Cayuga Health Sends Healthcare Team to Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian for COVID-19 Efforts

People posing together in a bus wearing protective face masks

More than 50 doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals from Cayuga Health in Ithaca have joined their Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center counterparts to care for New Yorkers diagnosed with COVID-19.

The team from Cayuga Health, which operates Cayuga Medical Center, the largest medical center serving Cornell University’s Ithaca campus, arrived April 8 by Cornell Campus-to-Campus bus. Team members have since been receiving on-the-job training in preparation for working in an expanded intensive care unit (ICU) – one of several that collectively have more than doubled NewYork-Presbyterian’s normal ICU capacity – to care for the sickest patients.

“This sharing of support across Cayuga Health, Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian and Cornell’s Ithaca campus exemplifies the connectedness of our communities,” said Cornell President Martha E. Pollack. “On an individual level, it also highlights the commitment of our local healthcare professionals to the larger New York State community, to their professions, and to their patients. Extraordinary times like these often bring out the extraordinary within people, and that is what we are seeing here: a demonstration of humanity and altruism that has been a light in the midst of this pandemic.”

doctors posing for a photo in front of a chalk drawing

Members of the Cayuga Health team in front of NewYork-Presbyterian David H. Koch Center.

“Our committed physicians and healthcare staff have been on the front lines since this crisis began, working tirelessly to help heal and return home as many COVID-19 patients as possible,” said Dr. Augustine M.K. Choi, the Stephen and Suzanne Weiss Dean of Weill Cornell Medicine and provost for medical affairs of Cornell University. “This heroic work requires all hands on deck, and we are profoundly grateful to Cayuga Health for its assistance in our hour of need. Together, we can provide New Yorkers with the finest, most compassionate care and bring this pandemic under control.”

“We are extremely proud of our dedicated staff who have shown extraordinary courage, skill and resilience in caring for our patients through this crisis,” said Dr. Steven J. Corwin, president and CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian. “We are deeply grateful to Cayuga Health and to this remarkable team of doctors, nurses and healthcare professionals for stepping up to help us in this time of need. Their willingness to join our staff on the frontlines of this pandemic is truly extraordinary.”

New York state has more COVID-19 cases than any country outside the United States, and New York City is the center of that outbreak and the hardest-hit city in the global crisis, with more than 132,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases and nearly 14,000 deaths and probable deaths to date. In response, medical teams from around the country have poured into the city to help local hospitals expand their capacity.

The Cayuga Health team was similarly driven to help. Tompkins County, which includes Ithaca, has so far been spared the brunt of the COVID-19 outbreak, and with outpatient and elective appointments canceled, the center’s medical team was available to redeploy where the need was greatest.

“Every night our medical staff was going home and watching the news and seeing what was happening in New York City, and realizing that others were in need – whereas in Ithaca, thankfully the burden from the pandemic has been much lighter,” said Dr. Martin Stallone, Cayuga Health CEO, who’s also a clinical instructor in medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.

The team began discussions, and on April 2 formally suggested a deployment to New York City. Dr. Stallone reached out to Dr. Gary Koretzky, vice provost for academic integration at Cornell University – and formerly one of Dr. Stallone’s medical school instructors – with the idea. Working with Pollack, Dr. Koretzky, who also is a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and leads collaboration between the university’s Ithaca and New York City campuses, facilitated the conversation with Dr. Choi. A plan took shape 72 hours and a site visit later.

“It seemed a good opportunity for a show of solidarity – and one that could be a real help in this crisis,” Dr. Koretzky said. “It was extremely gratifying to help our upstate medical colleagues connect with Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian to provide a much needed service.”

The team – consisting of 12 doctors, 33 nurses and seven nurse-support staff – have made an initial four-week commitment. (Additional healthcare workers joined the group a few days later.) Paired with teams from Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian, the Cayuga Health staff spent several days learning the institutions’ standard practices and protocols. Once acclimated, the Cayuga Health team was assigned to staff an expansion ICU serving approximately 30-50 patients who may need additional care to manage severe pneumonia and other complications. 

“We are unfortunately the hottest spot in the world right now for COVID-19, and we're taking care of a huge number of critically ill patients, far more than we have ever taken care of at one time,” said Dr. Matthew Fink, assistant dean for clinical affairs and chairman of the Department of Neurology at Weill Cornell Medicine, and neurologist-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Dr. Fink led the teams’ integration. “We really appreciate the help from the Cayuga Health team, which will provide invaluable care to our patients and enable our team – who have been working around the clock – to get some rest.”

“We expect this exchange will spark a greater appreciation of the benefits of collaboration across the Cornell University campuses, as well as medical centers across the state,” Dr. Choi said. “We are deeply appreciative of President Pollack and Dr. Stallone for their invaluable contributions in this challenging time.”

Weill Cornell Medicine
Office of External Affairs
Phone: (646) 962-9476