South Nassau Communities Hospital's MD is More than a Specialist in Pain Management
An anesthesiologist and chief of pain management at South Nassau for more than a quarter-century, Dr. Kirschen runs several interventional pain management clinics on Long Island using traditional and alternative medicine techniques.
Oceanside, NY, December 31, 2014 --(PR.com)-- The Long Island Business News (LIBN) recently awarded its “Health Care Heroes” Physician Hero Award to Neil Kirschen, M.D., chief of pain management at South Nassau Communities Hospital. LIBN’s “Health Care Heroes” awards honor individuals and organizations in the health care industry in Nassau and Suffolk counties for outstanding leadership and commitment.
An anesthesiologist and chief of pain management at South Nassau for more than a quarter-century, Dr. Kirschen runs several interventional pain management clinics on Long Island using traditional and alternative medicine techniques. When he’s not at his full-time job, he’s volunteering as a firefighter and emergency medical technician for the Rockville Centre Fire Department and as the medical director of the Rockville Centre, Roosevelt and Hicksville fire departments. During his 30 years of service, he has responded to thousands of fire and EMS calls and seen more than his share of cardiac arrests, house and building fires and motor vehicle accidents.
If he’s not busy fighting fires, tending to the sick and injured or providing continuing medical education and mentoring to EMTs, he’s instructing village police departments throughout Nassau County how to administer lifesaving intranasal Narcan® for drug overdoses. “When you call 911, that’s when you’re most in need,” says Dr. Kirschen.
Driven by a passion for “pre-hospital emergency care,” Dr. Kirschen is also a member of the Nassau Regional Emergency Medical Advisory Committee, which develops policies and protocols for EMTs in Nassau County. As a medical control physician for the EMS System, he directs medical care at the “pre-hospital scene” for patients who require advanced life support.
In his hometown of Rockville Centre, he teaches members of the village’s police and auxiliary first-aid techniques to administer to themselves, should they become wounded on the job. “Each officer is given a first-aid kit and they learn how to patch their own wounds before the ambulance arrives,” he said. “This is done to save the lives of the police and auxiliary.”
Several times a year he travels to upstate Rome, where he advises emergency preparedness officials on course curriculum offered at the New York State Preparedness Training Center, which serves as a hub for emergency response training for natural, technological and terrorism-related disasters for first responders.
A lot of his volunteer work is done on nights and weekend, and for the most part, it’s local, except for his medical missions work. That work takes him to Guadalajara, Mexico— more than 2,000 miles away. Each fall for the past seven years, he and three dozen physicians from all over the U.S., who are members of the American Association of Orthopedic Medicine (AAOM), staff the city hospital’s pain clinic. During the week-long visit, villagers who make the hours-long trek from the mountains and hillsides line up for relief of all types of musculoskeletal pain and sprains, from farm accidents or other work-related injuries to motor vehicle crashes.
“Some of these people have never seen a doctor,” said Dr. Kirschen, a past president of AAOM who also makes house calls for bedridden residents of the city.
An anesthesiologist and chief of pain management at South Nassau for more than a quarter-century, Dr. Kirschen runs several interventional pain management clinics on Long Island using traditional and alternative medicine techniques. When he’s not at his full-time job, he’s volunteering as a firefighter and emergency medical technician for the Rockville Centre Fire Department and as the medical director of the Rockville Centre, Roosevelt and Hicksville fire departments. During his 30 years of service, he has responded to thousands of fire and EMS calls and seen more than his share of cardiac arrests, house and building fires and motor vehicle accidents.
If he’s not busy fighting fires, tending to the sick and injured or providing continuing medical education and mentoring to EMTs, he’s instructing village police departments throughout Nassau County how to administer lifesaving intranasal Narcan® for drug overdoses. “When you call 911, that’s when you’re most in need,” says Dr. Kirschen.
Driven by a passion for “pre-hospital emergency care,” Dr. Kirschen is also a member of the Nassau Regional Emergency Medical Advisory Committee, which develops policies and protocols for EMTs in Nassau County. As a medical control physician for the EMS System, he directs medical care at the “pre-hospital scene” for patients who require advanced life support.
In his hometown of Rockville Centre, he teaches members of the village’s police and auxiliary first-aid techniques to administer to themselves, should they become wounded on the job. “Each officer is given a first-aid kit and they learn how to patch their own wounds before the ambulance arrives,” he said. “This is done to save the lives of the police and auxiliary.”
Several times a year he travels to upstate Rome, where he advises emergency preparedness officials on course curriculum offered at the New York State Preparedness Training Center, which serves as a hub for emergency response training for natural, technological and terrorism-related disasters for first responders.
A lot of his volunteer work is done on nights and weekend, and for the most part, it’s local, except for his medical missions work. That work takes him to Guadalajara, Mexico— more than 2,000 miles away. Each fall for the past seven years, he and three dozen physicians from all over the U.S., who are members of the American Association of Orthopedic Medicine (AAOM), staff the city hospital’s pain clinic. During the week-long visit, villagers who make the hours-long trek from the mountains and hillsides line up for relief of all types of musculoskeletal pain and sprains, from farm accidents or other work-related injuries to motor vehicle crashes.
“Some of these people have never seen a doctor,” said Dr. Kirschen, a past president of AAOM who also makes house calls for bedridden residents of the city.
Contact
South Nassau Communities Hospital
Damian J. Becker
516-377-5370
southnassau.org
Contact
Damian J. Becker
516-377-5370
southnassau.org
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