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5.0 out of 5.

 
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Dr Zeshan Hyder DO, 9001 Broadway, Merrillville, IN


Rating: 5 out of 5.

Dr Hyder performed surgery on my lower back which was injured in a fall down stairs. The bone was relocated back in its proper place, a disc was replaced and arthritis was removed. The pain I had before was completely gone! I had no surgical pain at the site and no complications since. My physical therapy has strengthened and I have recommended Dr Hyder countless times! His staff team at the hospital & his office have also been excellent!

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Alexander Nash, 3822 Broadway Ave., Fort Myers, FL, 33901


Rating: 5 out of 5.

Dr. Nash is one of the few doctors that I have been to that really cares for his patients. He gives you his entire attention and all the time you need; however, you do not spend hardly any time waiting to be seen. I would recommend Dr. Nash to anyone needing pain management.

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Dr (Kristappa) Sangavaram, 303 Molnar Drive, Elmwood Park, NJ, 07407


Rating: 1 out of 5.

Dr Kristappa Sangavaram, MD double charged me $1,000. He charged me and my medical insurance company for the same injection of a steroid. Sometimes he uses the last name "Sangdidram", other times he uses the last name "Sangavarian" and other times he uses the last name "Sangavaram". He told me not to tell the other anesthesiologists but I did and I told the insurance company. Even his ex-partner told me "I know what Dr Sangavaram did to you...I know the story" and that's why he was told to leave and he had to go to a smaller place and he makes less money thanks to me because I told everyone. I spoke to him and he didn't know I told on him and he started trash talking his previous partners. In a way I won because he ended up earning much less money because I told everybody. Always report when physicians do that to you- it happens all the time and never pay a medical bill in this country because all those bills are fraudulent. I know because I worked in the medical field. Don't go to Dr Kristappa Sangavaram because besides that he doesn't do anything that will help you. He's strictly just works with botox and steroid blockers. He will try to shame you if you take pain meds. He calls your family members and gossips to your family members about you before he bills you. Remember: Always report these doctors to every appropriate agency and always name and shame them. This happens all the time in the United States. Only in 11 US states is it not permitted for a physician to over-bill you. In all the other 39 US states they are allowed but you must not pay it. I told you I worked in the medical field in this country.

Like 95

 

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At Dominic, Mark Valverde, MD, Jackson, MS


Rating: 1 out of 5.

Mark Valverde, former Psychiatrist at St Domic hospital in Jackson, MS will not 1. Look his patients in the eyes or call them by name, even when the patient asks that he do so. When the patient was in the inpatient area of the hospital, the nurses were unable to reach Dr Valverde by phone or beepers when he was needed for emergencies. The staff appeared to be scared of him. He would not reply when a patient was in distress. Dr Valverde is a psychiatrist. Psychiatrists are supposed to look at their patients in the eye and offer understanding. He was unable to connect with his patients. It was a shame he was chosen to work with the most vulnerable of patients. I left with the lowest opinion of his communication skills, his lack of compassion and he had an air of being better than others. His choice to not respond to calls from staff calls was malpractice. Dr Valverde would not look the patients in the eyes. It may behoove him to work in a lab or do research. Psychiatry must encompass compassion. Dr Valverde had no compassion.

Like 53

 

 

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lisa primiani, n/a


Rating: 5 out of 5.

Dr. Lisa Primiani is the best doctor if you are a patient with a real medical issue. She does not do well with entitled men that complain like a twat.

Reply to:

This review is in reference to a United Healthcare virtual visit on Ju...

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lisa primiani, n/a


Rating: 3 out of 5.

