Faces of Care Shines Light on ‘Behind the Scenes’ Staff at Mount Sinai

Faces of Care is a unique series of eight moving, short videos featuring employees who work for the Mount Sinai Health System. These employees are professionals, deeply dedicated to their crafts. The videos show that every employee plays an integral role in delivering safe, high- quality, seamless care, and they underscore the importance of the essential services these employees provide.

“I’m going to prep the instruments as best I can, as fast as I can, because that’s the way I would want to be treated. I’m playing a part in that. I’m helping people. We’re saving lives.” -Leahcim Francis, Central Sterile Technician

The first set of videos focus on employees at Mount Sinai Morningside, including those responsible for everything from sterilizing instruments to operating a PET CT scan to waste removal, and they show how all Mount Sinai employees, no matter their task, keep the patient at the center of their work.

Sanford Lapsley, a high-pressure boiler operating engineer who is one of the featured employees, is part of a team that operates on the hospital’s roof 24 hours a day.

“We’re responders. We feel what we do is important to the whole operation of Mount Sinai,” he says. “We give you heat, we give you steam, and we help cure patients.”

As Mount Sinai Morningside’s Chief Transformation Office, Lucy Xenophon, MD, often goes to see staff in the place where their work is done. She says she is impressed and humbled by their determination, skill, and kindheartedness. She realizes that some roles are almost invisible to the public.

“When I found out that there is someone who stays on the roof of the hospital 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to ensure steam is available for essential operations, I was determined to find a way to tell this story and stories like these,” said Dr. Xenophon.

Dr. Xenophon continued, “We must appreciate the value of our people—their fascinating work and their inspiring accomplishments. There is so much value in shining a spotlight on those who work behind the scenes in critical roles that keep our hospital and health system running.”

Director/Filmmaker Sean O’Neill created the videos in conjunction with the Mount Sinai Video Production Department led by Nicole “Nicci” Cheatham, Video Studio Manager.

“We chose Sean because of his commitment to creating authentic videos,” said Ms. Cheatham. “The choice to film the staff in their workplace and utilize the natural sounds of their environment provides a true look into the subjects’ day-to-day work life.”

“What struck me in watching the videos is the direct connection all of these staff have to healing patients and improving health,” said Arthur A. Gianelli, President, Mount Sinai Morningside. “The sense of duty and passion of people throughout the hospital has always awed me—and it is clearly evident in these videos.” The series is being expanded across the Mount Sinai Health System.

In addition to Mr. Lapsley, the video series features:

Hilary Bogert, Speech Language Pathologist

Douglas Burgos, Patient Representative

Marita Cuenca, Laboratory Technologist

Leahcim Francis, Central Sterile Technician

Sehar Khan, PET CT Technologist

Joseph McSherry, Mechanic Foreman

Edgardo Valentin, Environmental Services, Waste Removal

Mount Sinai Recognized by Healthcare Digital Marketing Awards

Mount Sinai’s Central Marketing and Communications team received three “Gold” honors in the Third Annual Healthcare Digital Marketing Awards.

Mount Sinai was recognized for its COVID-19 response and the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Facts and Resources web page; for its Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion web page; and for eNewsletter campaigns for The Friedman Brain Institute and the Light and Health Research Center. The Mount Sinai Health System was the only New York City health system to be honored.

The goal for the COVID-19 site was to provide all Mount Sinai’s communities with accurate information on how to get the information they need—whether it is how to get care, testing, vaccinations—in a “one stop shop” site. The site had 1.6 million visitors from January to August.

The Diversity, Equity and Inclusion page was designed to raise awareness of how Mount Sinai integrates DEI into its everyday interactions in quality patient care, the workplace, education, and research. The site had more than 3,000 visitors from January to August.

The Friedman Brain Institute specialty report newsletter was sent to 3,000 researchers, and the monthly HealthCast Professionals eNewsletter for the Light and Health Research Center was sent to 5,000 researchers. Both were designed to help with the position and branding of the organizations.

