Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Shaleen Vira, MD

    4.2 (5 reviews)
    Closed Closed

    Shaleen Vira, MD Photos

    You might also consider

    Recommended Reviews - Shaleen Vira, MD

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    2 months ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    1 year ago

    Everything went well on a dangerous surgery. Dr Vira is top of his field and I am thankful for him

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    4 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    6 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    6 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Ask the Community - Shaleen Vira, MD

    You might also consider

    Verify this business for free

    People searched for Spine Surgeons 280 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

    Verify this business

    Andrew Little, MD - Dr. Andrew "Dragon Slayer" Little is my Surgeon & an authentically  caring human.

    Andrew Little, MD

    4.5(10 reviews)
    1.4 mi

    I don't give perfect scores frequently to anything or anyone. Dr. Andrew Little and my overall…read moreexperience at the Barrow Neurological Institute continues to be stellar. Dr. Andrew removed a 3 inch glioblastoma tumor and continues to monitor that with other caregivers at Barrow.Dr. Andrew removed a 3 inch glioblastoma tumor and continues to monitor that with other caregivers at Barrow. My medical outcomes and experience inside my body or testament to Dr. Andrews skill as a surgeon. I had zero pain or discomfort, post surgery, other than the itchiness of my surgery scar healing.My medical outcomes and experience inside my body or testament to Dr. Andrews skill as a surgeon. I had zero pain or discomfort, post surgery, other than the itchiness of my surgery scar healing. so many things could have gone wrong that did not! so many things could have gone wrong that did not! Even if you have the most competent professional to help you thru, the psychological, emotional and spiritual comfort that comes from a person who cares. You cannot buy this with any amount of money. It has to come from the person inside, the eternal soul who has learned that we are all in this together! We are walking each other home! And the heart of someone who feels what others are feeling. These qualities elevate, Dr. Andrew Little from skilled expert to Healer / Earth Angel / most excellent human Highly recommend dr. Little and company as his front desk staff and nurses are absolutely as caring as the good doctor himself. If doctors hospitals and clinics make you nervous or you have a diagnosis that scares the heck out of you, I cannot say enough good things about Barrow, go there and, let your heart tell you how it feels to be in your body in the presence of so many well-trained, spiritual humans dedicated to your well-being.

    Dr. Little is the top of my list! I've had some bad back surgeries and then back and neck…read moresurgeries by Dr. Little. He is kind, cares, and a gifted teacher (also to his patients). A real "people person" and a neurosurgeon to boot!! Still thanking God for you, Dr. Little. :)

    Photos
    Andrew Little, MD - Happy and calm, past the moment of crisis with Dr. Andrew Little's help

    Happy and calm, past the moment of crisis with Dr. Andrew Little's help

    Andrew Little, MD

    See all

    Dignity Health - Dignity St. Joe's. My 1st visit to a St Joe's was after antique washer rollers pulled 4 year old fingers through  to my armpit

