Felice H. Schnoll-Sussman, M.D.
Business Details
About
Beyond the Upper East Side apartments, in the clinical corridor of specialized care, you’ll find Felice H. Schnoll-Sussman, M.D. At the threshold of York Avenue, this ninth-floor office functions as a dedicated gastroenterology outpost for complex digestive issues and routine screenings. Colonoscopies, upper endoscopies, and liver-function evaluations define the roster; IBD management and GERD interventions sit closer to the referral stream. Network doctors funnel patients here after a positive Cologuard or a haem-positive stool card shows up on their desks, hoping for a rapid trajectory through prep instructions and biopsy results.
A two-minute elevator climb from the main elevator shaft brings patients to the office door, where reception logs indicate an average wait that rarely pushes into overtime. Diagnostic quality—not white-glove hospitality—anchors the workflow; every abnormal polyp found on an endoscopy phone home the same day with a pathology follow-up. Outside, York Avenue hums with fleets ofNIH investigators rushing to morning grand rounds while Bellevue-bound ambulances flash past—the chaos outside is the calm inside.
When biopsy reports finally arrive, patients don’t linger; they either pivot to one of the dedicated hepatology or motility sub-specialists on the same floor or schedule an annual surveillance colonoscopy. The referral loop is compact, short, fast. Insurance verifications leave a voicemail the afternoon charts close, giving families a single number to circle back by week’s end. That’s how the system runs—brief, clinical, and always one floor above sidewalk noise.
Head straight to StreetEasy’s map marker instead of weaving around York traffic: Navigate to 1283 York Ave 9th Floor, New York, NY 10065. After arrival, a call on (646) 962-4000 confirms check-in; the lobby phone emits a single ring and connects to the front desk without a unified menu hassle. Between subway disembarkation at 77th or 86th and the elevator doors, everything is measured in paces, not pleasantries.