Dr. William Friedman

3.3 ( 33 reviews )

Ratings for Dr. William Friedman

1
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Knowledge

It is now 4 am . As I lay here in bed after being awakened by terrible burning in the right side of my face after having radiation a few years ago given to me by Dr.Friedman. ( Back story) at the time I lived in Roswell, Georgia and was advised by my dr there to come to Shands for a consult with Dr. Friedman.
I had ( have an acoustic neuroma ). At my visit with him he advised me to have this procedure where I would have a halo screwed into my head, when he put me into the machine I noticed my head was slightly turned . I mentioned this to Dr. Friedman and he said that it was ok. So, with reservation, I had the procedure to continue. But what did. I know? He was supposed to be the expert.
If I knew then what I know now I would never had that procedure done. My face is constantly burning, the right side of my head itches so bad it is unbearable.
I am doomed to live like this for the rest of my life. I cry because I should NEVER have had this procedure by a doctor who clearly isn’t concerned with his patients.
I went back to see if Dr. Friedman could help me alleviate my suffering and he told me that I would have to “ live with it”.
After all these years, my suffering hasn’t gotten any better.
I take Lyrica and Trileptal three times daily but they don’t help much and I take the maximum dose of each daily. How could a doctor have such disregard for his patient? He didn’t even seem to care that I was in such pain. As far as I’m concerned, my life is ruined.
Constant pain, constant misery. That is my cross to bear.

Submitted Feb. 22, 2024

5
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Punctuality
5
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3
Knowledge

1989 I was told by most neurosurgen of Orlando would not live passed 40 yrs I was one of the first to receive stereotactic radiosurgery. Full success I'm now 57 doing well thank you Dr Friedman God bless you

Submitted Dec. 12, 2023

5
Staff
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Punctuality
5
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5
Knowledge

Loved every moment of my consult, stay and even survey with Dr. Friedman and Shands Hoapital. Not sure why people are leaving such nasty reviews for Dr. Friedman. He, his staff and everyone involved with my surgery was fabulous for me. Make the decision for yourself, don’t just go off of bad reviews. Usually people seem to be happy to leave a BAD review. :(

Submitted Oct. 23, 2020

5
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I had surgery by Dr. Friedman in February 2019. This was my second surgery in the same area in the brain. My first was performed by a different doctor in a different hospital. Dr. Friedman instilled confidence in me, and the outcome and recovery time was far better than my first surgery. Thank you Dr. for all you have done............
Ellen

Submitted July 16, 2019

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Following mvd I woke up at Shands Hospital with tingling numb complete left dude of my body. Friedman never came to see me. I was sent home after all nurses said they don’t know what happened. I called Friedman for 6 weeks begging him to call me back . He never did. My Trigeminal Neuralgia has now returned. Stay away.

Submitted Nov. 4, 2018

5
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Knowledge

Very pleased with care and end result following MVD for trigeminal neuralgia. Perfect surgical outcome, no complications, complete recovery and I am pain-free. Would definitely recommend.

Submitted Aug. 12, 2018

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Dr. Friedman was to do a MVD from trigeminal neuralgia but without my consent he did a rhizotomy. The pain I
After surgery was horrible as it caused pain in all three branches in my face. After the surgery I started having epileptic seizures and 4 years later I still have one about once a month. Dr. Friedman did not come to see me at hospital or talk to my family like most surgeons. At follow up appointment he does not listen to new problems from surgery. In his words don’t call my office, I only do the surgery and do not treat anything after that. I am now disabled beginning the date of brain surgery. Shands Administration backs him up while acting like they care because he brings in much revenue for hospital. 3 other patients have reached out to me after leaving reviews whom he has injured their brain or spine doing extra procedures so he can bill insurance for it. He then lies on the medical record and consent form. He has hired public relation firm that covers up for him. Beware

Submitted Dec. 19, 2017

5
Staff
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Punctuality
5
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5
Knowledge

Dr. Friedman and his staff are amazing and wonderful. I have been in such extreme pain for over 6 months. After my surgery, the only pain I have now is from the surgery and that is expected until it heals. But my problem is solved. He is a true miracle worker. Thank you for giving me my quality of life back. I can't sing your praise enough.