    Dignity Health

    4.0(4 reviews)
    1.5 mi

    March 6, 2026, 10 a.m. This is my next moments in the…read more 2025-26 series, "Why is the Dignity St Joseph's rating 2.5 to 3." My best friend, wise counselor, intelligent organizer of all things, and lovely wife of 24 years was born a member of the Hopi Tribe. Though born in Phoenix and an Arizona Valley Girl, her parents were children of Hopi Culture Carriers. Search "Hopi Alcatraz" and you will see a story about her ancestors refusing to allow their children to be removed to government boarding schools. So... Fathers were imprisoned and the children sent to government boarding schools. Lots of children sent to boarding schools. Lots of children removed to homes in distant cities. You can cut hair, discipline native language use out of daily use, force English-only, stop ceremonies, and sit kids in pews, listening to sermons and reading holy books. The Geology of Culture supports the vegetation of life's new ways. My wise, intelligent, and lovely new family changed my culture, teaching me how to care for family in serious medical events. Over the past 21 years I have spent more than a year's time, 24/7 in hospitals, acute care, skilled nursing, physical therapy, senior living, memory care and other cares. Another fork in the road, just a cul de sac. If interested search "Hazel Lumley Umtuch Olney." We began Hazel mistrusting me. I helped her with a project. Soon she said, "We're gonna Indianize you chris." Last time I saw her we greeted eachother as long lost dear friends. My Indianizing; no, Humanizing, continues to this moment. I could not write these words without 54 years of humanizing and uncountable hours supporting family in medical situations. Family presence equals better medical care. The more care shown by the family, or friend side, the better the treatment. My brother was not a homeless guy. When I moved into his room. Care and concern in San Fernando, California eent up at least 35%. That is a big percent in science. Medicine is science. This week is another Fall Week. Not as a season, as a lose balance, hit ground fall. Hip fracture. 9 1 1: Phoenix Dispatch did their job quickly. Station 10 equipment and six crew arrived, quickly assessed, moved respondent to Dignity SJ's ER. Patient moved to ER gurney. Imaging done. Wife and I find ways to doze overnight in ER bay. Team focused on bone repair begins assembling: Team managing physician, many nursing staff - from general care to Specialist nurses. Orthopedic Surgeon, attending surgeon more imaging techs and specialists, anaesthesiologist. Team assembled onformation (data), consults, created surgery and recovery plan. Patient prepped in pre-op. Family Consult with Orthopedic surgeon. Half hour procedure, attending surgeon closes. Recovery room staff takes over from there. Wait for orthopedic surgeon to complete two previously booked surgeries. Total of three nursing staff prep patient in the middle of a shift change. As patient is sedated, blood pressure plummets. Surgery cancelled, patient returns to consciousness in recovery bay. I get a very polite, honest, pointed communication regarding my presence in a Restricted Area without an official escort. I arrived to understand how a surgery notification board can go from "Waiting for procedure" to "PACU" without an "In Progress" notification. We reset to a hospital room as Specialists determine how to accomplish this potentially life-ending procedure. I retrieve our family Rollator/Transport Chair from the car. We have seating for two in a one-chair room. Meanwhile, D finds another room chair, non reclining, in the hallway. Loud pulling and scraping noises resonates from the char, floor and down the hall as The Lioness retrieves her prey, retiring to The Cave. A night of care including transport staff, excellent, patient, caring Nurse and Patient Care Technician. Heart and Lung Squad integrated into the team, Both "gists" meaning many education, training and practice years added to the knowledge and information collection. 7 a.m. following day, more imaging, records review, Cardiologist and Pulmonologist greeting us. We met them first in December. They bring along a Pulmonology Fellow, adding more experience and special ptactice to his dozen previous medical years. Green light on heart fitness. Waiting for operating theater scheduling. Within 20 minutes, patient being prepped for surgery. Anaesthesia will be an epidural; painless, waist down, patient conscious, waist up. We wait for return of our repaired family member. Next stops, observation, release to a physical therapy facility, finally, home.

    Dignity allows Dr. Greg Marchand to practice here. He follows the advice of Robert F. Kennedy Jr…read morewho suggests questionable if not dangerous remedies. The professionalism of the entire staff is now in question as is the vetting process by management.

    Photos
    Dignity Health - Gift Store: Many items discounted 50% or more, holiday items and items like these Lego mini flashlights.

    Gift Store: Many items discounted 50% or more, holiday items and items like these Lego mini flashlights.

    Dignity Health - Internal Medicine office waiting area

    Internal Medicine office waiting area

    Dignity Health - Read the hat yelp*ers.

    See all

    Read the hat yelp*ers.

