(Press-News.org) The Department of Pediatrics at NYU Langone Health has received $9.8 million from NYU Langone trustee Trudy Elbaum Gottesman and Robert W. Gottesman, founding donors of Sala Institute for Child and Family Centered Care, which has profoundly influenced excellence in clinical care across Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone since 2013.
“We are proud to support innovations in pediatric research and career growth of physician–scientists,” said Trudy Elbaum Gottesman. “Our commitment is unwavering and focused on enhancing outcomes for children everywhere.”
The Gottesmans’ recent funding will promote innovation in pediatric research, foster the career development of gifted pediatric physician–scientists, prepare pediatric fellows for life-changing careers, and play a pivotal role in advancing the understanding, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of childhood diseases.
“Providing exceptional care means understanding the unique needs of the patients we see at NYU Langone Health—and there is often no patient more vulnerable, or more resilient, than a child,” said Robert I. Grossman, MD, dean of NYU Grossman School of Medicine and CEO of NYU Langone Health. “We are fortunate to have supporters like the Gottesmans, who know this so well and are deeply committed to ensuring that Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital, through Sala Institute, remains the best place for any parent to seek care for their child. Their most recent gift allows us to continue to enhance research, fellowship training, and the next generation of pediatricians.”
Advancing Clinical Research That Enables Pediatricians to Better Treat Children’s Health
One of the key initiatives supported by the Gottesmans’ most recent giving is the creation of the Sala Elbaum Pediatric Research Scholars Program. To help meet a global need for more pediatric physician–scientists, the program provides early-career clinicians support and protected time for an intensive, supervised career development experience in the fields of biomedical, behavioral, or clinical research.
“This type of formalized program is critically important for enhancing research in pediatric healthcare, to ensure progress in the field overall,” said Catherine S. Manno, MD, the Pat and John Rosenwald Professor of Pediatrics and chair of the Department of Pediatrics. “The program will strengthen our ability to attract, grow, and retain the most talented future leaders in science and clinical care, both from within and from across the country to the NYU Langone Health and the Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital community.”
The first two Sala Elbaum Scholars are Carol Duh-Leong, MD, a general pediatrician at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital, and Kirsty Hillier, MD, a pediatric hematology–oncology specialist at the Stephen D. Hassenfeld Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders.
Over the course of four years, Sala Elbaum Scholars will be supported and trained through this program, and upon completion, continue to conduct their research independently and competitively through outside grant support.
Training the Next Generation of Pediatric Physician Leaders
In addition, the Gottesmans’ generosity has created the Sala Elbaum Fellowship Endowment Fund, which will ensure the longevity of a rigorous and competitive fellowship program in the Department of Pediatrics. The Department of Pediatrics recruits some of the nation’s most promising young doctors, training a full roster of fellows in the diagnosis and care of children with complex and chronic conditions. In recognition of the Gottesmans’ gift, two fellows in the Department of Pediatrics will be named Sala Elbaum Fellows in key pediatric subspecialty areas.
Pediatric subspecialists require an additional two to three years of fellowship training after the four years of medical school and three years of residency that are required to become a general pediatrician.
“Pediatric specialists are the only physicians uniquely qualified to treat many children with complex conditions,” said Dr. Manno. “This fund will help us continue to provide top-notch training to our pediatric fellows, ensuring more pediatric physicians have deep experience in child- and family-centered care.”
About the Gottesmans
Trudy Elbaum Gottesman and Robert Gottesman are staunch advocates for children’s health and have helped NYU Langone achieve many milestones for pediatric care. Mrs. Gottesman has been an NYU Langone trustee since 2013. She helped found KiDS of NYU Langone in 1991, and currently serves as chair of Sala Circle, a community of supporters working together to advance the health and wellbeing of children at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital and beyond. Mr. Gottesman is the executive chair, senior managing director, a portfolio manager, and the former CEO of First Manhattan. The Gottesmans have given to create and expand Sala Institute for Child and Family Centered Care—named after Trudy’s late mother, Sala Bierman Elbaum, a Holocaust survivor—to ensure that children and families at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital benefit from supportive services and resilience programs tailored to their needs.
