The CARE Award Program recognizes employees who receive positive written remarks from patients or their loved ones after receiving high-quality and compassionate care.
The criteria for the award are:
C: Compassion- Through listening, identifying patient vulnerabilities, and conveying empathy.
A: Advocacy-Ensure quality care is given and the safety of the patients and environment is maintained.
R: Respect-Greeting or speaking to others in a kind and respectful way.
E: Engagement-Make individuals feel valued, important, and recognized.
Please join us in congratulating:
1. Marisa Mohr – Jamaica Hospital
2. Liliane Napaul- Jamaica Hospital
3. Janet Lynch- McKay- Jamaica Hospital
4. Floyd Federbush – Flushing Hospital
5. Janine Mc Larty – Flushing Hospital
6. Margaret Hoffman- Flushing Hospital
7. John Bigger- Flushing Hospital
8. Alex Khaimov- Flushing Hospital
9. Isaac Lopez- Flushing Hospital
10. Ashley Valerio- Flushing Hospital
11. Vejay Sanichar- Flushing Hospital
We thank our employees for their contributions to making our hospitals high-reliability facilities that focus on patient-centered care.


Jamaica Hospital Medical Center is lending its support to Food Bank for New York City’s “Woman to Woman” initiative, which aims to provide menstrual and childcare products to women who live in poverty and struggle to afford these resources. The initiative also raises awareness about how poverty affects women’s ability to obtain these products.

On Monday, April 8th, The MediSys Health Network held a very special ribbon-cutting ceremony to commemorate the opening of the network’s cancer center, located on the concourse level of Jamaica Hospital Medical Center’s C building.


The MediSys Health Network has been named as one of the top 10 hospital systems in the United States for fair share spending by the Lown Institute, a nonprofit organization that promotes equity and transparency throughout the American healthcare system. MediSys was one of many hospital systems across the country included in the Lown Institute’s 2024-25 fair share analysis, which compared hospitals’ tax exemptions to their community spending.


