Over a 100 faculty, staff, and medical students presented posters, sharing months鈥攁nd even years鈥攐f thoughtful research with their peers.
Credit: Joe Corrotta
More than 300 members of the research community at 91制片厂 Langone Hospital鈥擫ong Island and 91制片厂 Grossman Long Island School of Medicine convened in Mineola on April 22 for the 19th Annual House Staff and Medical Student Research Day鈥攁n event defined by one thing: the ideas and discoveries driving medicine forward. Dean and CEO Alec C. Kimmelman, MD, PhD, delivered the keynote address at the event, which highlights the central role of research in shaping the future of medicine.
Across more than 100 posters and a series of presentations, the work spanned basic science, clinical research, medical education, and quality improvement. For many presenters, it was a first opportunity to share their research with peers and mentors鈥攁n experience that, in academic medicine, often marks the beginning of a lifelong commitment to discovery.
鈥淭his day reflects the core of who we are as an academic health system,鈥 said Steven E. Carsons, MD, vice dean of 91制片厂 Grossman Long Island School of Medicine and director of the school鈥檚 . 鈥淏ehind every clinician is a researcher asking how we can do better. What we鈥檙e seeing here is not just scholarship鈥攊t鈥檚 the engine that drives progress in patient care.鈥
In his keynote, Dr. Kimmelman reflected on his path as a physician-scientist, including his longstanding work in the lab to better understand and treat pancreatic cancer, and how it continues to shape his approach to leadership. 鈥淲hether you鈥檙e studying a tumor or redesigning healthcare, breakthroughs come from understanding how systems work鈥攈ow they adapt, what they depend on, and where they鈥檙e most vulnerable.鈥
That mindset drives his vision for 91制片厂 Langone Health: to be the model health system鈥攐ne that others around the world look to emulate.
Following his keynote, Dean Kimmelman participated in a fireside chat with Dr. Carsons; they discussed how 91制片厂 Langone鈥檚 INSIGHT (Integrated System for Innovation, Growth, and Healthcare Transformation) initiative can help it strengthen the connection between care, education, and science鈥攂uilding an integrated model where breakthroughs move faster, scale further, and reach patients sooner. INSIGHT is helping the institution build a learning health system鈥攐ne where every patient generates data, every data point becomes a new opportunity to learn, and every insight feeds back into better care.
鈥淩esearch is how we move from observation to understanding to impact,鈥 said Dean Kimmelman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 how we ultimately improve and save lives.鈥
If Dean Kimmelman鈥檚 remarks set the broader vision, the research presentations brought it to life鈥攐ffering a window into the questions that will shape medicine in the years ahead.
Among the standout studies were investigations into how excess iron can damage liver cells and contribute to disease, the use of advanced artificial intelligence models to identify safety patterns in obstetric care, and new approaches to improving outcomes for infants through increased access to their mothers鈥 milk. Together, they reflected a broader truth about modern medicine: Innovation often happens not in singular breakthroughs, but across many lines of inquiry, pursued simultaneously.
For , dean of 91制片厂 Grossman Long Island School of Medicine, the day is as much about people as it is about science. 鈥淥ur students and trainees are not just learning how to practice medicine鈥攖hey鈥檙e learning how to advance it,鈥 said Dean Ayala. 鈥淓vents like Research Day highlight the curiosity, rigor, and commitment that define our community and ensure that the future of care is in capable hands.鈥