Sinead F Brady, MD

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3959 Broadway
New York, NY 10032
Dr. Krishnareddy completed her internship and residency in internal medicine at Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, and went on to complete her fellowship in Digestive and Liver diseases at Columbia University, during which time she obtained a Masters in Clinical Research Methods and Biostatistics from the Mailman School of Public Health. She was a post-doctoral fellow in a NIH-funded training program during her training under the mentorship of Sankar Ghosh. She then completed an advanced fellowship in Inflammatory Bowel Disease at The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and returned to join the faculty of Digestive and Liver Diseases at Columbia University Medical Center in 2014. Dr. Krishnareddy's clinical interest include a wide range of gastrointestinal disorders including Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, indeterminate colitis celiac disease, autoimmune enteropathy, microscopic colitis, collagenous colitis, lymphocytic colitis and other autoimmune disorders of the gut. Dr Krishnareddy is actively recruiting for participation in clinical trials for management of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Dr. Krishnareddy is collaborating with the Department of Immunology and Microbiology in the study of the microbiome and the effect on disease pathogenesis in celiac disease and inflammatory bowel disease. She is also the studying the role of the microbiome in immune development and regulation.
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Jonathan A. Slater, MD
Services, nec, nec, Internal medicine practitioners

Jonathan A. Slater, MD

Dr. Slater directed The Pediatric Psychiatry Consultation-Liaison Service from 1992 until 2014, when he became a Senior Consultant. The Consultation-Liaison Service provides evaluations and brief treatment for children and adolescents hospitalized at the Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of New York, who have a primary psychiatric disorder, psychiatric complications of a medical illness, complicated neuropsychiatric syndromes, medical illnesses or symptoms thought to have significant psychiatric components, and patients with adjustment or compliance problems. During the time he directed the Consultation-Liaison Service, Dr. Slater created liaisons exist to a variety of inpatient clinical services in Children's Hospital, including the cardiac transplant, neurology, and hematology-oncology services. Psychiatric evaluations are a routine part of the clinical evaluations for heart and lung transplantation. Dr. Slater's book, entitled Tell Me Where it Hurts, which is a parenting book about somatization disorders in children, was published in the fall of 2002. In 2002, Dr. Slater also authored book chapters on psychopharmacology in medically ill children, psychiatric aspects of transplantation, and psychiatric issues in children with cancer. An article written by Dr. Slater entitled "Deciphering Emotional Aches and Physical Pains in Children" appeared in the June issue of Pediatric Annals. Lastly, in 2001, Dr. Slater created an after-school program geared specifically for children with special needs, which largely serves children with neuropsychiatric disorders in Irvington, New York, which served the community in Westchester County. Dr. Slater's contributions to education have been extensive. He teaches the Child Development course to the second-year P&S students (based on a chapter he wrote on Life Development for the textbook used in the second year medical student psychiatry course), does weekly attending rounds with pediatric house staff, and is the leader of a weekly preceptorship with the third-year P&S students rotating through the pediatric service. Dr. Slater teaches in the Foundations of Clinical Medicine course for P&S students in the first, second and major clinical years. Dr. Slater has been the recipient on numerous awards. As a Child Psychiatry Fellow, he was awarded the Viola Bernard Award on two occasions and used funding from this award to create a documentary film about children receiving heart transplants, which continues to be used by families awaiting heart transplantation. He later was the contributing producer for an HBO film, "Heart of a Child", which was a documentary about a girl who received a heart-lung transplantation. Dr. Slater's teaching efforts have been rewarded both at the medical center, when he received the Medical Student Teacher of the Year in 1997, and at the national level, when he received Nancy C.A. Roeske Certificate of Recognition for Excellence in Medical Student Education in May 2003 (awarded by the American Psychiatric Association). Dr. Slater has a private practice specializing in pediatric psychopharmacology in Irvington, New York.
United StatesNew YorkNew YorkSinead F Brady, MD

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