Tufts-New England Medical Center
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Tufts-New England Medical Center (Tufts-NEMC) is a medical institution in Boston, Massachusetts. It is a center for research and is the principal teaching hospital for Tufts University School of Medicine where all full-time Tufts-NEMC physicians hold faculty appointments.[1]
Tufts-NEMC it is subdivided into a full service adult hospital and the Floating Hospital for Children, a full-service pediatric facility. In 1992, with the addition of a maternity service, Tufts-NEMC became the first private, full-service medical facility in Boston.[1]
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[edit] Research
Tufts-NEMC has a history of achievement in scientific research and clinical advances. Tufts-NEMC research led to the discovery of drugs that prevent the body’s rejection of transplanted organs, coining the term "immunosuppression," and also brought to light the link between obesity and heart disease. Tufts-NEMC ranks among the top 5 percent of the nation’s institutions that receive federal research funds[1]
[edit] Numbers
Tufts-NEMC has a total of 451 licensed beds: 210 medical/surgical beds, 46 adult intensive care beds, 66 pediatric beds (including 12 pediatric psychiatric beds), 62 pediatric and neonatal intensive care beds, 23 post-partum beds, 20 adult psychiatric beds, and 24 infant bassinets.[1]
[edit] Emergency medicine
The Emergency Department (ED) is equipt for the evaluation, resuscitation and stabilization of patients of all ages who present with acute illness or injury. The Floating Hospital for Children is the home of the Kiwanis Pediatric Trauma Institute and is a Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center. Tufts-New England Medical Center is part of the consortium of hospitals which operates Boston MedFlight..[2]
[edit] Location
The institution is located in downtown Boston, next to Chinatown and the Theater District and within walking distance of the Boston Common, Downtown Crossing, and many hotels and restaurants.