The Mount Sinai Health System began as a single hospital, founded in 1852 and opened in 1855 as the Jews' Hospital. In 1864, the hospital became formally nonsectarian and, in 1866, changed its name to
The Mount Sinai Hospital. The hospital is one of the oldest and largest
teaching hospitals in the U.S. The hospital campus is located on the
Upper East Side of Manhattan, beside
Central Park. In 1881, the Mount Sinai Hospital established a training school for doctors and nurses. Prior to its establishment it had been served by untrained male and female attendants. The school closed in September 1971 amid financial difficulties and a failed plan to affiliate with the
City College of New York. The charter was taken up by The Mount Sinai Hospital School of Continuing Education in Nursing, founded in the fall of 1975. In 1963 The Mount Sinai Hospital chartered
The Mount Sinai School of Medicine, the first medical school to grow out of a non-university in more than 50 years. The school and the hospital together formed the Mount Sinai Health Center. In 1993, Astoria General Hospital located on 30th Avenue in
Astoria, Queens, became an
affiliate of The Mount Sinai Hospital. A year later the hospital's name changed to Western Queens Community Hospital. In 1999, the hospital was purchased by Mount Sinai and had its name changed again, this time to Mount Sinai Queens, becoming the first
community hospital to bear the Mount Sinai name. In 2013,
Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing (PSON), founded in 1902, became the nursing school of the Mount Sinai Health System. In 2016, the Mount Sinai Health System announced a partnership with
Stony Brook Medicine, allowing for joint programs between the
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the
Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University. == Continuum Health Partners ==