Neuroscience Services at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas
Wednesday, July 28th, 2010
Physicians on the medical staff at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas offer a broad continuum of Neuroscience services ranging from Parkinson’s to brain tumors; stroke to Alzheimer’s to epilepsy.
Texas Health Dallas features a dedicated, Level-4 Comprehensive Epilepsy Center.
Texas Health Dallas is recognized with designation as a Primary Stroke Center by The Joint Commission. This means that the hospital is in the Dallas Area Stroke Network, and it underscores our commitment to safety and quality patient care by physicians on the medical staff, nurses, and other caregivers.
There’s a wide range of advanced technologies including one of the world’s first BrainSUITE operating rooms for complicated brain tumor surgery.
Deep Brain Stimulation therapy plays an important role in Parkinson’s disease treatment, and 3-D imaging capabilities open new windows into the brain.
As a faith-based organization, comprehensive care covers the whole person…body, mind, and spirit.
Welcome to the Neuroscience services at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas…where patients and families are valued as individuals and treated with compassion and respect.
Texas Health Resources
1-877-THR-WELL
www.TexasHealth.org
Duration : 0:3:45
John stossel takes on mythes about Heatlh care system and Michael Moores new movie Sicko
when its him, we should change something, when he’s ok, the rest of us.
Stuart Browning highlights the plight of an Ontario man with a cancerous brain tumor who crossed the border to the U.S. to get the medical care that is rationed in his home country.
Filmmaker Stuart Browning shows the callousness of “single-payer”, government-run health care systems as practiced in Canada.
J. Adam Milgram, Executive Director of Stein Institute for Research on Aging, discusses the psycho spiritual dimension of aging and how we can use it to stay young. Milgram proposes a preventive, empowering approach to facilitating overall wellness and longevity through accepting responsibility for developing life enhancing life styles, behaviors and attitudes. Series: “SIRA (Sam and Rose Stein Institute for Research on Aging)” [12/1999] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 4477]