The Healthcare Digital Marketing Awards recognizes the best health care websites, digital content, electronic communications, mobile media, and social media. The awards are sponsored by HMR Publications Group.

Entries were received from nearly 1,000 health care and medical institutions across the country. The HDMAwards were judged by a national panel of health care marketers, creative directors, and marketing and advertising professionals.

Gold awards were granted to 161 institutions, Silver awards were awarded to 82 institutions, and Bronze awards were awarded to 47 institutions.

Janet Anne Green Remarks to the Graduating Class of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing

These prepared remarks were delivered by Janet A. Green, Co-Chair, Board Member, Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing, at the 120th Commencement of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing on Thursday, December 15.

Janet A. Green, Co-Chair, Board Member, Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing

Janet A. Green, Co-Chair, Board Member, Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing

Until my mother’s passing in September, 2021, it was she who delivered this greeting to all of you on behalf of our family. I was always enthralled listening to Carol Phillips Green retell the tale of our family and how we became staunch supporters of New York City health care and this school of nursing. Truthfully, of all of the ways I’ve had to attempt to fill her shoes, this speech is the hardest.

Before we begin this ceremony of graduation, I would like to carve out a brief moment in remembrance of my dear grandfather, Seymour Phillips, the man who was honored by having his name linked to the nursing school from which you are graduating today. The Phillips School of Nursing… many of you may have wondered about this man who was so greatly honored by having this school named after him. I have been assured and reassured that no matter which hospital group becomes our umbrella institution, we will always remain the Phillips School of Nursing, and that is a commitment and promise that will be kept.

It is now 35 years since my grandfather’s death—a minute and a lifetime. Possibly the way you feel today looking back on this time you have spent at the Phillips School of Nursing—a minute and a lifetime. Take a moment to think about how different you are with this knowledge and with the friendships you have created here!

The number of generations that our family has been a part of Beth Israel, its nursing school, and New York City health care is now five. I proudly represent the fifth generation as co-chair of your Nursing School Board, serving with the amazing and dedicated Ruth Nerken who has her own compelling tale of philanthropy and service to community to tell. We represent your interests and needs to the Mount Sinai Health System, and even though you may not see us wandering the halls, we have been there with you in spirit every day. And it gives me great, great pride that my daughter, Kristine Mikkelsen, has recently joined the Board representing the sixth generation of our family. Really, it leaves me kind of speechless.

As President of the Phillips-Green Foundation, it is my honor to keep the generations of our family informed about this school, our students, scholars, and graduates. I send regards and congratulations from our seven Directors on this milestone in your lives.

As so as many of you and your families have come from other countries, so too, my grandfather’s grandfather, Moses Phillips, his wife, Endel, and three sons, came to America in 1881 as penniless immigrants from Poland.

President Theodore Roosevelt with supporters at the groundbreaking of Beth Israel Hospital in New York, including Isaac Phillips, the second person to the left of the president

The family first settled in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, where a cousin was living. As there was not much work in this community for a cantor, a singer in the synagogue, he bought his wife, Endel, a sewing machine, and Moses, from his pushcart, sold the shirts his wife made to the coal miners emerging from the mines with their Friday paychecks. A business was born there.

In the 1890’s my great, great grandfather, Moses, moved the family and the business to New York City, where he helped open an infirmary on the Lower East Side to help care for and train immigrants that had arrived here from all over the world. Twenty years later, his son, Isaac, helped raise the money and turned the first shovel of dirt for the new Beth Israel Hospital at 17th Street and First Avenue—proudly standing next to Theodore Roosevelt, the newly elected President of the United States. Can we even possibly imagine the pride of this immigrant and the honor he felt at that moment? There is a photo of this event in the Phillips display case on the main floor of the school, and I hope you will pause for a moment to look at it the next time you pass by.

