New York Daily News

$1B TO YOUR HEALTH

Prof’s record-setting gift to Bronx med school will allow it to go tuition-free

- BY CAYLA BAMBERGER

Students at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx will no longer have to pay tuition after a longtime professor donated $1 billion to the school, removing a major financial hurdle to becoming a physician in a historical­ly underserve­d borough.

The gift by Ruth Gottesman, chairwoman of Einstein’s Board of Trustees, is considered the largest gift made to a medical school in the country, according to a press release.

“l feel blessed to be given the great privilege of making this gift to such a worthy cause,” Gottesman said in a statement.

Gottesman, a retired pediatrics professor who spent 55 years of her career affiliated with the Bronx medical school, developed a widely used screening test for children with learning disabiliti­es and founded a trailblazi­ng adult literacy program.

Her husband, David “Sandy” Gottesman, counted Warren Buffett among his mentors and left his wife a large portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway stock when he died in 2022, The New York Times reported. Gottesman thanked him for making the donation possible.

“I am very thankful to my late husband, Sandy, for leaving these funds in my care,” Gottesman said.

Einstein will be permanentl­y tuition-free starting next school year. Students in their last year of medical school who already paid for this semester will be reimbursed, school officials said.

More than 1,000 students attend Einstein’s medical, Ph.D. and postdoctor­al research programs. They join a small but growing number of medical students, including those at New York

University, who will graduate without the steep debt of tuition.

“This donation radically revolution­izes our ability to continue attracting students who are committed to our mission, not just those who can afford it,” said Dr. Yaron Tomer, the dean of Einstein, an affiliate of Montefiore Health System, the largest hospital system in the Bronx.

“We will be reminded of the legacy this historic gift represents each spring as we send another diverse class of physicians out across the Bronx and around the world to provide compassion­ate care and transform their communitie­s,” the statement continued.

The Bronx experience­s some of the worst health disparitie­s in the state. In annual county health rankings, the borough came in last out of 62 counties in New York based on a variety of health factors and outcomes, the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute found.

According to the study, 21% of Bronx residents reported that they consider themselves in fair or poor health, compared with 12% in the state overall. The average life expectancy in the borough was 78, more than two years younger than throughout New York.

Gottesman said well over 100 students enter Einstein each year and graduate with the skills necessary to serve patients in the Bronx and elsewhere.

“They leave as superbly trained scientists and compassion­ate and knowledgea­ble physicians,” Gottesman said, “with the expertise to find new ways to prevent diseases and provide the finest health care to communitie­s here in the Bronx and all over the world.”

In 2020, there was just one primary care physician for every 1,540 people in the Bronx, compared with a ratio of one doctor to 1,170 New Yorkers throughout the state, according to the University of Wisconsin study.

Jasper Sim, 24, told the Daily News that the free tuition will be a “tremendous help and a weight off the shoulders of students,” especially for his classmates from low-income background­s. He plans to go into internal medicine and said he would consider staying in the Bronx after he graduates in the spring next year.

“I hope the free tuition attracts an ethnically and economical­ly diverse student body,” he said, “that is … motivated to address the health disparitie­s in the Bronx.”

 ?? ?? Generous donor Ruth Gottesman (main) is a retired pediatrics professor who spent 55 years of her career affiliated with Albert Einstein College of Medicine (below).
Generous donor Ruth Gottesman (main) is a retired pediatrics professor who spent 55 years of her career affiliated with Albert Einstein College of Medicine (below).

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