Total Transplants
25
across all organ programs
This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.
Open-data reference.
New York · Code: NYCC
Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center is a transplant program in New York (SRTR center code NYCC). According to SRTR Program-Specific Reports from November 2025, the center operates 1 distinct organ program — Kidney. Each program is independently evaluated by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients using risk-adjusted survival estimates, so performance on one organ does not imply performance on another.
Across all programs, the center reported approximately 25 transplant procedures during the most recent SRTR reporting cohort. An estimated 28 candidates sit on this center's combined waiting lists, though allocation is driven by OPTN policy (blood type, medical urgency, geography, organ-specific criteria) rather than list position alone.
This center operates 1 SRTR-reporting program; survival estimates are risk-adjusted for recipient characteristics and update approximately twice per year. Use the table below to compare each organ program's survival, volume, and waitlist against national averages. This information is factual and does not constitute medical advice.
National median wait times from listing to transplant. Individual wait times vary by blood type, urgency, and geographic allocation region.
Total Transplants
25
across all organ programs
Programs Above Avg
0/1
at or above national 1yr survival
Best: N/A (Kidney)
Based on SRTR Program-Specific Reports (November 2025), Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center in New York operates 1 transplant program covering Kidney. The center performed approximately 25 transplants during the most recent reporting period. There are currently an estimated 28 patients on its combined waiting lists.
Survival rate data for this center's 1 program is reported by SRTR using risk-adjusted estimates. Outcomes may vary based on individual patient factors, and survival statistics alone do not determine the quality of a transplant program. Patients are encouraged to discuss these figures with their transplant team.
Source: Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) Program-Specific Reports (CSRS 2511) · November 2025
| Organ | 1-yr Survival | 3-yr Survival | US Avg | Transplants | Waitlist |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kidney | N/A | N/A | N/A | 25 | 28 |
Survival rate data for Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center is available in the SRTR Program-Specific Reports. Rates vary by organ type and reporting period. Consult your transplant team for the most current information.
According to the latest SRTR data, Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center has approximately 28 patients on its combined transplant waiting lists across 1 organ program. Wait times depend on many factors including organ type, blood type, medical urgency, and geographic allocation policies. Your transplant center can provide an estimated timeline based on your specific circumstances.
Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center offers transplant programs for Kidney. Each program is independently evaluated by SRTR with its own survival rate data and volume statistics. Not all centers offer the same organ programs, so availability is an important factor when choosing a transplant center.
Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center operates 1 transplant program evaluated by SRTR. National rankings use risk-adjusted survival estimates and exclude centers below minimum case volume thresholds. Discuss center-specific outcomes with your medical team to understand how they apply to your individual case.
When evaluating Long Island Jewish Medical Center-Cohen Children's Medical Center or any transplant center, consider multiple factors beyond survival statistics: the center's experience with your specific organ type, geographic proximity (which affects organ allocation timing), your insurance coverage, the multidisciplinary team's expertise, post-transplant follow-up capabilities, and the center's patient volume. SRTR data provides one lens, but the OPTN recommends discussing all options with your referring physician and potential transplant teams.
The data shown here comes from SRTR Program-Specific Reports released in November 2025 as part of the Collaborative Silo-Reservoir Study (CSRS). SRTR publishes updated program-specific reports approximately twice per year (typically May and November). Each release includes the most recent cohort data, which may lag by 6-18 months due to follow-up requirements for survival outcomes.
Explore additional healthcare resources for New York from federal data sources.
Other transplant centers in New York reporting to SRTR.
About This Data
This data is for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your transplant team for decisions about your care.
Source: Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) Program-Specific Reports (CSRS 2511) · November 2025 Survival rates are 1-year graft survival estimates for adult recipients.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.