NYU
Receives Magnet Award: Medical Center Nurses Hailed for Outstanding Patient
Care
When Susan
Bowar-Ferres, Ph.D., R.N., Senior Vice President and
Chief Nursing Officer, appears on the floors of Tisch
Hospital or the Rusk Institute, it’s a sure bet
that staff nurses take notice. But on a recent Tuesday
morning, they noticed a particularly broad smile on
her face and a small lapel pin on her violet suit. The
pin bore the word Magnet, which explained to everyone
present why she was beaming.

Some of the 1,400 staff nurses
at NYU Medical Center cheer the news delivered by Susan
Bowar-Ferres, Ph.D., R.N., Senior Vice President and
Chief Nursing Officer (shown in violet suit), that NYU
has received the Magnet Award for excellence in nursing.
Magnet facilities have positive outcomes for nurses
and patients alike: lower mortality rates, shorter lengths
of stay, increased patient satisfaction, and increased
retention and recruitment rates among nurses.
“I’m here to announce,”
she said cheerily several times to groups of nurses
who gathered
at the nursing stations she visited, “that we
are Magnet nurses at a Magnet hospital.” With
this long-awaited news, the nurses realized that
NYU Medical Center had just been admitted
to a highly select group of hospitals and medical centers
honored for their excellence in nursing.
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She
Floats Like a Butterfly, Too
Khaliah Ali,
daughter of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, says her bout
with obesity began in childhood. But the successful
plus-size model and fashion designer was determined
not to be a heavyweight.

In August 2004 she underwent bariatric surgery at NYU
Medical Center, having a silicon, ring-shaped device
called a lap-band installed around the top portion of
her stomach. As shown here six months later, she’s
well on her way to championship condition.
More
about weightloss
surgery ay NYU >>
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The
Heart's Surgeons
On
a recent Friday morning in an operating room on the
fifth floor of Tisch Hospital, a group of cardiac surgeons
huddled around a 79-year-old man whose heart was in
need of mitral valve repair. The right side of his chest
already bore a four-inch-long incision, the portal for
the life-saving surgery that was about to begin. On
overhead video monitors, his heart was clearly visible
to everyone in the room. Then all eyes turned to chief
surgeon Aubrey C. Galloway Jr., M.D., who was using
special elongated instruments to make an incredibly
delicate cut in the heart’s left atrium.

Surgeons in the newly created
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery perform more than
1,800 operations annually. Many take place in the ORs
on the fifth floor of Tisch Hospital. One such operation
is pictured above.
To the onlookers in the room—some
of the more than 200 surgeons who have come from around
the globe to learn this procedure—that was the
moment they had been waiting for. But to Dr. Galloway,
it was all in a day’s work. He and his colleague,
Stephen B. Colvin, M.D., the first Chairman of the newly
created Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, have performed
thousands of such mitral valve repairs, often working
in adjoining ORs. Using a device they developed, they
inserted into the heart’s mitral valve a kind
of internal scaffolding that enables the valve to maintain
its shape and to keep it working efficiently.
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