
Alan L. Goldbloom, MD
President CEO, Children's Hospitals and Clinics
"Children's
is proud to be a member of the Phillips Partnership, as its
mission directly coincides with our commitment to improve
the health of all children. Good health requires much more
than good medical care, as anyone who works with children
knows. A child's future health and well-being is hugely influenced
by his or her environment, and part of Children's work is
to enhance the quality of that environment wherever we can.
"Phillips is our neighborhood: we share in the responsibility
for its growth, development, and quality of life."
Alan L. Goldbloom,
MD, became President and CEO of Children's Hospitals and Clinics
– the eighth-largest children's health care provider
in the nation – in January 2003.
Before joining Children's, Dr. Goldbloom served as Executive
Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of The Hospital
for Sick Children in Toronto, where he was responsible for
day-to-day operations of the hospital as well as community
initiatives and partnerships. During his 15 years at The Hospital
for Sick Children, he served in a number of leadership roles,
including Associate Pediatrician-in-Chief and Director of
Clinical Services, as well as Associate Chair of Pediatrics
at the University of Toronto. Prior to this, Dr. Goldbloom
spent a number of years involved in medical education, directing
residency training programs in pediatrics, and serving as
chairman of the examining board in pediatrics for The Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
Born in Montreal, Dr. Goldbloom has
spent most of his career in Canada. He is a 1973 graduate
of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. He practiced
pediatrics in Nova Scotia, where he also served on the faculty
at Dalhousie University. Dr. Goldbloom has had long-standing
interests in community issues. He has served as President
of the Children's Aid Society in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and
was involved in leading a re-organization of pediatric care
in Toronto. This latter activity included the development
of a Child Health Network, linking hospital, clinic, and individual
providers of pediatric care. Its goal was to provide the highest
quality care as close to the child's home as possible, with
minimal disruption to school and family. Dr. Goldbloom's wife,
Lynn, is a former child life worker from Boston Children's
Hospital and a long-time community volunteer. They have three
children – Ellen, Amy, and Stephen – all of whom
are studying and working in Canada.
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