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Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, DO
Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum is an attending cardiologist and the Director of Women and Heart Disease of the Heart and Vascular Institute of Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. She has done fellowship training in both Preventive Cardiology and Cardiology. She is board certified in Internal Medicine and Cardiology, with a subspecialty in prevention and Women and Heart disease. She was the Director of the Center for Cardiac and Pulmonary Health, for cardiac rehabilitation and lifestyle management at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York prior to joining Lenox Hill. Dr. Steinbaum has devoted her career to the treatment of heart disease through early detection, education, and prevention. She was one of the founders of the Women’s Cardiac Care Network, a city wide program under the Continuum Hospital network, including 4 hospitals citywide in metropolitan Manhattan. She has lent her time in lecturing to multiple organizations around New York, including the United Federation of Teachers, the Hispanic Housing Society and was as a physician at the finish line of the More Marathon, for women over 40 years old. She is a published author in Progresses in Cardiovascular Disease, on “The Metabolic Syndrome: an emerging health epidemic in women.” Her work in this field has enabled her to be on the grant review panel for the Office of Women’s Health through the National Institute of Health, to provide funding for programs devoted to promoting Women and Heart Disease prevention throughout the United States.
Dr. Steinbaum is on the consulting board of Bottom Line/Women’s Health, an on-line health journal, as well as The Journal for Alternative and Complementary Therapies. Her writing and perspectives on health and wellness can be seen in the magazine, The Boulevard Long Island. She can be seen on the online segments of Women and Heart Disease in www.howdini.com. This year she is the spokesperson for Kellogg’s Healthy Beginnings. (www.HealthyBeginnings.com) Dr. Steinbaum is a Fellow of the American College of Cardiology and a member of the American Heart Association.
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Brenda Strong
Brenda Strong can be seen (and heard) as Mary-Alice Young, the recently-departed narrator of ABC’s award-winning smash hit “Desperate Housewives.” While Strong’s seemingly-perfect character committed suicide in the premiere episode, she starred in several flashback scenes as the mystery surrounding her death unfolded. Her weekly voiceovers provide viewers with insightful commentary from beyond the grave. Strong will be seen in an upcoming episode of the hit HBO series “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and recently starred in the Lifetime telefilm “Family in Hiding.” She will also be seen in the upcoming independent films “Ocean of Pearls,” “A Plumm Summer” and “You.”Previously, Strong was perhaps most recognizable to television audiences for her role as Sue Ellen Mishkie (a.k.a. “The Braless Wonder”) on the award-winning series “Seinfeld.” She has also recurred on such acclaimed series as “Nip/Tuck,” “Everwood,” “Sports Night,” “7th Heaven” and “Party of Five.” Other television credits include “CSI,” “Ally McBeal,” “Gilmore Girls” and “ER.” Strong recently starred in the feature films “The Kid and I” with Tom Arnold and “The Work and the Glory 2 & 3” Previous film credits include “Starship Troopers,” “The Deep End of the Ocean,” “The Craft” and “Spaceballs.”A native of Portland, Oregon, Strong left home to attend Arizona State University, where she earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Musical Theater. After graduation, she moved to Los Angeles and began landing roles in both television and film. Strong is a certified yoga instructor and produces and stars in a line of videos designed to help infertile couples through yoga therapy. Additionally, she has taught at UCLA’s Mind-Body Institute. The American Fertility Association recently named her their first national spokesperson, because of her work with infertility. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and son.
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Alexandra Levi
Alexandra Levi launched her first consulting practice when she was 21, developing financial and tax strategies for individuals and small businesses in entertainment and media. Eight years later, a client convinced her to join his company, where she became CFO of a premier modeling agency headquartered in New York. She expanded the business to London, South Beach and Cape Town growing income tenfold to $20 million. Levi also developed the company's commercial, television and film divisions, negotiating some of the largest and most innovative contracts in the industry. In 1999, she became vice president of entertainment at a communications firm, leading both its creative and management teams. In addition to producing content for film and television, Levi spearheaded licensing, branding and distribution programs. After six years, she decided to return to her own practice, driven by her entrepreneurial instinct and desire to help individuals and businesses develop strategies for growing their businesses and creating and preserving wealth.
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Robin Sloan
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Mrs. Patricia Butts
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