Great doctors office
Today I had to visit the emergency room. Everyone was so nice and helpful. I was there for 2 hrs. Which is fast, considering that they took xrays and the change of tour. I have been coming to this hospital for the past 40 years and I have always have a good experience. Thanks to all the doctors and staff. Specially to my internal medicine doctor Madrid for taking care of me and my family.
Fast Pace five star excellent respectful discreet service.
My visit in your emergency room the nurse Asia help me tremendously a smile go a very long way I thank her for her assisting me. I was truly nervous scared because I have not been in a hospital since 1992. Thank you are blessed by the best Ms. ASHA may God bless her to continue on helping many other people in need who come to your hospital? Ms. Asia put your crown on.
I love it was treated andcthe way things was explained to me and they was so careful it's was a great experience thank you
Emergency Detox Care for Fentanyl Withdrawal Dear Hospital Administrators, Lawmakers, and Public Health Officials, I am writing to urge immediate action on a critical gap in our healthcare system: hospitals must be equipped and authorized to provide emergency detox and stabilization for individuals withdrawing from fentanyl. Fentanyl withdrawal is fast, severe, and dangerous. It does not wait days for placement in a detox center. Yet access to detox facilities is often delayed by regulations, referrals, insurance approvals, and bed shortages. These delays disproportionately harm poor and uninsured individuals. Emergency rooms already encounter patients in acute withdrawal every day. Emergency care should include immediate withdrawal management, just as it does for other life-threatening conditions. Delays increase the risk of relapse and overdose. Hospitals should be able to provide: Immediate withdrawal management and stabilization Short-term (48–72 hour) bridge care Access to appropriate medications without insurance barriers Seamless transition to long-term treatment after stabilization When regulations move slower than withdrawal, lives are lost. Treating fentanyl withdrawal as a medical emergency is both a public health necessity and a moral responsibility. Thank you for your time and attention to this urgent matter.Here is the solution Unconventional & Advanced Approaches to Emergency Detox and Addiction Care (AI, Advanced Tech, and Bio-Integrated Systems) 1. AI-Driven Emergency Withdrawal Management Real-time AI clinical decision support in hospitals to detect fentanyl withdrawal early and adjust care dynamically. Predictive models that anticipate withdrawal severity, relapse risk, and overdose probability within hours—not days. AI systems trained on anonymized ER data to recommend immediate stabilization pathways without bureaucratic delay. Think of it as a “medical autopilot” for withdrawal emergencies. 2. Digital Twin of the Human Body (Bio-Simulation) Development of AI “digital twins” that simulate an individual’s metabolism, nervous system response, and withdrawal trajectory. Used to safely test detox strategies virtually before applying them to the patient. Reduces trial-and-error, speeds care, and lowers risk. This is already emerging in cardiology and oncology—addiction medicine is behind and needs to catch up. 3. Artificial or Semi-Artificial Bio-Support Systems (Non-Sci-Fi Version) Not a full artificial body—but bio-assistance layers: Wearable or bedside systems that regulate autonomic stress (heart rate, temperature, hydration). Neuro-adaptive feedback systems that calm the nervous system during peak withdrawal. Closed-loop monitoring that adjusts support in real time. This is supporting the body, not replacing it. 4. AI-Mediated “Bridge Care Units” Hospital-based micro-units powered by AI triage + automation. Minimal staff load, high responsiveness. Designed for 48–72 hour emergency stabilization when detox centers are inaccessible. Especially critical for poor, uninsured, or homeless patients. 5. Synthetic Biology (Research Phase Only – Long Term) At the research level only: Exploring non-addictive bio-mimetic compounds that stabilize opioid receptors without dependency. Studied in silico and simulated environments first. No human application without decades of ethical review. This is future science—but research must begin now. 6. Ethical Frame (Critical) If society can invest billions in artificial intelligence, robotics, and space exploration, it must invest in technologies that preserve human life at its most fragile moment. This is not replacing humans. This is buying time so humans can heal. Bottom Line Vision Statement (You can quote this): We need unconventional solutions because fentanyl is an unconventional threat. AI, advanced simulation, and bio-integrated technologies must be developed to treat withdrawal as the medical emergency it is—especially when time, poverty, and bureaucracy work against survival.Thanks again. Sincerly Stu Hook
Dr. Jay Stylman and staff are very friendly, professional and knowledgeable. They also value time. I definitely would recommend Dr. Stylman to everyone.