For more information or to make a gift to Sala Institute to support children’s health, visit NYU Langone Giving.
Media Inquiries
Katie Ullman
Phone: 646-483-3984
Kathryn.Ullman@NYULangone.org
END
NYU Langone receives $9.8 million to advance pediatric medicine
Gift establishes the Sala Elbaum Pediatric Research Scholars Program and the Sala Elbaum Fellowship Endowment Fund.
2023-10-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Society for Neuroscience 2023 Promotion of Women in Neuroscience Awards
2023-10-30
WASHINGTON – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will honor six researchers who have made significant contributions to the advancement of women in neuroscience. The awards will be presented during Neuroscience 2023, SfN's annual meeting.
“SfN proudly recognizes these neuroscientists for their outstanding scientific achievements and efforts to support other researchers,” said SfN President Oswald Steward. “Their dedication to scientific excellence and inclusion of women along the length of the research pipeline results in a stronger, more relevant field of neuroscience.”
Bernice Grafstein Award for Outstanding ...
Society for Neuroscience 2023 Outstanding Career and Research Achievements
2023-10-30
WASHINGTON – The Society of Neuroscience (SfN) will honor leading researchers whose
pioneering work has transformed neuroscience — including the understanding of the visual
system, addiction, synaptic plasticity, and learning and memory — with this year’s Outstanding
Career and Research Achievement Awards. The awards will be presented during Neuroscience
2023, SfN’s annual meeting.
“The Society is honored to recognize this year’s awardees, whose groundbreaking work has
transformed our understanding of plasticity in ...
Society for Neuroscience 2023 Early Career Scientists’ Achievements and Research Awards
2023-10-30
WASHINGTON – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will honor eight early-career researchers whose work is transforming our understanding of the neural dynamics of touch sensation, spatial navigation, memory circuits, and more. The awards will be presented during Neuroscience 2023, SfN's annual meeting. “This year’s Early Career Awardees are pushing the boundaries of neuroscience by combining cutting-edge methods in machine learning, microscopy, genetics, biophysics, and beyond,” said SfN President Oswald ...
Society for Neuroscience 2023 Education and Outreach Awards
2023-10-30
WASHINGTON – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) will present five neuroscientists with this year’s Science Education and Outreach Awards, comprising the Award for Education in Neuroscience, the Science Educator Award, and the Next Generation Awards. The awards will be presented during SfN’s annual meeting, Neuroscience 2023.
“The Society is honored to recognize this creative group of neuroscientists working to educate the public about science and combat misinformation,” SfN President Oswald Steward, said. “Their innovative approaches — including games and viral social media videos — inspire not just the next generation of neuroscientists, ...
A sustainable alternative to air conditioning
2023-10-30
As the planet gets hotter, the need for cool living environments is becoming more urgent. But air conditioning is a major contributor to global warming since units use potent greenhouse gases and lots of energy.
Now, researchers from McGill University, UCLA and Princeton have found in a new study an inexpensive, sustainable alternative to mechanical cooling with refrigerants in hot and arid climates, and a way to mitigate dangerous heat waves during electricity blackouts.
The researchers set out to answer how to achieve a new benchmark in passive cooling inside naturally conditioned buildings in hot climates such as Southern California. They examined the use of roof materials ...
Microdroplets, macro results: Beckman researchers pursue Energy Earthshots
2023-10-30
Good things come in microscopic packages, according to the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology’s new DROPLETS project.
By packaging electrochemical reactions in smaller-than-standard serving sizes, interdisciplinary researchers aim to produce clean hydrogen, sequester carbon dioxide, and store renewable energies like wind and solar inexpensively and sustainably. Their project, called DROPLETS, received $4.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science through its Energy Earthshots Initiative.
“If we do this right, we will ...
Landmark menopause toolkit updated to improve assessment and treatment
2023-10-30
Care for women with menopausal health issues should improve globally following the release of an updated Monash University-led toolkit that guides health professionals around the world in assessing and treating them.
