Facts and Firsts:

SBHCS Pediatrics Services Facts and Figures

1997: Children’s Hospital of New Jersey is integrated into Newark Beth Israel Medical Center.

2003: The smallest baby to survive in New Jersey is born at Saint Barnabas Medical Center weighing 11 ounces.

2004: Monmouth Medical Center opens area’s only Pediatric Emergency Department, staffed with physicians trained in Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

2004: The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Saint Barnabas Medical Center is one of 10 centers among a network of 500 hospitals selected as a model by The Vermont Oxford Network, a non-profit collaboration of health care professionals dedicated to improving the quality of medical care for newborns.

2005: Following the successful model of Children’s Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Monmouth Medical Center’s commitment to children’s health was officially recognized by the State of New Jersey when it granted it licensing as the official children’s hospital for Monmouth and Ocean Counties.

2006: The Children’s Heart Center at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center receives state certification for heart transplantation.

2006: Monmouth, Newark Beth Israel and Saint Barnabas Medical Centers continue their tradition of offering our young patients the highest quality services at our three Valerie Fund Children’s Centers for Cancer and Blood Disorders.

2006: The Children's Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center was certified by the US Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to perform pediatric heart transplantation. The certification ensures that young adults and teens in New Jersey have access to the same extraordinary level of care for complex heart problems that adults receive.

2006: A heart transplant is successfully performed at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center on a 15-year-old boy, the youngest patient transplanted in the state of New Jersey.

2006: Since 1992, nearly 100 babies have benefited from Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO), a unique lifesaving heart/lung bypass procedure for the most critically ill newborns offered in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Children’s Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center - the first and only ECMO program in the state.

2006: Saint Barnabas Medical Center Neonatal Intensive Care Unit treats between 1,200 and 1,400 infants each year, ranking among the top one percent in the Nation.

2006: Forty percent of Neonatal Intensive Care Unit patients are transported from hospitals throughout the state to receive specialized and critical care at Children’s Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center.

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