James Klein, MD
350 Engle Street, Englewood, NJ 7631
Phone:
(201) 894-3636
350 Engle Street, Englewood, NJ 7631
Phone:
(201) 894-3636
Three Cooper Plaza, Suite 104, Camden, NJ 08103
Phone:
(856) 342-2141
1600 Haddon Avenue, Camden, NJ 08103-3101
Phone:
(856) 757-3840
3401 N Broad Street, Suite 301/100C, Philadelphia, PA 19140
Phone:
(215) 707-3602
900 Centennial Boulevard, Building 2, Suite 202, Voorhees, NJ 08043
Phone:
(856) 342-2141
900 Centennial Boulevard, Building 2, Suite 202, Voorhees, NJ 08043
Phone:
(856) 342-2141
425 Jack Martin Boulevard, Brick, NJ 8724
Phone:
(732) 240-3390
425 Jack Martin Boulevard, Brick, NJ 8724
Phone:
(732) 240-3390
1944 New Jersey 33, Neptune City, NJ 7753
Phone:
(732) 776-3690
984 50th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11219
Phone:
(718) 854-6100
Cardiothoracic surgeons are trained to perform surgeries to correct disorders affecting the organs of the chest and thorax, including the heart, lungs and related structures.
Cardiothoracic surgeons are highly specialized physicians who have undergone training general surgery before completing an advanced cardiothoracic (the heart and organs of the thorax) fellowship. These highly trained surgeons are capable of providing advanced surgical procedures and performing techniques that are both invasive and minimally invasive in nature. Cardiothoracic surgeons are trained in the preoperative diagnosis and evaluation, surgical reparation, and post-surgical management of nearly every thoracic and cardiac disorders or conditions.
A Doctor of Medicine (MD) is a medical degree, the meaning of which varies between different jurisdictions. In some countries, the MD denotes a first professional graduate degree awarded upon initial graduation from medical school. In other countries, the MD denotes an academic research doctorate, higher doctorate, honorary doctorate or advanced clinical coursework degree restricted to medical graduates; in those countries, the equivalent first professional degree is titled differently (for example, Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery in countries following the tradition of the United Kingdom)
In 1703, the University of Glasgow's first medical graduate, Samuel Benion, was issued with the academic degree of Doctor of Medicine.
University medical education in England culminated with the MB qualification, and in Scotland the MD, until in the mid-19th century the public bodies who regulated medical practice at the time required practitioners in Scotland as well as England to hold the dual Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees (MB BS/MBChB/MB BChir/BM BCh etc.). North American medical schools switched to the tradition of the ancient universities of Scotland and began granting the MoD title rather than the MB beginning in the late 18th century. The Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York (which at the time was referred to as King's College of Medicine) was the first American university to grant the MD degree instead of the MB.
Early medical schools in North America that granted the Doctor of Medicine degrees were Columbia, Penn, Harvard, Maryland, and McGill. These first few North American medical schools that were established were (for the most part) founded by physicians and surgeons who had been trained in England and Scotland.
A feminine form, "Doctress of Medicine" or Medicinae Doctrix, has also been used by the New England Female Medical College in Boston in the 1860s. In most countries having a Doctor of Medicine degree does not mean that the individual will be allowed to practice medicine. Typically a doctor must go through a residency (medicine) for at least four years and take some form of licensing examination in their jurisdiction.