Endorsed by the International, Australasian and British Menopause Societies, the Endocrine Society of Australia and Jean Hailes for Women’s Health, the 2023 Practitioner’s Toolkit for Managing the Menopause is designed to be used anywhere in the world.
Published in Climacteric, the Toolkit has been updated and enhanced from the original 2014 Toolkit for practitioners with new advice and therapies based on a systematic review of the latest menopause ...
New antibody could target breast cancers
2023-10-30
An enzyme that may help some breast cancers spread can be stopped with an antibody created in the lab of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor Nicholas Tonks. With further development, the antibody might offer an effective drug treatment for those same breast cancers.
The new antibody targets an enzyme called PTPRD that is overabundant in some breast cancers. PTPRD belongs to a family of molecules known as protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs), which help regulate many cellular processes. They do this by working in concert with enzymes called kinases to control how other proteins ...
Drawing a tube of blood could assess ALS risk from environmental toxin exposure
2023-10-30
Over the last decade, research at Michigan Medicine has shown how exposure to toxins in the environment, such as pesticides and carcinogenic PCBs, affect the risk of developing and dying from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Now, investigators have developed an environmental risk score that assesses a person’s risk for developing ALS, as well as for survival after diagnosis, using a blood sample.
The results are published in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
“For the first time, we have a means collecting ...
Research grants available: $50,000 to evaluate race in risk calculators
2023-10-30
DALLAS, October 30, 2023 — Multiple 1-year grants of up to $50,000 each are available from the American Heart Association to fund research that evaluates the use of race in heart disease and stroke risk calculators.
The American Heart Association, the single largest non-government supporter of heart and brain health research in the U.S., is offering the funding as part of the De-Biasing Clinical Care Algorithms project. The project is a two-year scientific research strategy, supported in part by a grant from the Doris Duke Foundation, to study the complex issue of how race and ethnicity factor into clinical care ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New guidelines for managing blood cancers in pregnancy
New study suggests RNA present on surfaces of leaves may shape microbial communities
U.S. suffers from low social mobility. Is sprawl partly to blame?
Research spotlight: Improving predictions about brain cancer outcomes with the right imaging criteria
New UVA professor’s research may boost next-generation space rockets
Multilingualism improves crucial cognitive functions in autistic children
The carbon in our bodies probably left the galaxy and came back on cosmic ‘conveyer belt’
Scientists unveil surprising human vs mouse differences in a major cancer immunotherapy target
NASA’s LEXI will provide X-ray vision of Earth’s magnetosphere
A successful catalyst design for advanced zinc-iodine batteries
AMS Science Preview: Tall hurricanes, snow and wildfire
Study finds 25% of youth experienced homelessness in Denver in 2021, significantly higher than known counts
Integrated spin-wave quantum memory
Brain study challenges long-held views about Parkinson's movement disorders
Mental disorders among offspring prenatally exposed to systemic glucocorticoids
Trends in screening for social risk in physician practices
Exposure to school racial segregation and late-life cognitive outcomes
AI system helps doctors identify patients at risk for suicide
Advanced imaging uncovers hidden metastases in high-risk prostate cancer cases
Study reveals oldest-known evolutionary “arms race”
People find medical test results hard to understand, increasing overall worry
Mizzou researchers aim to reduce avoidable hospitalizations for nursing home residents with dementia
National Diabetes Prevention Program saves costs for enrollees
Research team to study critical aspects of Alzheimer’s and dementia healthcare delivery
Major breakthrough for ‘smart cell’ design
From CO2 to acetaldehyde: Towards greener industrial chemistry
Unlocking proteostasis: A new frontier in the fight against neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's
New nanocrystal material a key step toward faster, more energy-efficient computing
One of the world’s largest social programs greatly reduced tuberculosis among the most vulnerable
Surprising ‘two-faced’ cancer gene role supports paradigm shift in predicting disease
[Press-News.org] NYU Langone receives $9.8 million to advance pediatric medicineGift establishes the Sala Elbaum Pediatric Research Scholars Program and the Sala Elbaum Fellowship Endowment Fund.