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Jewish Health System Inc company history timeline

1855

In 1855, that vision came to fruition with the establishment of the 45-bed Jews' Hospital in New York in what was then a rural neighborhood on West 28th Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues.

1866

After this, to reflect its broadened mission and to ensure its eligibility for state and city support, the Jews' Hospital formally abandoned its sectarian charter in 1866 and was renamed The Mount Sinai Hospital.

1881

In 1881, a training school for nurses was established, introducing professional nursing care to a facility previously served by untrained male and female attendants.

1887

1887—Published the first description in the United States on familial amaurotic idiocy, later renamed Tay-Sachs disease.

1888

1888—Published the first book in the United States on aseptic and antiseptic principles.

1889

She found support from the Jewish community, which, in November 1889, agreed to plan, fund and build a nonsectarian hospital for the treatment of respiratory diseases, primarily tuberculosis.

1892

1892—Performed the first successful mastoidectomy in the United States.

1893

In an unfortunate coincidence, however, 1893 also marked the start of a nationwide recession prompted by the Silver Crisis.

1899

In December 1899 the first patient, a Minnesota woman, checked into the new National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives under its official motto: "None may enter who can pay—none can pay who enter.”

National Jewish Health began serving patients in 1899 in response to the great number of destitute individuals suffering from tuberculosis (then known as consumption) who flocked to Denver for the climate's supposed beneficial effect on respiratory diseases.

When funds dried up, the hospital remained empty until 1899, when the National Jewish B'nai B'rith organization was persuaded by Denver Rabbi William Friedman and Louis Anfenger to undertake the opening and maintenance of the hospital.

1901

1901—Performed the first successful abdominal colectomy for colitis in the United States.

1903

The collection highlights the efforts of the Jewish Hospital Association, incorporated in 1903, to build and manage a hospital that met the medical needs of both the Jewish community in Louisville and a general patient population.

1904

In 1904, the new 456-bed, 10-pavilion Mount Sinai Hospital was dedicated on Fifth Avenue at 100th Street.

1905

The association’s efforts led to the opening of Jewish Hospital in 1905 as a 32-bed institution at the corner of Floyd and Kentucky streets.

Jewish Hospital established a Training School for Nurses, with its first graduating class in 1905.

1907

Metropolitan Jewish Health System began in 1907 and today is an integrated system that includes short-term and long-term care programs, adult day health care centers, palliative and hospice programs, skilled nursing facilities and managed care programs.

In an effort to help the hospital’s patients balance their medical and social needs, a department of Social Work Services was created in 1907.

1908

1908—Published the first mention of using a blood test for compatibility before human blood transfusion.

1910

1910—Identified endemic form of typhus fever (Brill's disease).

1911

Folder 304: Minute Book Materials, 1911.

1911—Developed the first cystoscope for children.

1912

Folder 303: Minute Book Materials, 1912.

By 1912, through investments, the endowment had increased to more than $2 million.

1913

Folder 302: Minute Book Materials, 1913.

1914

Folder 301: Minute Book Materials, 1914.

1914—Invented the first modern electric ophthalmoscope.

1915

Folder 300: Minute Book Materials, 1915.

1915—Described the minimum amount of citrate required to prevent blood from clotting, making indirect transfusion possible and practical, and allowing blood to be stored for later transfusion.

1916

Folder 299: Minute Book Materials, 1916.

The latter is supported by the Auxiliary Board, which was formed in 1916 to provide financial support and labor resources to social service-related activities at the Hospital.

1917

Folder 298: Minute Book Materials, 1917.

1918

Also of note are discussions in 1918 regarding the offer of a $100,000 donation from brothers Bernard and I. W. Bernheim, along with their request that the hospital be renamed Bernheim Memorial Hospital in honor of their parents.

Folder 297: Minute Book Materials, 1918.

Barnes Hospital dealt with the deadly Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918.

1919

Folder 296: Minute Book Materials, 1919.

1919—Introduced the use of peruterine insufflation of the fallopian tubes for the diagnosis and treatment of sterility in women (Rubin test.

1919—Performed experimental transmission of encephalitis lethargica.

1920

Folder 295: Minute Book Materials, 1920.

1923

1923—Became the first in the United States to publish on gastrectomy—a new surgical procedure for duodenal ulcers.

1925

His innovations included in 1925 developing a method to image the gallbladder by x-ray, paving the way for successful gallbladder surgery.

1925—Published the first textbook in the United States on thoracic surgery.

1925—Published description of a new lymphatic system disease, later expanded by Douglas Symmers's work, later known as Brill-Symmers disease and then nodular lymphoma.

1926

1926—Developed test to measure estrogen levels in circulating blood.

