
 
        
         
		New York-Presbyterian opens borough’s  
 largest outpatient care center at Methodist 
 The Center for Community Health at New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital opened March 15.  New York-Presbyterian 
 COURIER L 20     IFE, MARCH 19-25, 2021 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 New York-Presbyterian opened  
 the borough’s largest ambulatory  
 care facility at its Brooklyn Methodist  
 Hospital in Park Slope on March  
 15, bringing outpatient care from diagnosis  
 to treatment to millions of  
 Brooklynites.  
 “The COVID-19 pandemic has  
 highlighted the need for high-quality  
 care close to home, and we are so  
 pleased to expand access to our care  
 and open this incredible resource for  
 Brooklyn, helping residents spend  
 less time in the hospital and more  
 time living their lives,” said Dr. Steven  
 Corwin, president and CEO of  
 NewYork-Presbyterian. 
 The Center for Community  
 Health  will  be  the  borough’s  fi rst  
 major  outpatient  care  facility  built  
 in 40 years. 
 At six stories, the facility will include  
 12 operating rooms for ambulatory  
 surgery, six procedure rooms,  
 diagnostic imaging services, a preanesthesia  
 evaluation  center,  prep  
 and recovery for ambulatory surgery, 
  an ambulatory infusion center  
 with dedicated pharmacy and lab,  
 and a clinical trials offi ce. 
 A team of doctors from Weill Cornell  
 Medicine with backgrounds in  
 various disciplines will evaluate  
 each patient holistically — no matter  
 what condition they’re coming  
 in for. 
 “The Center for Community  
 Health epitomizes Weill Cornell  
 Medicine’s  enduring  dedication  to  
 providing exemplary and compassionate  
 care to our patients,” said Dr.  
 Augustine M.K. Choi, the Stephen  
 and Suzanne Weiss Dean of Weill  
 Cornell Medicine. “The center offers  
 patients a convenient single destination  
 for all of their medical needs, a  
 beacon for maintaining good health  
 and well-being.” 
 Patients  will  be  greeted  in  the  
 facility’s  lobby  by  hospital  service  
 representatives before being given a  
 personalized “smartband” that provides  
 the patient access to the building. 
 A private prep and recovery room  
 will  be  assigned  to  each  patient  at  
 their visit and will serve as a homebase  
 throughout their visit. 
 The 400,000 square-foot facility  
 was designed with patients’ convenience  
 and pleasure in mind, hospital  
 reps said, inviting natural light  
 and skyline vibes to create a soothing  
 environment. The space also encourages  
 social-distancing and will  
 display artwork throughout.  
 “New  York-Presbyterian  Brooklyn  
 Methodist Hospital is committed  
 to improving the health and wellbeing  
 of the Brooklyn community,  
 and the new Center for Community  
 Health will provide seamless access  
 to high-quality, innovative care, all  
 in one convenient location,” said  
 Robert Guimento, president of New- 
 York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist  
 Hospital. 
 Health