After Isaac’s too early death, my grandfather, Seymour, then in his early 20’s, came to work in what we still lovingly think of as “the family shirt business” which eventually morphed into the Phillips Van Heusen Shirt Company. But Seymour devoted his free time to his real love: the Beth Israel Hospital and the Nursing School whose Committee he chaired for 37 years until his death in 1987. There are some great stories of Seymour on that Board as he championed nurses and nursing education, saving the school from budget axes and closure in the 1970’s because some others couldn’t see the value added, only the expense. That we are standing here to honor you today is a testament to what can happen when you stand up to the naysayers.

During each of those 37 years, my grandfather presided over these graduations, and he and his wife, Madelyn, warmly hosted dinner dances for the graduates in their Park Avenue apartment, and occasionally I still hear from alumni that remember those evenings. In the three plus decades after Seymour’s passing, my mother delivered this message of welcome to the graduates and their families, and to hopefully give you a sense of my grandfather’s extraordinary life.

Graduation was the favorite day in Seymour’s busy year. He loved this school, its staff and faculty, and he especially loved its graduates. It was the highlight of his very full life when he was honored by having this nursing school bear his name.

This section of my remarks come directly from my mother—her sentiments so beautiful they need no improvement: As I look out at your beautiful faces today and feel the love of your families who now sit behind you, but who have stood behind you during these difficult years of education, we realize that you represent the very best of our country and the hope for its future. If America could look and act as this class does… with love and respect for each other, with strong support and caring concern for community, faculty and family, then we will have deserved the continuing blessings of this great country.

I am truly sorry that you did not get a chance to know my grandfather or mother. But today, we are even sorrier that they did not know you.

So on behalf of my dear grandfather, Seymour Phillips, whose memory I do invoke for this brief moment, and for my mother, Carol and all of our family, I salute each of you… and on with the ceremony.

 

Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing Celebrates Commencement

The Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing celebrated 150 new graduates at its 120th Commencement in a joyous ceremony that spotlighted the critical role nurses play in supporting patients and improving health care. The ceremony was held Thursday, December 15, at Stern Auditorium, when degrees were awarded to 100 students from the December 2022 Class and 50 students from the August 2022 Class.

One of the reasons for joy was that all of the graduates have received offers for positions at the Mount Sinai Heath System.

For example, Blair Paltrowitz, the August valedictorian, is working at Mount Sinai South Nassau in labor and delivery, a favorite assignment for many nursing graduates.

Ms. Paltrowitz, who had been an actress on Broadway and in television, was inspired to become a nurse thanks to the care she received during her own labor and delivery experiences at Mount Sinai.

“It was extremely important to me to start my career as a Mount Sinai nurse,” she said in an interview before the ceremony.  “I knew I would be embraced there as a new nurse, and learn from some of the most brilliant minds in the field. I also knew from my clinical experience how the nurses all work as a team at Mount Sinai, and I was eager to be a part of that culture. My new position at Mount Sinai South Nassau has been incredibly rewarding and challenging in the best way possible.”

Andy Charlorin, who is graduating in December, also is looking forward to working at Mount Sinai. “It was important to me to receive an offer from Mount Sinai because their pipeline for students shows their confidence and commitment to their education system,” he said in an interview. “I can’t wait to get started.”

Todd F. Ambrosia, DNP, MSN, FNAP, Dean of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing and Vice President of Nursing Academic Affairs at the Mount Sinai Health System

Todd F. Ambrosia, DNP, MSN, FNAP, Dean of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing and Vice President of Nursing Academic Affairs at the Mount Sinai Health System, presided over the ceremony. “It is definitely a unique time for nursing, as our health care landscape is ever changing and evolving in response to highly critical situations. But it’s every part of who you are becoming, and I thank you for rising to the challenge with such courage,” he told the the graduates, guests, faculty, and staff. “For all of us—if there was ever a time when we needed to come together and say we will make space for humanity in our care, and let it transform us into a more compassionate, courageous, resilient community, this is the time. And we are the ones to do it.”

