Mount Sinai Launches Integrated Women’s Health Center with Lifespan-Focused Care Model
Event summary
- Mount Sinai opened the 11,000-square-foot Carolyn Rowan Center for Women’s Health and Wellness on May 27, 2026, in Manhattan.
- The center integrates 15+ specialties under one roof, including gynecology, cardiology, and behavioral health, with structured care pathways.
- First pathway launched: MyPath Balance 40+, targeting midlife hormonal and cardiometabolic transitions for women 40+.
- Center funded by philanthropic gift from Mount Sinai Trustee Carolyn Rowan.
- Will serve as research hub for sex-specific biology, led by The Blavatnik Family Women’s Health Research Institute.
The big picture
Mount Sinai’s new center responds to growing demand for coordinated, lifespan-focused women’s healthcare, particularly in midlife. The model aligns with broader industry shifts toward precision medicine and multidisciplinary care integration. With 47,000 employees and seven hospitals, Mount Sinai leverages its academic medical system scale to position this as a potential benchmark for women’s health delivery.
What we're watching
- Pathway Adoption
- How quickly Mount Sinai can scale its MyPath clinical pathways beyond the initial Balance 40+ offering.
- Research Translation
- Whether the center’s research focus on sex-specific biology can accelerate treatment innovations for under-researched women’s conditions.
- Competitive Differentiation
- The pace at which other academic medical centers replicate this integrated, lifespan-focused model for women’s health.
