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NGE >> Science and Medicine >> Medicine >> Major Hospitals >> Emory University Hospital |
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Emory University Hospital Emory
Providing a full range of specialized care, the hospital is annually included in U.S. News and World Report 's "America's Best Hospitals" and is recognized for its excellence in cardiology and cardiac surgery, neurology and neurosurgery, oncology, ophthalmology, organ and tissue transplantation, and orthopedics. For eight consecutive years (1998-2006), members of the Atlanta community named Emory University Hospital the Consumer's Choice Award winner. The hospital's relationship with Emory University's Woodruff Health Sciences Center has had a significant impact on patients. Through this partnership, advances have been made in medicine that will affect the lives of Georgians for the next several decades. History Emory
In the mid-1930s, the name was changed to Emory University Hospital. The university and the hospital bear the name of Bishop John Emory, who presided over a meeting of the Georgia Methodist Conference in 1834 at which delegates decided to establish a Methodist college, which later became Emory University. Emory University Hospital "Firsts" A number of revolutionary medical procedures have been performed in the state for the first time at Emory University Hospital: —1947: Georgia's first cornea transplant —1963: Georgia's first aortic valve replacement —1966: Georgia's first kidney transplant —1970: Georgia's first coronary bypass —1979: Georgia's first bone marrow transplant —1982: Georgia's first injection of a clot buster to treat heart attack —1985: Atlanta's first heart transplant —1987: Georgia's first liver transplant —1987: Georgia's first insertion of an implantable defibrillator —1989: Georgia's first pancreas transplant —1996: Georgia's first coronary artery bypass graft "keyhole" surgery —1997: Georgia's first implantation of a dual-pump ventricular-assist device —1999: Georgia's first implantation of a biventricular pacemaker —2003: Georgia's first islet cell transplant to cure diabetes The hospital's other notable accomplishments include recruiting Andreas Gruentzig, inventor of the balloon angioplasty, from the Medical Policlinic in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1980, and the nation's first coronary stent implantation in 1987. In 1992 a team of Emory neurologists and surgeons performed a pallidotomy, using brain mapping to guide the placement of lesions and electrodes, on a Parkinson's patient. In 2002 the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of a protein that stimulates bone growth and provides an alternative to painful bone grafts, an outgrowth of work by Emory orthopedic surgeon Scott Boden. Lance M. Skelly, Emory Healthcare Published 8/25/2006 |
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