Beth Oliver, DNP, RN, FAAN, Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Executive, Mount Sinai Health System, told the graduates they have a unique opportunity.

Beth Oliver, DNP, RN, FAAN, Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Executive, Mount Sinai Health System

“During this time of unprecedented transformation in health care, you are entering our nursing profession with an incredible opportunity to leave a mark and make a difference in the lives of others.  As graduates of Mount Sinai’s Phillips School of Nursing, each of you has learned how to use your knowledge, compassion, and skills to contribute to public good,” she said. “Our world continues to face uncertain times, and your commitment to answer the call to help and serve those in need is noble and courageous. Your graduation starts your lifelong journey of continuous professional learning and reflects your resilience and determination.”

A ritual at commencement is a greeting from the Phillips-Green family, as the history of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing has been intertwined with the Phillips family for more than six generations. The school is named for Seymour Phillips, who served as a hospital trustee for more than 50 years and chaired the school’s Trustee Committee for 37 years. This year, the greeting was delivered by Janet A. Green, Co-Chair of the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing Board and granddaughter of Seymour Phillips. Her mother had spoken for many years before her death in September 2021.

“This section of my remarks come directly from my mother—her sentiments so beautiful they need no improvement: As I look out at your beautiful faces today and feel the love of your families who now sit behind you but who have stood behind you during these difficult years of education, we realize that you represent the very best of our country and the hope for its future,” she said. “If America could look and act as this class does…with love and respect for each other, with strong support and caring concern for community, faculty, and family, then we will have deserved the continuing blessings of this great country.” (Click here to read her full speech).

In the keynote address, Lorraine McGrath, MA, RN-BC, Senior Director of Clinical Affairs and Associate Professor at the Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing, where she has worked for 40 years, told the graduates that one of the highlights of her career has been meeting graduates who become nurses throughout the Mount Sinai Health System and other leading New York hospitals. She has taught generations of students, many times parents and then their children and their older and younger siblings—including the mother of one the current graduates, and her aunts.

Lorraine McGrath, MA, RN-BC, Senior Director of Clinical Affairs and Associate Professor

She urged the graduates to keep in mind the interest and needs of their patients. “My advice for you is to be caring and compassionate, to be able to think critically and problem solve, take the initiative in patient care, collaborate with the health care team and most importantly to be a strong patient advocate,” she said. “There are so many patients today who do not have a voice…now that is you, the RN.”

The student speaker, Brittany Robinson, salutatorian of the December class, noted in her remarks what an honor it is for the graduates to embark on a career in nursing, well prepared for the challenges ahead. While at the School, she said, students had “bonded over our passion for social justice and equality, and honed a competency and passion for nursing” that will help countless patients.

Following the presentation of the graduating class and conferring of degrees, Vice Dean Laly Joseph, DVM, DNP, CNE, RN-C, MSN, APRN, ANP-BC, FNAP, and Assistant Professor, Carla Santos MS, NPD-BC, NC-BC, CCRN, distributed awards to graduating students, and Lynn Rubenstein, MA, RN, Professor Emeritus, Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing, delivered the international pledge for nurses.

The following awards were announced (August Class, December Class):

Seymour Phillips Award (valedictorian): Blair Paltrowitz, Paola Coronel

Paula and Sherman Raskin Award for Maternal and Child Nursing: Noa Allen, Doris Arias-Bonilla

Paula and Sherman Raskin Award for Academic and Clinical Excellence in Nursing: Fana Dealla, Sarin Grey

Eileen Melnick Award for Compassion in Psychiatric Care: Patrice Stellato, Molly Beitchman

Eileen Melnick Team Spirit Award: Veronica Javellana, Marvin Anderson

Dean’s Award for Professionalism: Daniel Angielczyk, Courtney Hart

Rose Hauer Award, given by the Alumni Association based on the vote of students: Julie Huang, Andy Charlorin

(Rose M. Hauer, RN, MA, was the Dean at the School and Nursing Director at Mount Sinai Beth Israel for more than 40 years. The honorees are selected by a vote of the graduating class for the student who made an outstanding contribution.)

The Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing was approved this year to charter a chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing. A total of 31 students and 9 nursing leaders were inducted.

These classes are the first to graduate from the School’s new, cutting-edge facility in East Harlem. It includes a high-tech simulation lab and classrooms to prepare nurses to meet the health care challenges of the day. Graduates come from all over the country, represent a variety of backgrounds and ages, and have different reasons for wanting to become nurses.

All graduates of the 2022 class are a part of the Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing (ABSN), a program to support and train nurses with the flexibility they need to succeed. It is one of two programs the school offers, along with an RN-to-BSN program.

 

Emergency Medicine Team From Mount Sinai Morningside and Mount Sinai West Volunteer to Care for Runners at the NYC Marathon

For more than a decade, Mount Sinai Morningside and Mount Sinai West have put together their own teams for the New York City Marathon. But instead of running, these are teams of volunteers who care for the runners.

The interdisciplinary team, with emergency medicine providers, nurses, and trainees, work together to provide care. Robert Hoke, MD, Associate Director of the Division of Emergency Medicine Services and Disaster Preparedness for Mount Sinai Health System and Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, has participated for the last two years and helps lead the efforts.

Robert Hoke, MD

He explains what it’s like behind the scenes as they set up at the finish line in Central Park.

To be ready for the first runners to cross the finish line, they assemble around 8 am. The set up involves arranging seats and cots, coordinating with the pharmacy, and checking ice baths.  A few hours later, when the first runners cross the finish line, it’s starting time for them.

“As a practicing emergency physician, we see patients when they are at their most vulnerable. At the marathon we get to see patients on their best day,” he says. “Throughout the day we treat runners and hear their stories, all tremendously varied but somehow still leading them to the same wonderful goal.  The race day concludes much later in the day, with the overall excitement of each runner driving us through.  Overall, the day can be difficult, but for all of those reasons it is magical to take part in.”

World AIDS Day: An Opportunity to Remember for Those on the Front Lines of HIV/AIDS Treatment and Research

December 1 is World AIDS Day. Since it was first observed in 1988, the day has been an opportunity to spotlight the efforts to prevent, treat, and someday cure HIV, and to remember those lost to AIDS-related illnesses.

This year, Mount Sinai employees who have been on the front lines in HIV/AIDS treatment and research for decades—including those at the Institute for Advanced Medicine, which has been a leader since the 1980s—were asked to share what this day means to them. Here is what they wrote.

Judith A. Aberg, MD

Judith A. Aberg, MD, Dean of System Operations for Clinical Sciences, Chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases, Dr. George Baehr Professor of Clinical Medicine

My first engagement with HIV/AIDS was in 1981 as a microbiologist working in Richmond, Virginia, as reports of pneumocystis pneumonia and cryptosporidium were increasing among gay men. Given my background in microbiology, I entered medical school with the intent to become an infectious diseases physician. My rotations during medical school continued to drive my interest in HIV for several reasons. One, the patients were my peers by age, and the devastation of seeing them suffer in the absence of effective therapies was heartbreaking. Two, there was so much misinformation, fear, and stigma associated with HIV that compelled me to gain knowledge to combat social injustice and inequities in health care. Third, persons with AIDS had infections that I had a strong scientific interest in and would eventually lead me from initial plans of having a lab to conducting clinical trials in search of more effective therapies.

World AIDS Day to me is a way for us to say “we will never forget” and to continue our fight against AIDS. There remains too much morbidity, mortality, and stigma among persons with HIV. I keep a slide of Ryan White at the end of my talks related to HIV, and my closing line has been that I will remove it when there is no more stigma. I still show it today. Ryan was 13 when he was diagnosed with AIDS in December 1984 and faced unbelievable discrimination. Congress passed the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act in August 1990, four months after Ryan died. We cannot forget how far we have come and how much further we must go.

