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Evan Peskin MD MBA

Interventional Pain Medicine Physician

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Pain Medicine (Anesthesiology) Physician

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Anesthesiology Physician

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Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Physician

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Pain Medicine (Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation) Physician

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Pain Medicine Physician

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Pain Medicine (Anesthesiology) Physician

Phone, Open Hours, Reviews & Information

4800 South Saginaw Street, Flint, Michigan 48507, United States
Spoken Languages: English
Gender: Male

 

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More practice addresses of Evan Peskin

1611 Northwest 12th Avenue, Miami, Florida 33136, United States

(305) 585-1111

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Interventional Pain Medicine is the discipline of medicine devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of pain and related disorders principally with the application of interventional techniques in managing subacute, chronic, persistent, and intractable pain, independently or in conjunction with other modalities of treatment.

An anesthesiologist who provides a high level of care, either as a primary physician or consultant, for patients experiencing problems with acute, chronic and/or cancer pain in both hospital and ambulatory settings. Patient care needs are also coordinated with other specialists.

An anesthesiologist is trained to provide pain relief and maintenance, or restoration, of a stable condition during and immediately following an operation or an obstetric or diagnostic procedure. The anesthesiologist assesses the risk of the patient undergoing surgery and optimizes the patient's condition prior to, during and after surgery. In addition to these management responsibilities, the anesthesiologist provides medical management and consultation in pain management and critical care medicine. Anesthesiologists diagnose and treat acute, long-standing and cancer pain problems; diagnose and treat patients with critical illnesses or severe injuries; direct resuscitation in the care of patients with cardiac or respiratory emergencies, including the need for artificial ventilation; and supervise post-anesthesia recovery.

Physical medicine and rehabilitation, also referred to as rehabilitation medicine, is the medical specialty concerned with diagnosing, evaluating, and treating patients with physical disabilities. These disabilities may arise from conditions affecting the musculoskeletal system such as neck and back pain, sports injuries, or other painful conditions affecting the limbs, such as carpal tunnel syndrome. Alternatively, the disabilities may result from neurological trauma or disease such as spinal cord injury, head injury or stroke. A physician certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation is often called a physiatrist. The primary goal of the physiatrist is to achieve maximal restoration of physical, psychological, social and vocational function through comprehensive rehabilitation. Pain management is often an important part of the role of the physiatrist. For diagnosis and evaluation, a physiatrist may include the techniques of electromyography to supplement the standard history, physical, x-ray and laboratory examinations. The physiatrist has expertise in the appropriate use of therapeutic exercise, prosthetics (artificial limbs), orthotics and mechanical and electrical devices.

A physician who provides a high level of care, either as a primary physician or consultant, for patients experiencing problems with acute, chronic or cancer pain in both hospital and ambulatory settings. Patient care needs may also be coordinated with other specialists.

Pain Medicine is a primary medical specialty based on a distinct body of knowledge and a well-defined scope of clinical practice that is founded on science, research and education. It is concerned with the study of pain, the prevention of pain, and the evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation of persons in pain. A comprehensive evaluation incorporates the physical, psychological, cognitive and socio-cultural contributions to pain. The treatment protocol may include pharmacological, invasive, behavioral, cognitive, rehabilitative and complementary strategies provided in a concurrent focused and patient specific manner. The pain medicine physician often serves the patient as a frontline physician regarding their pain, but also may serve as a consultant to other physicians, direct an interdisciplinary/multidisciplinary treatment team, conduct research, or advocate for the patient's pain care with public and private agencies. The Pain Medicine physician may work in variety of settings including office, clinic, hospital, university, or governmental/public agencies.

An anesthesiologist who provides a high level of care, either as a primary physician or consultant, for patients experiencing problems with acute, chronic and/or cancer pain in both hospital and ambulatory settings. Patient care needs are also coordinated with other specialists.

Source: NUCC, CMS

Health Insurance Plans Evan Peskin accepts

Issuer Network State Plan Year New Patients Last Updated
Blue Care Network of Michigan NULL MI 2024 accepting Jun 19 2024
McLaren Health Plan Community REWARDS MI 2024 not accepting Mar 27 2024
Buckeye Community Health Plan PREFERRED OH 2024 accepting Jul 15 2024
Molina Healthcare of Michigan, Inc. PREFERRED MI 2024 accepting Jul 01 2024
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois BLUE-FOCUSCARE IL 2024 accepting Apr 08 2024
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois BLUE-CHOICE-PREFERRED-PPO IL 2024 accepting Apr 08 2024
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois BLUE-PRECISION-HMO IL 2024 accepting Apr 08 2024
Priority Health MYPRIORITY-TELEHEALTH-HMO MI 2024 accepting Jun 28 2024
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Mutual Insurance Company NULL MI 2024 accepting Jun 19 2024

Source: CMS.gov, HealthPorta API