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Tufts-New England Medical Center

 Organization

Dates

  • Existence: 1965

Biography

Abstract:
The Tufts-New England Medical Center (T-NEMC) was the official partnership between Tufts University and the New England Medical Center (NEMC). In 1965, a charitable corporation named the Tufts-New England Medical Center, Inc. was established to coordinate the administrative activities of Tufts University and the New England Medical Center Hospital (NEMCH). T-NEMC, Inc. was part of the medical complex which included the Schools of Medicine and Dental Medicine, as well as NEMCH. Collectively, these units were referred to as the Tufts-New England Medical Center, a collaborative institution with a mission to provide medical care as well as support research and teaching in the field of medicine. Now named the Tufts Medical Center, it is the primary teaching hospital for Tufts University, and is located in the Chinatown neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. <p>The Tufts-New England Medical Center (T-NEMC) was the official partnership between Tufts University and the New England Medical Center. In 1930, the School of Medicine, the Boston Dispensary, and the Boston Floating Hospital for Infants and Children created an alliance known as the New England Medical Center. Over the next forty years the evolution of NEMC, the physical move of the Medical and Dental Schools to Chinatown, and the overall shift in health care necessitated the need for a joint venture between Tufts and NEMC, a unified organization which would provide medical care as well as support research and teaching. Now named the Tufts Medical Center, it is the primary teaching hospital for Tufts Schools of Medicine and Dental Medicine, and is located in the Chinatown neighborhood of Boston.</p><br/><br/><p>In 1930, the governing bodies of the Boston Dispensary (BD), the Boston Floating Hospital for Infants and Children (BFH), and the Trustees of Tufts College created the New England Medical Center (NEMC). NEMC was established as a non-profit organization to coordinate the operations of its constituent organizations. Population growth and newer approaches to providing citizens economical medical care would foster the evolution of NEMC over the next two decades. In 1938, for instance, a donation from William Bingham, 2nd built the Joseph H. Pratt Diagnostic Hospital. Over time, the Pratt Clinic expanded, and subsumed the BD. The need for additional space dictated the addition of Farnsworth Surgical Building and Ziskind Research Center. The merging of these hospital units became the third piece of NEMC, the New England Medical Center Hospital (NEMCH). NEMCH was a 452-bed non-profit hospital that addressed needs in cardiology, cancer, endocrinology, hematology, kidney disease, among others. At NEMCH, patient care was integrated with student and physician training, as well as research, further cementing the relationship between NEMC and Tufts.</p><br/><br/><p>A physical move of the Schools of Medicine and Dental Medicine to Harrison Avenue in Chinatown, the same neighborhood as the hospitals, provided access for students and physicians. Yet, despite these physical advancements, an organizational structure unifying these entities was still lacking. Each unit operated under its own governing body, which made decision making across the medical center cumbersome. To address this issue, an organized planning effort began for NEMC to become one fully integrated, multi-operational complex dedicated to research, teaching, and medical care.</p><br/><br/><p>In 1965, the University/Hospital alliance was named the Tufts-New England Medical Center. It included the three units of NEMC and Tufts University Schools of Medicine and Dental Medicine. In addition, a separate corporation was established to jointly govern the University and Hospital, known as T-NEMC, Inc., incorporated in 1968. T-NEMC, Inc. had its own board, composed of members of the Board of Trustees of Tufts, as well as members of the Board of Governors of NEMC. This collaboration would continue to grow, with professors at the School of Medicine advocating for T-NEMC to serve as the primary teaching hospitals for the School of Medicine.</p><br/><br/><p>By 1976, T-NEMC controlled common services, which included health care studies, medical engineering, community health and ambulatory care, employee-student health services, communications, parking facilities, property ownership, and public relations. By the late 1970s both institutions had experienced a change in leadership, and interest in collaboration dissipated.</p> <br/><br/><p>Tufts and NEMC, once again separate after T-NEMC, Inc. was dismantled, drafted a new affiliation agreement in 1991. In 2000, the center was once again named Tufts-New England Medical Center, and 2008, was renamed for the last time, to the Tufts Medical Center, reflecting the working partnership between Tufts University and the New England Medical Center hospitals.</p>

