Brian M. Eiss, M.D.
Brian M. Eiss, M.D.
Locations and Appointments
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About Brian M. Eiss, M.D.
As healthcare has improved over the past several decades, more and more adults are living into their 8th, 9th and even 10th decades of life. I seek to provide comprehensive, compassionate and individualized care to all adults based on their preferences and values, with a focus on care of the rapidly increasing population of older adults. I also seek to dedicate considerable efforts to educating the next generation of internal medicine physicians in the principles of geriatric medicine while they are still in training so that they are better prepared to care for older adults regardless of the subspecialty within internal medicine they choose for their career paths.
I practice primarily at Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇå°æ's Adult Internal Medicine practice, where I see adult patients of all ages, but mainly older adults, and maintain a smaller practice at the Irving Sherwood Wright Center on Aging, which is Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇå°æ’s geriatrics faculty practice. I rotate on the inpatient medicine and geriatrics services and the palliative care consultation service at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center several weeks out of the year. I am as passionate about teaching medical students and physicians in training as I am about patient care and am active in clinical and preclinical education at Â鶹´«Ã½¸ßÇå°æ. I also have a background in quality improvement and patient safety, serving on several committees and participating in quality improvement initiatives and research projects.
Dr. Eiss received his MD from Georgetown University School of Medicine in 2008 and completed his internal medicine residency in 2011 and geriatric fellowship in 2012 at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. He was recruited to serve as the Quality Improvement/Patient Safety Chief Resident for the Department finishing his fellowship and in this role, he launched several important initiatives in both inpatient and outpatient sign-out and helped change the structure of the daily resident schedule so that night float residents stay for morning rounds to reduce unnecessary handoffs and add an additional educational opportunity to that rotation. He is currently working on a quality improvement initiative on the inpatient wards to institute a multidisciplinary “discharge timeout” to reinforce crucial changes made to a patient’s medication regimen and aspects of follow up in hopes of reducing unnecessary readmissions and improving patient satisfaction. As the sole member of Weill Cornell Internal Medicine Associates with formal geriatrics training, he provides residents with lectures on geriatric medicine in the outpatient venue and is interested in expanding exposure to geriatrics to residents during their outpatient medicine rotations as well as developing a “Geriatrics Resource Center” and tracking outcomes after implementation.
Don't Count Sheep - Get a Good Night's Sleep - Your Health Depends on It! - Sleep and the Elderly Population - Thursday, March 26, 7 – 9 pm in 2015 by Bloomingdale Aging in Place Panel Presentation, Invited Lecturer
What Does Healthy Aging Mean To You? - Invited author for newsletter article in 2015 by New York Presbyterian Health Outreach Newsletter - Winter 2015
Healthy Aging – Invited speaker – New York Presbyterian Health Outreach – February 2014
Hartford Foundation Centers of Excellence Scholar in 2013
Employee CARE Award for Outstanding Service and Patient Care 2010
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M.D.Georgetown University School of Medicine2008
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B.A.University of Pennsylvania2004
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Assistant Attending PhysicianNewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
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Assistant Professor of MedicineWeill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University
External Relationships
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No External Relationships Reported