Submitted Feb. 4, 2017

5
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Punctuality
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5
Knowledge

Dr. Friedman is professional, accurate, compassionate, great diagnostic skills, excellent team, top drawer program.

Submitted Oct. 4, 2016

5
Staff
5
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5
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5
Knowledge

He is the best! I highly recomend him. He is number one in my opinion.

Submitted April 14, 2016


Dr. William Friedman's Credentials

Accepting New Patients

Yes, this doctor is accepting new patients

Biography

Dr. William Alan Friedman was born in Dayton, Ohio on April 25, 1953. He attended high school in Cincinnati, Ohio. He graduated in 1970 as a National Merit Scholar and attended Oberlin College. There he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa before moving on to the Ohio State University College of Medicine. Before graduating summa cum laude from medical school in 1976, he was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha honor society and received the Maurice B. Rusoff Award for excellence in medicine.In 1976, Dr. Friedman moved to the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. He performed a surgical internship and a neurosurgical residency, from which he graduated in 1982. During residency training he did basic neurophysiology research as an NIH postdoctoral fellow (1 F32 NS0682-02). In 1982, he joined the faculty of the Department of Neurosurgery, as an Assistant Professor. He received an NIH Teacher Investigator Award (NS 00682-02), from July, 1982 - July, 1987, which funded further research into the basic neurophysiology of spinal cord injuries. In addition, this award supported the development of one of the first intraoperative neurophysiology monitoring laboratories, subsequently used to monitor thousands of neurosurgical and orthopedic surgical cases. Dr. Friedman served as Medical Director of the Intraoperative Neurophysiology Service from 1982-1992.Dr. Friedman was promoted to Associate Professor and received tenure in August, 1987. In August, 1991 he was promoted to Professor. In 1999, he became Chairman of the Department of Neurosurgery. He is the author of more than 300 articles and book chapters and has written a book on radiosurgery. He is a member of numerous professional organizations. Most notably, he is a Past-President of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, Past President of the Florida Neurosurgical Society, and Past President of the International Stereotactic Radiosurgery Society. He was the Founding Editor of Neurosurgery On Call, the Internet homepage of organized neurosurgery. He was a member of the Shands Hospital Board of Directors for two terms. Dr. Friedman led the Level I Trauma task force which resulted in the establishment of a trauma center at UF Health. He was also the first ACGME Designated Institutional Official (DIO) at UF.In 1986, Dr. Friedman began collaborative work with Dr. Frank Bova, which led to the development of the University of Florida radiosurgery system. This system was subsequently patented by the University of Florida and licensed to Philips, then Sofamor-Danek, then Varian. The commercial version of the system has become one of the most popular radiosurgical systems worldwide. Drs. Friedman and Bova received the 1990 UF College of Medicine Clinical Research Prize in recognition of this accomplishment. Dr. Friedman is the leader of a multidisciplinary radiosurgery team which has treated over 4500 patients, published more than120 papers and chapters, produced many international meetings, and educated hundreds of visiting physicians. Drs. Bova and Friedman received NIH R01 funding to support their continuing research efforts. Dr. Friedman is the Director of the Preston Wells Center for Brain Tumor Therapy at the University of Florida. During his tenure as Chair of the Department of Neurosurgery he grew the department's endowed funds to greater than $45 million, much of which is focused on finding a cure for malignant brain tumors. In recent years, Dr. Friedman also worked hard to elevate the quality metrics of the department and became a frequent national neurosurgical speaker on quality improvement. He was the Honored Guest at the 2021 Congress of Neurological Surgeons meeting in Austin, Texas. He published a medical memoir, "Something Awesome: A Life in Neurosurgery,: in 2021 which became an Amazon neurosurgical best seller.After almost 20 years in the job, Dr. Friedman stepped down as Chair on July 1, 2018 but continues to run a very busy neurosurgical practice. In his spare time he loves travel, hiking, reading, Civil War history, cooking, and time with friends and family.

Education

  • Oberlin College (Grad. 1974)
  • The Ohio State University (Grad. 1976)

Other Specialties

Areas of Expertise

  • Neck Pain
  • Brain Tumor
  • Birth Defects
  • Herniated Disc
  • Sciatica
  • Spinal Stenosis
  • Trigeminal Neuralgia
  • Lumecca
  • Back Pain