Take control of your life. Discover how spinal cord stimulation therapy at NY Spine Medicine can help you find lasting comfort.
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NY Spine Medicine is a leading provider of pain management solutions in Fisher Island, FL. Our team of experienced medical professionals uses advanced spinal cord stimulation technology and a patient-centered approach to deliver the best possible outcomes. We believe in empowering our patients to take control of their pain and live fuller, more active lives.
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Spinal cord stimulation is changing the way people manage chronic pain. This innovative therapy works by interrupting pain signals before they reach the brain. This can significantly reduce your pain levels and improve your overall quality of life. At NY Spine Medicine in Fisher Island, FL, we’re committed to providing the highest quality care. Call 212-750-1155 to schedule a consultation.
Fisher Island was separated from the barrier island which became Miami Beach in 1905, when Government Cut was dredged across the southern end of the island. Construction of Fisher Island began in 1919 when Carl G. Fisher, a land developer, purchased the property from businessman and real estate developer Dana A. Dorsey, southern Florida’s first African-American millionaire. In 1925 William Kissam Vanderbilt II traded a luxury yacht to Fisher for ownership of the island.
After Vanderbilt’s death in 1944, ownership of the island passed to U.S. Steel heir Edward Moore. Moore died in the early 1950s, and Gar Wood, the millionaire inventor of hydraulic construction equipment, bought it. Wood, a speedboat enthusiast, kept the island a one-family retreat. In 1963, Wood sold to a development group that included local Key Biscayne millionaire Bebe Rebozo, Miami native and United States Senator George Smathers and then former U.S. Vice President Richard Nixon, who had promised to leave politics. During his subsequent presidency from 1968-1973, and during the Watergate scandal, Nixon maintained a home on nearby Key Biscayne known as the “Key Biscayne Whitehouse” that was the former residence of Senator Smathers and next door to Rebozo, but none of the three ever resided on Fisher Island.
The Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS) of the University of Miami maintained the Comparative Sedimentology Laboratory on Fisher Island from 1972 to 1990 under the leadership of Robert Ginsburg.
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