I joined Mount Sinai in January 2014 as the merger among several hospitals was occurring and we would be providing care to more than 10,000 persons with HIV. This was an opportunity for my research team to offer enrollment in clinical trials throughout the Mount Sinai Health System in order to reach more populations affected by HIV in search of less toxic and better-tolerated therapies for HIV, treatments for comorbidities, and strategies for a cure. We are proud of our accomplishments, having enrolled more than 1,000 patients of diverse backgrounds of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, religion, and socioeconomic status who have contributed to new strategies and licensing of new therapies.

I am blessed that I was friends with Robert Zackin, ScD, who was the first successful heart transplant in a person with AIDS who had a history of Kaposi sarcoma, cytomegalovirus, and disseminated MAC infection at the Cleveland Clinic. No one thought such a transplant could be done in these circumstances. While Robert unfortunately succumbed to a transplant-related infection 3½ years later, he paved the way for others to follow. I miss him every day.

Matthew Baney, MS

Matthew Baney, MS, Director, Institute for Advanced Medicine

I began working in the HIV/AIDS field in 1985. My motivation for doing so was very personal: I had lost many friends and two partners to the infection. I am most proud of the response we brought back in the early stages of the epidemic, addressing a health emergency in the community with care, compassion, and love. The same approach continues today in our work.

World AIDS Day helps remind us that the fight is not over with respect to HIV. People are living with the infection, while others continue to be infected. There is still plenty of work to do. The world has changed since the early stages of the epidemic, and the provision of health care has changed as well. It was forced to change, and we have improved our efforts on behalf of all patients.

Mount Sinai was one of the first institutions to address HIV/AIDS, and the system treated every patient as any other, once again with quality care and compassion. We brought equality to medical care, treating everyone as individuals in need. We equalized. Once again, we continue that approach today.

I have dedicated my professional career to the field of HIV/AIDS with the hope that in my lifetime there would be a cure. I still have the hope for the future. For my friends and my loved ones, I never forget you.

Michael Mullen, MD

Michael Mullen, MD, Executive Director, Institute for Advanced Medicine, Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases)

I have been working in this field for nearly 40 years. It has been an incredible journey. Before the development of effective treatment, an AIDS diagnosis was considered a “death sentence.” Those years were devastating. I lost so many patients, family members, a majority of my friends, and many colleagues. The numbers continued to increase over time. I remember losing five patients in one day. There was very little time to deal with the grief and loss.

Fortunately, effective treatments came into play, and it was astonishing to witness a uniformly fatal disease largely reverse its course. That being said, I can never forget those terrible days and those brave individuals who succumbed to this disease. In fact, my tears are flowing as I’m writing this.

World AIDS Day is a time to remember those lost and to spread awareness of the need to continue efforts on HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. The number of new infections are overwhelmingly seen in communities that experience discrimination and exclusion. This is another example of disparities in health care. If we are going to see an end to this epidemic, there need to be continued efforts to advocate for funding and resources to address this need.

Many medical centers have closed their HIV/AIDS treatment centers, but Mount Sinai Health  System’s leadership has continued to support specialized clinics for HIV/AIDS education, treatment, and prevention. Cheers to Mount Sinai!

Lorna Gottesman, LMSW

Lorna Gottesman, LMSW, Social Worker

In 1990, I started volunteering in what we then called “the fight against AIDS.” I was part of the Gay Men’s Health Crisis Buddy Program, providing one-on-one support to a person living with AIDS. I was also a peer educator at the Columbia University Gay Health Advocacy Project and sat in the back of Act Up meetings.

It was a way for me to find queer community in New York, and I was drawn to the work because HIV is the intersection of the most important issues in our culture. To really fight AIDS, I need to be anti-racist, and I need to be fighting homophobia and sexism, and I try to keep that the focus of my practice. I feel lucky that I can work one-on-one with people and be working for a better world.