Found in 19 Collections and/or Records:

Bingham Associates Fund Records

 Collection
Call Number: MS228
Scope and Contents This collection contains publications, meeting minutes, and administrative files of the Bingham Associates Fund, as well as the Bingham Advisory Committee. Physician files, annual reports, and correspondence, as well as information about regional medical programs, are also included. The physical collection documentation folder of this collection includes copies of Dave Nathan’s original finding aid entries as well as copies of the original acquisition records.This collection...
Dates: Majority of material found within 1932 -- 1985; 1900 -- 1990

Boston Dispensary Records

 Collection
Call Number: MS214
Scope and Contents This collection contains adminstrative records, annual reports, meeting minutes, policy and procedure manuals, financial records, scrapbooks, employee records, publications, and promotional materials relating to the Boston Dispensary (BD).As there was a periodic shifting of departments to and from NEMC/T-NEMC and their constituent institutions, any comprehensive search of a particular topic over time must involve also consulting the other NEMC archives collections at TARC. Contact...
Dates: Majority of material found within 1910 -- 1965; 1795 -- 1990

Boston Floating Hospital Records

 Collection
Call Number: MS213
Scope and Contents This collection contains annual reports, meeting minutes, correspondence, publications, photographs, and promotional materials relating to the founding and running of the Boston Floating Hospital for Infants and Children (BFH), now the Floating Hospital for Children, the pediatric wing of the Tufts Medical Center. Most official records are by the Board of Trustees of the BFH. Also included are early autopsy records, the BFH’s original certificate of incorporation from 1901, and research...
Dates: Majority of material found within 1894 -- 1985; 1890 -- 1990
Drs. Cohen and Madias, 1978-03
Drs. Cohen and Madias, 1978-03

Drs. Cohen and Madias

 Digital Image
Dates: 1978-03

Drs. Cohen and Madias, 1978-03

 Item — Box 3: Series MS099.001 [Barcode: RF047633599]
Call Number: MS099.001.003.00078.00001
Scope and Contents From the Series: This series contains images, films, and audio recordings in various formats. Images in the collection depict individuals, buildings, activities, and subjects belonging to, or affiliated with, NEMC and its predecessor organizations. Several images are duplicates and can be found in a variety of formats throughout the series. All print images are in black and white. Print image folders are titled with a subject heading identifying what is depicted in the photograph, as well as the...
Dates: 1978-03

Girl at Rehabilitation Institute

 Digital Image
Dates: 1950 -- 1970

Girl at Rehabilitation Institute, 1950 -- 1970

 Item — Box 2: Series MS099.001 [Barcode: 39090016515526]
Call Number: MS099.001.002.00088.00001
Scope and Contents T-NEMC/NEMCH: Nurse helping patient at Rehabilitation Institute.
Dates: 1950 -- 1970

Laser use in Cancer research

 Digital Image
Dates: 1963

Laser use in Cancer research, 1963

 Item — Box 3: Series MS099.001 [Barcode: RF047633599]
Call Number: MS099.001.003.00034.00001
Scope and Contents Boston medical researchers in laser laboratory where laser light is used on cancers transplanted into animals. Left to right: David B ushnell, biophysicist at Raytheon Company, Dr. Paul E. McGuff, Research Fellow in Surgery and Dr. Ralph A. Deterling, Jr., Surgeon-in-Chief at Boston's Tufts-New England Medical Center. First results of these studies were reported at annual meeting of American College of Surgeons in San Francisco.
Dates: 1963

New England Medical Center Records

 Collection
Call Number: MS099
Scope and Contents The records of the New England Medical Center (NEMC) contain the administrative, financial, legal, publicity, and departmental records of the institution. The collection also contains extensive audiovisual material; timelines and reference files relating to NEMC's history; publications by and for NEMC; planning files for the expansion of NEMC; and the records of affiliated organizations, such as the Frances Stern Nutrition Center and the Ladies Committee. Of particular interest are the...
Dates: Majority of material found within 1920 -- 1990; 1880 -- 2009