    21st Century Neurology

    21st Century Neurology

    3.2(9 reviews)
    0.9 mi

    They are very nice and really try to help the patient. I would recommend them highly but it can…read moretake awhile to be seen, but it is worth it

    I moved 900 miles to Phoenix with my family in 2015, one of the main reasons was to become a…read morepatient of Dr. Flitman's. The two years prior to that were a whirlwind nightmare of countless neurologist visits in four other states trying to figure out what was happening to me. None of the doctors could make a diagnosis, two even accused me of faking my symptoms. (If anyone knows how to fake muscle spasms so severe they crack bones, or fake your eyes not moving at the same time, I would be curious to hear about it ) All but the two docs agreed something was terribly wrong, but did not have a name for it or any idea how to treat it. Even the Mayo Clinic could not make a diagnosis. Dr Flitman was able after two visits to establish a diagnosis...it is one that is very rare, especially while in your 30's. Sadly, it is terminal...the only "treatment" is to manage the symptoms. But Dr. Flitman cares very much about managing those symptoms as well as possible to keep my quality of life as good as it can be. I saw Dr. Tobin once and liked him as well. This is more like a 4.75 rating...the only thing that keeps it from being a 5+ is that I wish the office staff would receive some customer service training. I think they actually do care about me, and other patients, but at times the attitude and word choices make that seem untrue. If you are familiar with the concept of "I statements" vs "you statements", that is just what I mean. When you hear statements beginning with "You didn't...", "Why didn't you...", "You have to....", "You can't..." in ANY business, it automatically puts the customer on the defensive, feeling accused and uncared for. Body language and tone of voice exacerbate that feeling. There is a lot of training out there (I used to teach it to nursing students) that allows you to convey the same information without offending or making the customer (patient) feel at fault, or like an inconvenience. In a specialty like neurology, where many patients and families are dealing with terminal or frightening diagnoses, and where some of us have the emotional parts of our brain affected, these statements can and do cause great upset, probably even more so than other businesses. Fortunately or not, one result of my disease is that I pretty much call it like I see it now...and when I hear these statements, or worse, they are made to my husband, who is breaking his back to be a caregiver to me and still take care of the family, I have no problem calling attention to it. Each time we have been able to reach an understanding...until the next time it happens. I think they try but desperately wish they would receive some training so that the whole practice could be as caring and understanding as Dr. Flitman. Nonetheless, I will continue to stay with Dr. Flitman through the course of this illness, as his expertise and caring attitude have helped so much during this difficult and heartbreaking time for me and my family. For that I have a great deal of gratitude.

    Center for Complex Neurology EDS & POTS - Salt is an Electrolyte which can help patients with Dysautonomia

    Center for Complex Neurology EDS & POTS

    3.7(9 reviews)
    0.2 mi

    It is very sad what this office has become. They have lost sight of what matters: the needs of the…read morepatient. All they care about now is money. I asked some basic questions through the portal about how vitamins and collagen work and affect EDS, including if taking collagen supplements will cause problems for people with EDS. Instead, his NP Kelli told me that I, as a disabled person on SSDI who can't work, would have to pay $500 for an appointment in exchange for information, saying they had to examine me in order to pesonalize the vitamin recommendations. I was not asking for recommendations!! I just wanted to know how they worked in people like me ‍ I have never had a provider refuse to provide general information or charge $500 to get it. When I said this, Kelli just provided basic information about collagen that could be easily looked up on google. I would understand if I was asking complex medical questions, but all I wanted to know was certain how vitamins and collagen work! This should not cost $500 to learn about. They also will not provide a list of EDS aware providers in the community if you ask them if they know of any. I used to think criticism of him no longer taking insurance and jacking up prices to pad his retirement was considered unfounded. Now I see that it is not. In their responses, they claim that they are focusing on providing good, professional service, but taking advantage of people with disabilities on SSDI is the exact opposite. Btw they say they offer competitive cash prices, but none of my doctors charge this much for an appointment, not even the uber specialized ones who have more certificates than Dr. Saperstein.