My first job in HIV was at a shelter for homeless people with HIV/AIDS. From there, I went on to work at several small AIDS service organizations including the PWA Health Group (a buyer club started by Michael Callen that provided access to medications before they were approved by the Food and Drug Administration); the Women’s Prison Association; and WORLD (Women Organized to Respond to Life-Threatening Disease) in Oakland, California, started by a personal hero, Rebecca Denison. I also helped start SMART University in East Harlem.

I’ve worked at Mount Sinai’s Samuels Clinic for more than 19 years. I enjoy the mix of patients we have. I like that I never quite know what my workday will hold, and I’m grateful that my patients and coworkers trust me enough to keep teaching me. And I remember my friends Judith, Cherie, Dale, Bunny, Petra, Tommy, and so many others.

Dale Mandelman, RN

Dale Mandelman, RN, Manager, Patient Care Services

I was working in the former Beth Israel Medical Center Emergency Department in 1984, and it seemed as though we were taking care of many people who were very ill and with what? After a while, HIV was named. At the same time, I had made the switch to the clinic and left the Emergency Department. It felt like the right fit for me. Sadly, people were so sick, and the intimacy created between staff and patients was so intense. There was tremendous loss.

Many people were estranged from their families, and we often became substitutes. But a wonderful thing started to happen. New medications were being developed, and people were living longer with a better quality of life. Today, most people can do well by taking one pill daily. Being a nurse at the Peter Krueger Clinic could not be surpassed, in that we made a difference, got a lot of love, gave it back, and helped people accept their illness and how to best deal with it. It’s been one of the highlights of my life, and certainly as a nurse.

Dina Franchi, LCSW

Dina Franchi, LCSW, Assistant Director, Social Work

I have been working at the Peter Krueger Clinic and with people who are HIV positive since 1991. Prior to coming to Mount Sinai Beth Israel, I was working in a therapeutic community for people with addictions, and this was when I first encountered HIV and people who were infected with this illness. I was working with people who could not overcome their addictions and were now sick and, unfortunately, many were dying.

I began working at the Clinic because I wanted to provide support and caring to those ill with HIV and work with their families to educate them about this illness, and to break down the stigma associated with HIV. Mount Sinai Beth Israel was a leader in HIV care, and we worked not only with people who were HIV positive but also with their families. The work we do made and continues to make a difference in the lives of our patients.

Over the years, treatments for HIV have been able to provide people infected with HIV the ability to live their lives, not focusing on illness but on living life. I continue to see patients I first worked with when I started working at the Clinic. So, when I was asked about what World AIDS Day means to me, it means several things: Remembrance of those who lost their lives battling this illness; not forgetting how this fight started; resilience for the strength people with HIV have; and life itself.

I continue to hope for a cure for HIV, and I do hope it happens in my lifetime.

Sally Parisi-Esposito, RN

Sally Parisi-Esposito, RN, Mount Sinai Beth Israel / Peter Krueger Clinic

I have been part of Beth Israel since 1986, when I attended nursing school. I began working at the Peter Krueger Clinic in 1991 because I wanted to make a difference. When I started working, people died from being HIV positive, but now they live. I am proud to be a part of Beth Israel, an institution that was not afraid to do what was right.

Scott Barnett

Scott Barnett, Program Coordinator

Since 2018 I have been a Program Coordinator at the Mount Sinai Comprehensive Health Program in Chelsea. My current role is working with the Mount Sinai emergency departments and facilitating linkage to HIV treatment and prevention services. My career in HIV spans 30 years, having been a clinical research study coordinator and then an outreach coordinator, recruiting all communities to participate in the research process.

As a gay man who lived in Key West from 1982 to 1990, I witnessed the loss of an entire generation of young men. I have a photograph of me and 13 friends taken at a pool party in 1984. By 1989, five years later, only one other person and I  were still alive. Also in 1984, I met the man with whom I would spend the next 16 years. Tim was diagnosed with advanced AIDS in 1991, and we moved to Baltimore to be near his family. He became a patient in the HIV clinic at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, and I started my career in HIV there as a volunteer. After his self-described “going away party,” Tim passed away at home with me in 2000, just before his 40th birthday.

