Calman was born in New York. He graduated from
University of Chicago in 1971 and from the
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey at
Rutgers University with a MMS in 1973 and from
Rush University with a MD in 1975. Calman spent two months pre-residency volunteering at a clinic in
Delano, California with the
United Farm Workers Union. He completed residency at
Montefiore Medical Center with the
Montefiore Residency Program in Social Medicine in the
Bronx, NY. Calman was inspired by his grandfather, an attorney, oral surgeon, and socialist
alderman in New York City, who fought for a number of social justice issues. Calman co-founded the
Institute for Family Health, a
FQHC in 1983 where he has served since its inception as the President and CEO. In 2012 with
Mount Sinai Hospital, Calman co-founded the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, the first department of family medicine in Manhattan, where he serves as a professor and chair of the department. Calman is the President of the American Association of Teaching Health Centers and the Board Chair of the Community Health Care Association of New York State. Calman was elected to the
National Academy of Medicine and the
New York Academy of Medicine Family medicine Calman was trained in family medicine and has been recognized as New York Metro Area's Top Doctor from 2002-2014. He has been profiled in books on family medicine physicians. Calman started three family medicine residency programs at the
Institute for Family Health; two in
New York City and one in the mid-
Hudson Valley.
Health disparities Calman is committed to eliminating
structural racism and examining the ways health care remains segregated. He is the Principal Investigator for Bronx Health REACH, a
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded community coalition addressing racial and ethnic disparities in health outcomes, since their formation in 1999. His article
“Out of the Shadows” discusses his experience in dealing with racism in the care of his patients. Calman was appointed to the HIT Policy Committee serving on the Meaningful Use Subcommittee by the Obama administration responsible for establishing recommendations for the deployment of
Health IT in practices and hospitals nationwide. Calman is sourced in media including
The New York Times and television news networks to discuss health care delivery and health disparities. == Appointments==