1927

When it opened in 1927, the new hospital was hailed for its elegant design and functional innovations, winning the Modern Hospital of the Year award from the American Hospital Association.

1929

1929—Developed the first cardiac stress test, the Master Two-Step.

1930

1930—Published the first textbook in the United States on pediatric urology.

1932

1932—Published the first description of regional enteritis—an inflammatory disease of the intestine (Crohn's disease).

1932—Established bronchial adenoma as a clinical and anatomic entity.

1933

1933—Published the first description of a total pneumonectomy in the United States.

1933—Introduced Hippuran as a radio-opaque medium.

1934

1934—Described the first clinically applicable method for measuring the circulation time to the right heart.

1935

1935—Published the first description of the vascular lesions in lupus.

1937

The hospital endured through financial deficits, the Great Depression, and the damage of the Ohio River flood of 1937.

1939

Folder 16: Executive Committee Minutes, 1939.

1940

Folder 17: Jewish Hospital Association By-Laws, 1940.

1940—Published the first description of eosinophilic granuloma of bone as a distinct entity.

1941

Folder 20: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1941.

1942

Folder 22: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1942.

1942—Published the first description of collagen disease.

1943

Folder 24: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1943.

1944

Folder 31: Medical Council Minutes, 1944.

In 1944, Jewish Hospital became one of the first in the country to use penicillin to treat patients.

1944—Inhibited tumor growth by using a folic acid concentrate.

1945

Folder 34: Medical Council Minutes, 1945.

1946

Folder 37: Medical Council Minutes, 1946.

1947

Folder 43: New Hospital Committee Minutes, 1947.

1947—Performed the first kidney dialysis in the United States, using a Kolff artificial kidney.

1948

Folder 46: Special Nursing Committee Minutes, 1948.

1949

Folder 47: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1949.

1949—Published first description of allergic granulomatosis (Churg-Strauss disease).

1950

Folder 53: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1950.

In 1950, Jewish Hospital became the first in the city to have a radioisotope laboratory.

1950—Developed a portable kidney dialysis machine.

1950—Published first description of familial lipoprotein deficiency, known as Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome or abetalipoproteinemia.

1951

Folder 58: Department Head Minutes, 1951.

1951—Became the first to perform closed mitral valve commissurotomy.

1952

A 1952 Courier-Journal article announced that African American patients would be admitted to the new hospital, with plans to have African American and white patients use “the same medical facilities” but not share patient rooms.

Folder 62: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1952.

1952—Perfected and reintroduced surgery for the mobilization of the stapes.

1953

Folder 73: Medical Council Minutes, 1953.

1955

Like the old hospital, the new hospital benefited from the work of volunteers, most notably from the Women’s Guild of Jewish Hospital, established in 1955.

Folder 93: Plans for Moving, 1955.

1956

Folder 98: Jewish Hospi-Tales, 1956.

1956—Developed and standardized the latex fixation test for the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis.

1957

Folder 100: Expansion Fund Report, 1957.

1958

Folder 105: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1958.

1959

Folder 108: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1959.

1959—Created polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for separating proteins.

1960

Folder 114: Jewish Hospital Board Agenda, 1960.

1960—Published the first description of postperfusion syndrome after open-heart surgery.

1961

Folder 117: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1961.

1962

Folder 122: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, 1962.

1962—Became the first to use a sequential combination regimen of chemotherapy for adjuvant treatment of ovarian cancer.

1963

Folder 123: Jewish Hospital Board Agenda, 1963.

The hospital built a cyclotron in 1963 to enhance radiologic imaging and radiation treatments at the hospital.

1963—Became the first to use a sequential combination regimen of chemotherapy for adjuvant treatment of breast cancer.

1964

Folder 125: Jewish Hospital Board Agenda, 1964.

1964—Established etiologic link between asbestos and cancer.

1965

The records provide information about the hospital’s participation in the Medicare program after 1965.

Folder 132: Jewish Hospital Board Agenda, 1965.

Seventeen-story Queeny Tower, named for benefactor Edgar Monsanto Queeny, opened in 1965.

1966

Folder 135: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1966.

1967

Folder 142: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, July-December, 1967.

1968

Folder 153: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, July-December, 1968.

Mount Sinai School of Medicine opened in 1968 in affiliation with The City University of New York.

1969

Folder 166: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1969.

1969—Developed an influenza vaccine—the first genetically engineered vaccine.

It soon began building a strong clinical immunology team in 1969.

1970

Folder 176: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, July-December, 1970.

Administrative papers document the establishment of the Louisville Medical Research Foundation in affiliation with Jewish Hospital in 1970.

1971

Folder 187: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1971.

The Mount Sinai Hospital School of Nursing closed in 1971 after graduating 4,700 nurses.

