Dr. Herbert Cohn MD Philadelphia, PA with 21+ years experience
Gender: Male Years In Practice: 21+ Phone Number:
Specialty
Thoracic & Cardiac Surgery
Adult General Thoracic Surgery
General Cardiac/Thoracic Surgery
Minimally Invasive Thoracic Surgery
Thoracic Surgical Oncology
Contact
1025 Walnut st.
610
Philadelphia, PA 19107 Phone:
Dr. Herbert Cohn's Videos
Jefferson honors Dr Herbert Cohn at the 2009 Jefferson Gala
One might say if you don't know Dr. Herbert Cohn, you don't really know Jefferson. Dr. Cohn arrived at Jefferson Medical College in 1951 as a medical student (JMC '55). Since that time, he has left only for his intern year at Atlantic City Hospital and two years of service in the U.S. Air Force. After graduating from the medical school, he completed his residency training on the service of John H. Gibbon, Jr., MD and his fellowship training in cardiovascular surgery. He was appointed to the faculty in 1962 and that was just the beginning. In the following decades, Dr. Cohn's surgical practice focused on endocrine and thoracic surgery. He earned a reputation as an exceptional educator with high expectations and an excellent clinician with a gentle bedside manner. Dr. Cohn has made immeasurable contributions to the educational initiatives at Jefferson and trained hundreds of surgeons. He received the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1980, was named the first Anthony E. Narducci, MD Professor of Surgery in 1998 and appointed to the JMC Academy of Distinguished Educators in 2011. He has also been a tireless advocate of patient safety and performance improvement, most recently as Surgeon Champion of the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) and the Vice Chair of Quality in the Department of Surgery. Last summer Dr. Cohn initiated a phased retirement with plans to fully retire in 2014. It will be an end of an era, literally and figuratively. Dr. Cohn's acquaintance has provided today's young surgeons with one-degree of separation from Dr. John Gibbon, Jr. - a neatly dressed, perfectly polite living connection to a surgical pioneer and a physician who has made his own indelible mark on Jefferson.