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This story first appeared in the Sept. 4 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.
Health and drama go together like air and water for Hollywood — the industry needs both to sustain itself. Just ask Seth MacFarlane, whose 2013 Oscar hosting gig was rescued by ear, nose and throat surgeon Dr. Shawn Nasseri, or So You Think You Can Dance producer Nigel Lythgoe, whose grandson was saved by pediatric neurosurgeon Dr. Mark Krieger, or Charlie Sheen, whose shoulder injury was prevented from derailing a money-minting career by orthopedic surgeon Dr. Raj (yes, that’s his name — this is Hollywood, after all). For its second annual Doctors Issue, The Hollywood Reporter elicited stories of drama, trauma and triumph over both by surveying 2,000 professionals in the film, television, movie, music, sports and media fields to find out who are the most beloved, trusted and go-to physicians in L.A.
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THR also scored an exclusive interview with former NBC medical correspondent Dr. Nancy Snyderman, who was excoriated for supposedly violating her Ebola quarantine, as well as her cameraman Ashoka Mukpo, who did indeed contract the dreaded disease and lived to tell about it. THR also asked this haunting question: What happens to the patients when a beloved doctor dies? In the case of Dr. Fredric Brandt, the celebrity dermatologist who commanded eight figures in annual billing before committing suicide in April, the answer is: a gold rush among prominent doctors to grab what they can from the dermatological diaspora. THR found out how to live to be 100 and still work in Hollywood (centenarian Norman Lloyd recently appeared in Trainwreck) and, in perhaps the world’s first Hollywood-oriented DSM-V, catalogued the dominant dysfunctions and diagnoses of the industry’s top jobs, from studio exec to screenwriter (producers win the top prize for anxiety, by the way). Finally, if you’ve ever wondered if you’re as narcissistic as people say everyone in Hollywood is, there’s a quiz for that.
As for the official Hollywood’s Top Doctors list for 2015, to identify the 469 elite physicians who qualified for it, THR’s editors partnered with the physician-led research team of Castle Connolly, the U.S.’ preeminent medical-database authority, to identify the highest-rated practitioners in their specialties, all of whom are nominated by their peers in an extensive survey process of thousands of U.S. doctors each year. The listed doctors rank in the nation’s top 10 percent and are among the very best in their specialties and communities. Castle Connolly screens these doctors’ medical educations, training, hospital appointments, disciplinary histories and much more. Doctors do not and cannot pay to be included.
Read more from The Hollywood Reporter‘s Top Doctors Issue:
Hollywood DSM: Industry Shrinks Reveal What’s Wrong With Actors, Producers, Agents and More
Stars and Their Doctors: Seth MacFarlane With the Man Who Saved His Voice for the Oscars
Stars and Their Doctors: A ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ Producer and the Man Who Knows Him Inside Out
Producer Nigel Lythgoe Pays Homage to the Doctor Who Saved His Baby Grandson
Stars and Their Doctors: Charlie Sheen and the Man Who Gives Him Stem Cells
How a Showtime PR Exec’s Daughter Was Cured of Debilitating Scoliosis
Yes, You Can Turn 100 in Hollywood and Still Work
Former CAA Partner: Why I Became an Agent for the Sick (Guest Column)
Dr. Fredric Brandt’s Suicide Sparks Frantic Scramble for His Celebrity Patients
Nancy Snyderman Breaks Silence on Ebola Nightmare, NBC News: “People Wanted Me Dead” (Exclusive)
Hollywood Psychologist on Reasons Why A-List Couples Fail
Hollywood’s Top Doctors 2015: The Dentist List
Want to Get “Expensive Urine”? Look at the Hollywood History of Health Fads
L.A.’s Westside Mystery: Higher Cancer Rates in One Zip Code, Longer Lives in Another
Manopause and Male Aging: Gavin Polone Says Just Say No to Those Drugs (Guest Column)
Ken Jeong: How to Ditch Medicine for a Career in Comedy and Diagnose Castmates (Guest Column)
Why There’s a Medical Crisis for Transgender Youth (Guest Column)
Cathleen N. Bairey-Merz
Cardiovascular disease
Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center in the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute
127 S. San Vicente Blvd.
Los Angeles 90048
310-423-9680
Satinder Jit Singh Bhatia
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Medical Group of Southern California
414 N. Camden Drive
Beverly Hills 90210
310-278-3400
David S. Cannom
Cardiac electrophysiology
L.A. Cardiology Associates
1245 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles 90017
213-977-0419
Jeffrey Caren
Cardiovascular disease
Cedars-Sinai
8635 W. Third St.
Los Angeles 90048
310-659-0715
Ramprasad Dandillaya
Cardiovascular disease
Cedars-Sinai
8631 W. Third St.
Los Angeles 90048
310-854-4995
Sandra P. Fallon
Cardiovascular disease
2001 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica 90404
310-453-4455
Gregg C. Fonarow
Cardiovascular disease
UCLA Health System
100 UCLA Medical Plaza
Los Angeles 90095
310-825-8816
Eli S. Gang
Cardiac electrophysiology
Cardiovascular Medical Group of Southern California
414 N. Camden Drive
Beverly Hills 90210
310-278-3400
Debra R. Judelson
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Medical Group of Southern California
414 N. Camden Drive
Beverly Hills 90210
310-278-3400
Jon A. Kobashigawa
Cardiovascular disease
California Heart Center
8536 Wilshire Blvd.
Beverly Hills 90211
310-248-8300
Leslie A. Saxon
Cardiac electrophysiology
Keck Medicine of USC
1520 San Pablo St.
Los Angeles 90033
323-442-5100
Prediman K. Shah
Cardiovascular disease
Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute
127 S. San Vicente Blvd.
Los Angeles 90048
310-423-3884
Charles D. Swerdlow
Cardiac electrophysiology
Cardiovascular Medical Group of Southern California
414 N. Camden Drive
Beverly Hills 90210
310-278-3400
Jonathan Marvin Tobis
Cardiovascular disease
UCLA Health System
100 UCLA Medical Plaza
Los Angeles 90095
310-825-9011
Mark K. Urman
Cardiovascular disease
COR Medical Group
8635 W. Third St.
Los Angeles 90048
310-659-0715
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