News | Cardiovascular Business | June 22, 2022

Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital Expands Cardiac Program

Thomas Forbes, MD, has been named the hospital's chief of pediatric cardiac services and has been joined by three other specialists as one of the nation's leading children’s facilities significantly increases its size and capabilities while also adding four floors to its existing building 

Thomas Forbes, MD, has been named chief of pediatric cardiac services at Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital.

Thomas Forbes, MD, has been named chief of pediatric cardiac services at Joe DiMaggio Children's Hospital. 


June 22, 2022 — Dr. Thomas Forbes, an interventional cardiologist, has joined Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital as its chief of pediatric cardiac services. Forbes, previously at Detroit Medical Center in Michigan, is leading an expanding roster of cardiac specialists as the Hollywood-based children’s facility significantly increases its size and capabilities while it adds four floors to the existing hospital building. 

Forbes is an active researcher and teacher that received fellowship training at Baylor University’s College of Medicine. Recently, he collaborated with Memorial Cardiac and Vascular Institute to repair a sinus venosus atrial septal defect in an adult patient using stents in a transcatheter procedure. It is believed this is the first time this approach has been used in Florida to repair an issue previously only fixable through open-heart surgery. 

In addition to Dr. Forbes, Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital Heart Institute, one of the top pediatric heart programs in the country, has added three other fellowship-trained physicians: 

  • Dr. Peter Guyon was part of the aforementioned procedure to repair the patient’s congenital heart defect. He was most recently at Rady Children’s Hospital and the University of California San Diego, where he completed a fellowship in pediatric cardiology. He specializes in interventional cardiology and earned his M.D. at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. 
  • Dr. Jared Klein is a cardiac imaging specialist, focusing on both echocardiography and MRI. His advanced training in those areas came at Nemours Children’s Health in Delaware and Ohio’s Cleveland Clinic Hospital. He is a second-generation cardiologist. 
  • Dr. John Dentel is a cardiac surgeon that completed fellowships at Washington University/Seattle Children’s Hospital (congenital cardiac surgery) and Indiana University (cardiothoracic surgery). 

The four doctors are members of the Memorial Physician Group and have joined the existing team of experts who offer a full range of congenital heart care, including heart transplantation. They will soon treat patients on a floor dedicated exclusively to cardiology when the expanded Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital opens later this year. The sixth floor will add a perioperative area for surgery patients, 20 intensive care beds, an operating room, a hybrid operating room, two catheterization labs, and procedure rooms with electrophysiology and interventional radiology capabilities. The new space will provide clinical teams a seamless environment to collaborate and efficiently care for critically-ill children, including those waiting for or recovering from a transplant. 

Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital has been included among the nation’s top 50 for cardiology and heart surgery in the 2021-22 ranking of best children’s hospitals by U.S. News & World Report. 

Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital is one of the nation’s leading pediatric hospitals, offering a comprehensive scope of healthcare services and programs in a caring, compassionate setting designed specifically for children. A level one pediatric trauma center, the hospital, part of Memorial Healthcare System, combines advanced technology, the expertise of one of the largest and most diverse groups of board-certified pediatric specialists in the region, and a focus on patient and family-centered care to heal the body, mind, and spirit. 

For more information: jdch.com 


Related Content

News | Pediatric Cardiology

March 29, 2024 — Young adults who were prescribed stimulant medications for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ...

Home March 29, 2024
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

March 1, 2024 — Prenatal stress is a potential risk factor for cardiovascular disease in offspring later in life. In a ...

Home March 01, 2024
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

February 28, 2024 — New research out of VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center and VCU Health Pauley Heart Center ...

Home February 28, 2024
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

February 21, 2024 — Ochsner Children's Hospital, ranked among the top hospitals in the nation for pediatric cardiology ...

Home February 21, 2024
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

February 13, 2024 — Pediatric heart transplantation has long been hailed as a life-saving intervention for children ...

Home February 13, 2024
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

December 5, 2023 — David Epstein, MD, a pediatrician who has dedicated his career to caring for very ill children, has ...

Home December 05, 2023
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

November 20, 2023 — In the U.S., nearly 10,000 children and adolescents have developed a condition called multisystem ...

Home November 20, 2023
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

October 6, 2023 — Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego, the largest children’s hospital on the West Coast and one of the ...

Home October 06, 2023
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

October 3, 2023 — A discovery of a mutation in the gene ACTA2 has given researchers, led by Dianna Milewicz, MD, PhD ...

Home October 03, 2023
Home
News | Pediatric Cardiology

August 23, 2023 — Researchers from Nemours Children’s Health will present a range of studies at the World Congress of ...

Home August 23, 2023
Home
Subscribe Now