Hospital in New York, United States
Gracie Square Hospital is a
psychiatric hospital located at 420 East 76th Street on the
Upper East Side of
Manhattan , in New York City.
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
The hospital was built and founded by Cynthia Zirinsky, a mental health care professional, and her husband Richard Zirinsky, a New York City real-estate developer.
[5]
About
The hospital had 140 beds for in-patients, as well as units focused on adult and
geriatric psychiatry ,
drug rehabilitation , and short-term care since 2013.
[2]
[3]
The hospital had 220 beds when it opened in 1958.
[6]
[7] The hospital is a member of the
NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System .
[2]
Notable patients
References
^
a
b Eddie Fisher, David Fisher (2000).
Been There, Done That . Macmillan.
ISBN
9780312975586 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^
a
b
c
"Gracie Square Hospital" . Nygsh.org. Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^
a
b
"Gracie Square Hospital in New York, NY – US News Best Hospitals" . usnews.com. Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^
"Program Gracie Square Hospital Inpatient Unit:" . www.nyconnects.ny.gov . Retrieved August 17, 2023 .
^
"CBS - Conflict of Interest Summary" (PDF) . Retrieved May 25, 2019 .
^
"The New York Gracie Square Hospital Inc - New York , NY - Business Data" . www.dandb.com .
^ Edward Shorter, David Healy (2013).
Shock Therapy: A History of Electroconvulsive Treatment in Mental Illness . Rutgers University Press.
ISBN
9780813560526 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^ Anthony Hecht (2012).
The Selected Letters of Anthony Hecht . JHU Press.
ISBN
9781421407302 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^ Robin Kelley (2009).
Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original . Simon and Schuster.
ISBN
9781439190494 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^ David de Leon (1994).
Leaders from the 1960s: A Biographical Sourcebook of American Activism . ABC-CLIO.
ISBN
9780313029172 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^ Scott Allen Nollen (January 10, 2014).
Paul Robeson: Film Pioneer .
ISBN
9780786457472 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^ Paul Robeson, Jr. (2009).
The Undiscovered Paul Robeson: Quest for Freedom, 1939 – 1976 .
ISBN
9780470569689 . Retrieved January 9, 2013 .
^
"Audra McDonald is the "Luckiest Survivor in the World" | Here's the Thing | WNYC Studios" . WNYC Studios . Retrieved October 18, 2018 .
External links
Buildings
59th–72nd Sts 72nd–86th Sts 86th–96th Sts Former
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