    Dr. Saperstein has been my neurologist for several years. I'm writing this review because I…read morerecently read several reviews and was surprised at the criticism of him moving to a non-insurance based practice. The healthcare industry is a mess as many of us know. If it was efficient, I would not have spent decades wandering through it misdiagnosed, blamed for a genetic disease, and worse, punished for what doctors could not and would not accept; my symptoms. Dr. Saperstein is a doctor who listens, does not judge, lights up when new connections are made (recent ATS confirmation with my ongoing communications with the world expert who discovered the rarity of it). Dr. Saperstien does something brave as a doctor as well: he simply says,"I don't know" when he doesn't, instead of definitively telling me something that could be worse or giving me a diagnosis that's wrong, and more frightening, medically gaslighting me and telling me it's "nothing" or in my head or "anxiety". The number of woman who lose their lives because they are told their symptoms are some emotional cause or a primary and secondary gain is attention is a pandemic disgrace. Dr. Saperstien is not one of these doctors. He respects his patient's experience. As a provider Dr. Saperstein keeps an immaculately clean office that runs more efficiently than any office in the valley I've been to. Like a synergistic ballet of moving parts tending to the care of patients one at time. Because Dr. Saperstien takes his time with each patient. It's a no-nonsense office. His first time fee is high, but like any business owner he pays his staff, rent, insurance, taxes, the list goes on. He's not exploiting patients. As an existing patient he has been generous and kind when I've needed a letter for travel or other reasons. And followup appts are reasonable in cost. And he still values the long time patient. These days in the US patients have endless diagnosis. With Dr. Saperstien his focus is not the name of a disorder but how he can help. Since working with him he's helped me find the best dosage of an a specialty orphan drug, an unusual dosage of an element for metabolic wasting issue, and was diligent in finding a low dose medication for sensory issues (bright lights, loud noises) to help reduce with startle in a very noise world. Medicine truly is an art as much as a science. Dr. Saperstien does not know I used to be a provider in Holistic Medicine: CCM specifically. Years of education and training, huuuuundreds of clients. My PI when I was grandfathered into the first PhD program in complimentary medicine was at UCLA. I still have the 1500 pages of research papers, books, et al. But had to leave due to illness. I often think of the subject; "The Histapathological Diagnosis of Beta Cell Failure in Type II Diabetes and the Psychoimmunological Impact on Patients". My original connection to AZ was helping in the production of a doc called "The Diabetic Cure", and convicting a very famous New Age Guru several counts of negligent homicide after he took advantage of vulnerable believers. (The Secret is there is No Secret). Dr. Saperstien does not know not I have a side gig as a part-time crime fighter. lol. I've helped put at least 30 bad people behind bars. I have a Channelopathy; we have unusual minds that help law enforcement. However, most neurological disorders or illness do not have cures, only management. So many dreams patients have for their lives are not fulfilled. This is hard on the patient most of all. I don't know how much doctors know about our lost dreams and potential as years of our lives go by. My originally career was in music and theatre-- I was a professional singer from a very young age, including going to a prestigious Music & Art HS in NY, and even touring as a young person. But disease catches up. My singing voice is gone. Even once the star of a crappy short lived TV show, oncer modeling and acting while doing all my studies. But years of medical misdiagnosis has led to a life derailed. Disease takes everything. But if your are blessed, you will find a doctor who sits face to face with you as Dr. Saperstien does (this is what I leaned in intake-- very important to show respect for a patient) as he does not tower over you when you meet. He's kind, caring, thoughtful, will come up with a plan if needed, or if it's just a check in. He's a doctor, he's not a magician. He's honest, no fuss, no false promises. That's a lot to say about anyone in today's world. He has integrity. And his office staff including Fran and all those who work with him are a reflection of his standard of excellence in an ever unravelling world. I leave his office feeling hope.

    Photos
    Center for Complex Neurology EDS & POTS - POTS - Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome

    POTS - Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome

    Center for Complex Neurology EDS & POTS - EDS info

    EDS info

    Center for Complex Neurology EDS & POTS - May is EDS awareness month

    See all

    May is EDS awareness month

    Shaleen Vira, MD - spinesurgeons - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...