Dr Robert Tanouye
Specialty – Emergency Medicine
Qualification: M.D., M.B.A.
Medical School: Tufts University School of Medicine
Visiting Hour: By Appointment Only.
Spoken Language: English
Contact Us: 212-746-5026
About Dr Robert Tanouye
Dr. Robert Tanue is Associate Director of the Emergency Department at NYP/Lower Manhattan Hospital, Associate Director of the Healthcare Leadership and Management Fellowship at Weill Cornell’s Department of Emergency Medicine, and Associate Director of the Healthcare Leadership and Management Scholars Program at Weill Cornell Medical College. She also serves as the physician scheduler in Emergency Medicine’s physician liaison department for billing and compliance.
Dr. Tanue is part of the 2020-21 cohort of NYP’s LEAD Academy for Physicians. He also serves on NY ACEP’s committee for practice management.
Dr. Tanue is an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College. He is a graduate of New York-Presbyterian/Columbia’s Emergency Medicine Residency and Cornell in Health Management program and MD/MBA from Tufts University School of Medicine.
Appointment: Online Appointment Here.
Clinic Details: New York-Presbyterian 525 East 68th Street, Room M130, New York, NY 10065
Doctor Enquire: 929-510-7661
General Enquire for Hospital: 718-661-8950
More Doctors: Dr Joseph Osborne
Health Tips For Your Life
- Eat a healthy diet.
- Consume less salt and sugar.
- Reduce intake of harmful fats.
- Avoid harmful use of alcohol.
- Don’t smoke.
- Be active.
- Check your blood pressure regularly.
- Limit sugary drinks
- Eat nuts and seeds.
- Avoid ultra-processed foods
- Don’t fear coffee.
- Eat fatty fish.
- Get enough sleep
- Feed your gut bacteria.
- Stay hydrated.
Health Tips
Eat a combination of different foods including fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, and whole grains. Adults should aim for five daily portions (400 grams) of fruit and vegetables. You can always improve your fruit and vegetable intake by including vegetables in all your meals; Take fresh fruits and vegetables as snacks; View different fruits and vegetables; And in the season they are. activity, the political movement produced by the skeleton, requires energy—300 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week for specific health benefits.
The key to a healthy diet is balancing the amount of energy you use with the amount of energy you use to burn calories for how active you are properly.
If you eat and drink, you have very little.
It would help if you had a comprehensive discussion to ensure a balanced diet and your body in all its aspects.
They can be fresh, frozen, canned, dried, or juiced.
It’s easy to turn on, you get 5 days. Why not slice a banana over your breakfast cereal, or swap your mid-morning snack for a slice of fresh fruit?
Eat a variety of foods