This review is in reference to a United Healthcare virtual visit on July 3, 2022. I'm a 49 year old male who has suffered through anxiety and sleep related issues. To give a little more background I'd previously spoken with 2 other doctors on June 30 and July 2, also through UHC virtual care. But unlike this experience, those two were 5 stars. I originally called because at the time I was going through severe withdrawal symptoms after having to abruptly stop a sleep/anxiety medicine. I had a scheduled appointment with a new primary care physician on July 8 but I had no idea what to expect from the new doctor, plus I needed some immediate relief from the withdrawal symptoms which were making it almost impossible for me to sleep. The first doctor, William Errico, DO was extremely helpful and prescribed a 30 day supply of .1 mg Clonidine to help me. He was friendly and I immediately felt comfortable with him. On July 2, I spoke with Karen Beers, NP. At this point I hadn't noticed much effect from the Clonidine and was looking to gather a little more input on things. She was very patient and helpful and gave me some good suggestions on natural remedies to help with my issue. The 5-HTP she recommended has worked very well for me. By late evening July 2/early July 3 I noticed the Clonidine was starting to have a positive effect. I was still apprehensive about what to expect from the new doctor and I felt that I could possibly gain some more insight from talking to a third doctor and possibly get a refill on the Clonidine since it was beginning to work for me. Plus I had no idea whether a new pcp would even prescribe it. My mistake was getting Lisa Primiani. From the beginning she projected a cold, unfeeling demeanor and I felt uncomfortable with her. The only good thing about the visit was there was no cost because it was fully covered under my insurance. But in this case I got what I paid for. She tended to use the word "unfortunate" a lot but the truly unfortunate thing was this visit. Well, where do I begin? I clearly stated my issue and my concerns and her first response was that I'd already had 3 previous visits with other doctors (it was only 2 - the first visit with Dr. Errico was accidentally disconnected before it had begun). In essence, this made me feel very uncomfortable. Like I'd already called several times already and why was I wasting her time? This isn't what she stated word for word, but it was clearly the impression that I got. To quote a phrase from my 13 year old daughter, it was a "cringe worthy" moment. It got worse from there. At this point I knew I was wasting my time, but I decided to approach the subject of giving me a Clonidine refill. I stated the reasons for this as I did earlier in this review. Her response was basically if I'd taken the whole bottle already then I had a serious problem. These weren't the exact words but they're nearly identical. My initial reaction was complete shock. I honestly don't have words for it. At the time, this comment kind of reminded me of an old lady with a serious case of dementia who will pretty much blurt out the worst possible thing. I was like, no way, she didn't really say that! Also, if I'd actually taken the whole 30 day supply of Clonidine in 3 days then chances are that I probably wouldn't have been having this conversation in the first place. Another truly cringe worthy moment. Unlike the previous 2 doctors, she offered me nothing. Well, actually she did. She offered me an excuse. She stated that her specialty was not "chronic" issues but rather short-term issues or something to that effect. Well, I'll make it a point the next time that I call a telehealth doctor to tell my body not to have a "chronic" issue but a short-term one instead. One word of advice for this doctor, actually 2 words, smile more. A little friendliness goes a long way. I'd love to see the world of telehealth become a kinder place as exemplified by my visits with the first 2 doctors. Every patient out there deserves nothing less.

Reply to:

This review is in reference to a United Healthcare virtual visit on Ju...

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stankova, DALLAS


Rating: 1 out of 5.

One of the top 50 doctors in the United States I don't think so. Mother of the Year by the PTA I also don't think so. it's just too many negative comments across too many platforms by way too many people not to be taken seriously not just this one for that to be true. Somebody's tooting their own horn witch tracks my investigation that doctor stankova has a huge ego cares more about herself then her patients and is on the bottom of the scale when it comes to proficiency something I didn't want for my babies. I investigated Dr stankova as well as many other ENTs as a possible candidates to look at my baby's ears every time they get into the water they have ear infections so now they have tubes in there ears and have to put wax in their ears every single time they go swimming. Some of the parents on this platform probably know exactly what I'm talking about .It's a hassle but we'll do almost anything for our babies. I determined up on my investigation that I would be a bad parent if I allowed doctor stankova or any other Doctor Who is the stankova near my babies ears. As far as parent of the year there's not a parent out there that doesn't question whether they made the right decisions whether they screwed up their kid worry every single minute that passes all they can hope and pray for that their kid makes it to 18 without going to jail for anything serious I question evey decision worry 24/7 about my babies as every parent does

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Dr Skowran - Sutter Gould, 600 coffee rd


Rating: 2 out of 5.

My mom went to him, then myself for 4 yrs. Seems like he needs to retire. There is no concern there any more. Office does their best to sched video calls instead of you going in. I've had him throw up his hands and say "what do you want from me?" Very discouraging and frustrating.But he's never forgot to remind me of a covid vaccine.

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lisa primiani, n/a


Rating: 1 out of 5.

