Janda understands evidence-based medicine as he is committed to providing his patients with the state-of-the-art care and up-to-date guidelines for the practice of neurology. Janda is licensed to practice medicine in both California and Nevada and is Board-Certified in Neurology. His resume includes many volunteer activities and numerous research publications. Janda has great interest in community service and educational activities as he continues to be involved with Neurology board-review and on-going research publications.
When he is not treating and managing neurologic issues, Dr. Janda enjoys spending time with his family, reading, volunteering, and hiking.
Robert W. Balsiger is a local board certified neurologist who has resided in Las Vegas since He has strong ties to the Midwest growing up in Minnesota and Ohio.
While a full time student, he obtained a personal training certificate and was involved in geriatric exercise prescription. Following his undergraduate degree, Dr. Balsiger relocated to Henderson, Nevada. There he attended Touro University Nevada and obtained his medical degree. He immediately recognized a need for physicians in the community. Upon completion of residency, Dr.
Balsiger continues to serve the community here in Las Vegas. He also has a strong passion for academic medicine. He enjoys spending time teaching residents and medical students in an inpatient and outpatient setting.
Balsiger also provides weekly neurology board examination review and neurology lectures for the neurology residents. Aside from practicing neurology, Dr. Balsiger enjoys weight training, watching movies and traveling. Mahajan is a board certified neurologist who has resided in Las Vegas for over ten years.
Born and raised on the West coast, he has anchored himself in Nevada and is dedicated to serving the Las Vegas community. Mahajan was selected to be a member of the University of California at San Francisco Biomedical Internship Program at a young age, sparking his interest in the field of medicine. After achieving his undergraduate degree, Dr. Mahajan relocated to Nevada where he received his medical degree at Touro University Nevada.
Upon completion of medical school here in the Valley, Dr. Mahajan felt invested in the Las Vegas community. He was awarded Resident of the Year honors in addition to awards for Service Excellence during his residency. He was nominated and elected by his peers to serve as a member of the Medical Executive Committee at Centennial Hills Hospital.
He is also core faculty for the Neurology Residency Program at the Valley Hospital Medical Center, where he thoroughly enjoys teaching residents and medical students. Practicing medicine and teaching is one of Dr. During his free time he also enjoys reading, exercising, and traveling. Denise LaBelle is a clinical psychologist who has been living in Las Vegas since She completed her undergraduate education at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, where she majored in Religious Studies and the Biological Basis of Behavior.
After graduating, Dr. LaBelle went on to earn her Ph. She spent much of her time at Temple immersed in research on the cognitive development of adolescents and young adults, specifically exploring the ways in which cognition and thinking styles can impact the onset of depression and bipolar disorder.
She has a passion for holistic understanding of human health that includes attention to emotional, physical, and interpersonal wellness. In addition to cognitive assessment, she offers short-term, cognitive behavioral therapy CBT , and incorporates elements of Acceptance and Commitment therapy ACT and Dialectical Behavioral therapy DBT during therapy sessions as needed.
In addition to her extensive experience with neurodegenerative disease and mood disorders, Dr. LaBelle also has experience working with individuals with epilepsy, brain injury, anxiety and thought disorders.
Outside the office, Dr. LaBelle enjoys spending as much time as she can outdoors hiking and traveling with her family. She completed yoga teacher training RYT in and practices whenever she can. A native New Englander, she was born and raised in Narragansett, Rhode Island, and tries to get back to the ocean as much as possible.
Vickers is a board-certified neurologist and fellowship-trained neuro-ophthalmologist who moved to Las Vegas from California in Vickers was originally born and raised in the south of France and moved to Southern California in During her undergraduate years, she fulfilled her passion for teaching by tutoring her peers in French and Mathematics. Following her undergraduate years, Dr. Vickers attended medical school at Touro University in Northern California.
As a medical student, Dr. Vickers participated in numerous volunteer activities. She also continued her passion for teaching by tutoring medical students in Neurology. Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook. Columnist writes last RJ column, will try hand at fiction. July 15, - am July 16, - am. Cab riders experiencing no-shows urged to file complaints. July 7, - pm July 7, - pm. Are no-shows by Las Vegas taxis usual or abnormal?
July 1, - am July 1, - pm. June 23, - pm June 23, - pm. June 16, - pm June 16, - pm. Las Vegas woman fights to stop female genital mutilation. June 9, - pm June 10, - pm. June 3, - am June 3, - am. Scammed via Western Union? Deadline to get money back nears. May 26, - pm May 26, - pm. May 20, - am May 20, - am. Millman concedes the move and the reopening were among the toughest challenges during his three decades as a state worker, first with the Nevada Historical Society, then with the museum starting in There was anxiety about whether the Legislature would provide the money to open the museum, which opened six years after it was supposed to, because the economic freefall forced the Legislature to cut the staff and the hours.
The museum is open four days a week, from 10 a. Friday through Monday, so all employees, including Millman, are part-timers working 32 hours a week.
Millman and others put in countless unpaid hours. For a lot of the employees, going from 40 hours to 32 was a financial hardship. The museum lost 40 percent of its budget and one-third of its staff before the move. The museum seems to have a new champion in Gov. Brian Sandoval. He likes it so much, he is holding a private VIP event there Wednesday for Desert Research Institute donors, partly to show the place off.
Sandoval is sincere in his love of history, and Millman is optimistic that the GOP governor will find the money in his next budget to keep the museum open full time. On the four-day schedule, the museum averages about visitors a day.
By being closed on three weekdays, the museum loses out on many school groups, the target audience. From critters to showgirls, from mines to atomic tests, the museum holds the potential to spark something in a child. His retirement plans? First, help his sister in Berkeley, Calif. What Millman does know is that he was part of improving an institution to make Las Vegas stronger and protect historical accuracy.
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