter Angritt – Colonel in the
United States Army Medical Corps who served as the leader of the Division of AIDS Pathology at the
Armed Forces Institute of Pathology among other key roles •
Lucille C. Gunning – African American pediatrician and children's cancer specialist who pursued sub-specialty qualifications in pediatric psychiatry at Montefiore during the 1960s and subsequently served as director of pediatric rehabilitation at Montefiore during the late 1960s and early 1970s; she was then appointed as director of pediatric rehabilitation at
Harlem Hospital and, later, deputy director of medical services of the Westchester Developmental Disabilities Service • Camara Jones – Family physician and epidemiologist who works on the impact of racism on the health • David Kindig – Emeritus Professor of Population Health Sciences and Emeritus Vice-Chancellor for Health Sciences at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison, School of Medicine and Public Health • Denise Rodgers – Vice chancellor for inter-professional programs at
Rutgers University • Steven Sayfer – chief executive officer of the
Montefiore Health System (2008–2019) == Leadership ==