This review is in reference to a United Healthcare virtual visit on July 3, 2022. I'm a 49 year old male who has suffered through anxiety and sleep related issues. To give a little more background I'd previously spoken with 2 other doctors on June 30 and July 2, also through UHC virtual care. But unlike this experience, those two were 5 stars. I originally called because at the time I was going through severe withdrawal symptoms after having to abruptly stop a sleep/anxiety medicine. I had a scheduled appointment with a new primary care physician on July 8 but I had no idea what to expect from the new doctor, plus I needed some immediate relief from the withdrawal symptoms which were making it almost impossible for me to sleep. The first doctor, William Errico, DO was extremely helpful and prescribed a 30 day supply of .1 mg Clonidine to help me. He was friendly and I immediately felt comfortable with him. On July 2, I spoke with Karen Beers, NP. At this point I hadn't noticed much effect from the Clonidine and was looking to gather a little more input on things. She was very patient and helpful and gave me some good suggestions on natural remedies to help with my issue. The 5-HTP she recommended has worked very well for me. By late evening July 2/early July 3 I noticed the Clonidine was starting to have a positive effect. I was still apprehensive about what to expect from the new doctor and I felt that I could possibly gain some more insight from talking to a third doctor and possibly get a refill on the Clonidine since it was beginning to work for me. Plus I had no idea whether a new pcp would even prescribe it. My mistake was getting Lisa Primiani. From the beginning she projected a cold, unfeeling demeanor and I felt uncomfortable with her. The only good thing about the visit was there was no cost because it was fully covered under my insurance. But in this case I got what I paid for. She tended to use the word "unfortunate" a lot but the truly unfortunate thing was this visit. Well, where do I begin? I clearly stated my issue and my concerns and her first response was that I'd already had 3 previous visits with other doctors (it was only 2 - the first visit with Dr. Errico was accidentally disconnected before it had begun). In essence, this made me feel very uncomfortable. Like I'd already called several times already and why was I wasting her time? This isn't what she stated word for word, but it was clearly the impression that I got. To quote a phrase from my 13 year old daughter, it was a "cringe worthy" moment. It got worse from there. At this point I knew I was wasting my time, but I decided to approach the subject of giving me a Clonidine refill. I stated the reasons for this as I did earlier in this review. Her response was basically if I'd taken the whole bottle already then I had a serious problem. These weren't the exact words but they're nearly identical. My initial reaction was complete shock. I honestly don't have words for it. At the time, this comment kind of reminded me of an old lady with a serious case of dementia who will pretty much blurt out the worst possible thing. I was like, no way, she didn't really say that! Also, if I'd actually taken the whole 30 day supply of Clonidine in 3 days then chances are that I probably wouldn't have been having this conversation in the first place. Another truly cringe worthy moment. Unlike the previous 2 doctors, she offered me nothing. Well, actually she did. She offered me an excuse. She stated that her specialty was not "chronic" issues but rather short-term issues or something to that effect. Well, I'll make it a point the next time that I call a telehealth doctor to tell my body not to have a "chronic" issue but a short-term one instead. One word of advice for this doctor, actually 2 words, smile more. A little friendliness goes a long way. I'd love to see the world of telehealth become a kinder place as exemplified by my visits with the first 2 doctors. Every patient out there deserves nothing less.

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Gregory Nazar, Baptist Health Floyd, Louisville, Kentucky


Rating: 1 out of 5.

My initial experience with this neurosurgeon was good. Procedure performed for synovial cyst touching my spinal chord went well. Until...a couple of months later, pain increased in same area. A disc had slipped into the spot where the cyst had been. Because precautions were not taken to insure this didn't happen, anither surgery needed to be done. During this procedure something was done incorrectly, again, and spinal fluid leak started, became infected, resulting in ANOTHER surgery to 'clean out the infection'. Meanwhile, he continued increasing my medications to help with the pain. (Looking back at what he had me taking, I probably should have died from an overdose.) Infection continued to worsen. The pain became unbearable! Dr. Nazar said, 'Well, there will be pain while healing.' I couldn't sit, stand, or lie down without a ripping, tearing pain. I thought I would die. My final MRI he ordered showed the infection had gotten into my spine - the bones. It's called osteomyelitis. I've never experienced pain like this in my life! When his nurse practitioner told me over the phone what this was, I almost fainted. I told her I couldn't take this anymore and wanted a new doctor. I wouldn't send my enemy to this man or his nurse practitioner. If you need anything with your spine, go to Dr. Jeffrey Gum, Leatherman Spine Institute. Just do your research.

Like 0