Beginning with the approval of the first “cocktail” medications, through today’s powerful single-pill HIV treatments and now pre-and post-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP and PEP) to prevent infection, we have the ability to end the AIDS epidemic by making sure all people know their status. That all people living with HIV have equal access to care and treatment. That all individuals who feel at risk of infection have equal access to prevention services. And that all people have the same opportunity to be as healthy as possible.

I commemorate World AIDS Day 2022 by remembering all those whom we have lost, and by retaining joy for all those who remain HIV negative.

Janet Goldberg

Janet Goldberg, Development and Communications Director

I began working in the HIV/AIDS field in 1987. AIDS was insane at that point, with more than 50 patients in the hospital on one day, and people dying every day. We attended many advocacy meetings, and heard stories from around the world. One meeting was with a country’s leadership who were planning to isolate everyone with HIV in a camp to stop AIDS from spreading–alarming!

There were so many positive outcomes from those days: harm-reduction practices, needle exchanges, fast tracking of medication in trial in order to get it to people in need faster. I am always astounded by how much we have done, and how many of the struggles are still the same.

What keeps me going is the people—patients and staff—their passion, dedication, perseverance, and skill and ability to think outside the box to ensure that services are being developed and delivered in a way that meets clients’ needs. Truly inspiring.

World AIDS Day always brings me back to the beginning, reading all the names, the quilt when it first started, developing our service networks, developing services. How much we have accomplished, and how much there is to do. We have lowered infection rates and improved treatments—but we need a cure. That’s my hope; that this will happen soon.

Oscar Klein, MD

Oscar Klein, MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases)

I have been involved with HIV/AIDS care since the beginning of the epidemic while in medical school in the early 1980s.

I was a resident and an attending physician at St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York during the worst of the epidemic, and I have continued to provide HIV care, which I proudly do at Mount Sinai. It is now, mostly, an outpatient chronic condition.

World AIDS Day allows us to focus on all the progress we have made, the ongoing improvements in the lives of people living with HIV, and to remember the work we have to do to expand the ability of all people with HIV to get the care they need.

I have always believed that it is a privilege to be able to work in the medical field. It has given me great satisfaction to be able to be involved in important moments and decisions in a patient’s life, and to feel that I have had a great impact on their sense of well-being.

I believe that our combined efforts in the labs, in clinical care, in protesting and organizing, and enlarging the circle of care will one day eradicate this epidemic.

Michael DeVidas, DSW, LCSW

Michael DeVidas, DSW, LCSW, Director of Social Work Services for Comprehensive Health Program and Jack Martin Clinic-Outpatient and Inpatient Practices

I’ve been at Mount Sinai for 20 years and a social worker for 38 years.

As a gay man in his early 20s, I have experienced the AIDS crisis since the early 1980s when clients with whom I worked, as well as friends, often died with little to no treatment available. The protesting and fighting to get medications approved for HIV and trying to keep people alive remains a struggle even now, based on one’s life circumstances and where you live. I became a social worker to make a difference in people’s lives. I have great admiration for long-term survivors of HIV/AIDS because I saw what they went through from the early days of the epidemic.

Mount Sinai became a leader in the battle to care for people with HIV. Since 1992, the Jack Martin Clinic and the inpatient service were models of HIV care in managing and advocating for the patients who came though Mount Sinai. When Mount Sinai added the St. Vincent’s Hospital HIV practice in 2010, our practice grew into the Institute for Advanced Medicine, serving more than 10,000 patients. I have great admiration for the providers, nurses, social workers, and other staff who show their dedication each day to keep our patients alive and thriving.

At this late stage of my social work career, I hope and pray a cure for HIV comes to fruition. I often think of all those patients and friends who lost their lives to AIDS.  They are always missed.

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