Overview of Dr. Schrope
Dr. Beth Schrope is a gastrointestinal surgeon in New York, NY and is affiliated with New York-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Irving Medical Center. She received her medical degree from Temple University School of Medicine and has been in practice 20 years. She specializes in pancreaticobiliary surgery and surgical oncology (other than breast) and is experienced in pancreatitis, minimally invasive surgery, pancreaticobiliary cancers, pancreatic surgery, and general / gastrointestinal surgery. She leads one of the few programs in the nation for total pancreatectomy with autologous islet cell transplantation for treatment of end stage pancreatitis. Her superior results in morbidity and mortality in pancreatic and gastric surgery are an attestation to her excellent surgical skill and judgement. With a national acceptable benchmark of <1.6% in-hospital mortality, Dr. Schrope's recent result (within past five years) of <1% mortality for major pancreatic operations is exemplary. She will care for any person with the need, without regard for ethnicity, type of insurance, or ability to pay.
Office
161 Fort Washington Ave
Fl 8
New York, NY 10032Fax+1 212-342-5754
Education & Training
- New York Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia Campus)Residency, Surgery, 1996 - 2001
- Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple UniversityClass of 1996
- Drexel UniversityPhD, Biomedical Engineering, 1988 - 1992
- Johns Hopkins UniversityBS, Biomedical Engineering, 1984 - 1988
Certifications & Licensure
- FL State Medical License 2020 - Present
- NY State Medical License 1998 - 2026
- NJ State Medical License 2001 - 2025
- American Board of Surgery Surgery
Awards, Honors, & Recognition
- New York's Best Doctors Castle Connolly New York Magazine
- Nobility in Science National Pancreas Foundation, 2017
- Meaningful Use Stage 1 Certification Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2012
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Publications & Presentations
PubMed
- 28 citationsIncidence and management of enteric leaks after gastric bypass for morbid obesity during a 10-year period.Evren Durak, William B. Inabnet, Beth Schrope, Daniel Davis, Amna Daud
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases. 2008-05-01 - 56 citationsQuality of life in patients after total pancreatectomy is comparable with quality of life in patients who undergo a partial pancreatic resection.Irene Epelboym, Megan Winner, Joseph DiNorcia, Minna K. Lee, James A. Lee
The Journal of Surgical Research. 2014-03-01 - 88 citationsThirty-day mortality after bariatric surgery: independently adjudicated causes of death in the longitudinal assessment of bariatric surgery.Mark D. Smith, Emma J. Patterson, Abdus S. Wahed, Steven H. Belle, Paul D. Berk
Obesity Surgery. 2011-08-25
Journal Articles
- Dabigatran (Pradaxa) Is Safe for Extended Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis After Surgery for Pancreatic CancerJohn A Chabot, Michael D Kluger, Beth A Schrope, Journal of gastrointestinal surgery
Authored Content
- Poor Patients Get Poor Positions on the OR Schedule and Poor Continuity of CareJuly 2020
Press Mentions
- Targeting Single Enzyme in the Obese Could Help Prevent and Treat DiabetesFebruary 10th, 2016
Professional Memberships
- Member
- AHPBAMember
- Member
- Fellow
- Member
- Member
Insurance Accepted
- Aetna Choice POS II
Aetna HMO
BCBS Blue Card PPO
Empire BCBS HMO
Empire BCBS PPO
GHI PPO
Great West PPO
Horizon BCBS Direct Access
Horizon BCBS HMOHorizon BCBS POS
Horizon BCBS PPO
Humana ChoiceCare Network PPO
MVP Healthcare PPO
Oxford Health Freedom
Oxford Health Liberty
United Healthcare - Direct Choice Plus POS
United Healthcare - Direct Options PPO - Please verify your coverage with the provider's office directly when scheduling an appointment
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