1971—Discovered that dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) could induce cancer cells to progress or differentiate to a normal pattern of development.

1972

Folder 194: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, July-December, 1972.

1973

Folder 198: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1973.

1974

Folder 203: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1974.

1975

Folder 211: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, January-June, 1975.

1976

Folder 220: Jewish Hospital Board Minutes, July-December, 1976.

1977

Folder 259: Jewish Hospital Mimeographed Board Minutes, January-June, 1977.

1978

Folder 270: Jewish Hospital Mimeographed Board Minutes, July-December, 1978.

In 1978 the National Asthma Center (NAC) in Denver began to succumb to financial struggles and proposed a merger with National Jewish.

1979

Folder 277: Jewish Hospital Mimeographed Board Minutes, July-December, 1979.

By 1979, Barnes had become the fourth largest private hospital in the country.

1980

Folder 288: Jewish Hospital Signed Board Minutes, July-December, 1980.

The 75th anniversary scrapbook from 1980 (vol.

In 1980, the first positron emission tomography (PET) scanner was developed at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology and housed in the Barnes cardiac care unit, where it was used to determine the extent of patients' heart damage.

1983

The hospital performed the first successful in vitro fertilization in Missouri in 1983, and opened St Louis' first Multiple Birth Center, offering medical support for women having more than one baby.

1985

1985—Provided the first direct evidence of the involvement of dopamine in schizophrenia.

1986

1986—Performed the first blood transfusion into the vein of an unborn fetus.

1986—Developed an in vitro fertilization technique called zona drilling to help sperm cells penetrate egg cells.

1987

In 1987, the lung transplant team was created at Barnes Hospital.

1990

Doctor Ralph Clayman performed the nation's first laparoscopic nephrectomy -- removal of a kidney through minimally invasive technique -- in 1990.

1992

In 1992, Barnes formalized its affiliation agreement with the Jewish Hospital of St Louis.

1993

Doctor Susan E. Mackinnon performed the country's first nerve transplant on a 12-year-old Indiana boy in 1993.

1995

By 1995, JHHS had expanded to take on the ownership and management of the Amelia Brown Frazier Rehabilitation Center, the Rudd Heart and Lung Center, and a regional network of outpatient facilities and twelve hospitals.

1995—Developed an ultrasound-guided technique to insert radioactive seeds into the prostate to treat prostate cancer.

To that point, in 1995, the hospital officially launched a day-treatment program in pediatrics which allowed for intensive treatment of children during the day but offered the advantage of nights at home, or in a hotel, with their parents.

1996

In January 1996, Barnes and Jewish Hospitals merged to form Barnes-Jewish Hospital.

By early 1996, an adult day-treatment program also was introduced.

2000

2000—Became the first to use black blood magnetic resonance imaging (BB-MR) to image the human coronary artery lumen.

2001

2001—Developed a novel isothermal DNA amplification method with an amplification mechanism quite different from conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR), resulting in an exponential amplification that distinguishes itself from the previously described nonexponential rolling circle amplification.

2002

The opening years of the 21st century found The Mount Sinai Medical Center struggling financially, but by the end of the hospital’s 150th anniversary celebration in 2002, steps had already been taken to chart a new course.

2004

2004—Identified the first common gene variant linked to autism.

2005

In 2005, JHHS and Caritas Health Services merged to create Jewish Hospital and St Mary’s HealthCare, with JHHS and Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) as parent companies.

2005— Performed the first successful composite tracheal transplant, using a method developed at Mount Sinai that allows patients to breathe and speak without a tracheotomy.

2006

2006—Discovered a gene in the brain—OLIG2—that may play a causal role in the development of schizophrenia.

2006—Identified three proteins found in significantly lower concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis than in healthy individuals.

2007

In 2007, the school began accepting 140 students in each first year class and there are now more than 300 graduate students at any point in time.

2007—Developed an advanced imaging technique to capture the movement of the microdomains of leukocytes, or white blood cells.

2007—Proved why influenza spreads most rapidly in the cold, dry air of winter, and showed that it can be spread just in the air, without coughing, sneezing, or physical contact.

2010

2010—Presented research showing that the World Trade Center collapse caused potentially dangerous heart problems to first responders.

2010—Performed the first United States implantation of a new device for aortic stenosis.

2012

In 2012, Jewish Hospital and St Mary’s HealthCare merged with Saint Joseph Health System of Lexington to form KentuckyOne Health.

2018

As of 2018, KentuckyOne Health’s Jewish Hospital and St Mary’s Foundation provides support to patient care, medical education, and clinical research at Jewish Hospital and other KentuckyOne Health facilities and programs in the Louisville area.

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1854
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