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Asisa Urgent Care, in Monticello! - The Perlowitz Show
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Quality urgent care in the heart of Monticello. Whether it’s an illness, injury, or something that just can’t wait, we’re here with on-site X-rays, on-the-spot medications, a dedicated nursing room for families, and the highest number of stitches treated in the Catskills, all in a beautiful, modern facility. Hours: Sunday - Thursday: AM - PM Friday: AM - PM Motzaei Shabbos: PM - Last patient 353 E Broadway, Monticello, NY 12701 845-419-1000 ----- Join The Perlowitz Show: Status: https://wa.me/message/DUARZNKTKMXLM1 Whatsapp community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/DAn5gZMjAytE0p86iz0IN5 Telegram: https://t.me/Perlowitz All platforms: https://Perlowitz.com ----- #yiddish
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
We're in Monticello by Assisi, 353 East
Broadway. Dr. Zelen, people come from
all over the Catskills just to see you.
How did you earn that reputation?
>> Well, hopefully I don't meet anyone. We
only meet a simple list. That's first of
all.
But you try doing the best for each
patient with a care for each patient
with a little bit of heart, a little bit
of
you know, neshama. Neshama use, you
know, do what's best in each case is is
different, but we always try, you know,
doing the right thing.
>> Could you earned a name? People come
from all over. Everybody knows stitches,
Dr. Zelen. Oh, shots, Dr. Zelen is the
best when it comes to that. The kids
love him.
>> that.
>> So, look at the parking lot over here,
Kevin. Now, if there's a big parking
lot, it means that inside is also big
and they can accommodate all the people
here. Let's check inside and see how big
and beautiful Assisi of Monticello is.
>> So, it is a huge parking lot that we
have over here. We we we always hope
that it should be like this with very
few cars. That means we're seeing
patients,
you know, expeditiously. But on the
weekends, on the times where there is a
wait or with a lot of patients, there's
adequate space for
>> enough
>> for enough cars. And you'll see that the
the space is is just a representation of
the place inside. It's a huge facility,
beautiful, state of the art.
>> Let's take a look. Let's check inside.
Wow.
Look at this room here. What's this room
here?
>> So, this is the the kids room, the
playroom. As we were saying before, you
know, when we as as kids we just played
with our with the
the little square
>> The square thing here.
>> [laughter]
>> I still remember that.
>> That was like the staple at every
doctor's office.
>> Exactly. But we had such a big
room over here, we decided to convert
this into
a kids room. We have a nurse
a room over here for mothers who are
nursing.
A separate bathroom over here.
>> Look at these games here. So, kids
probably come just to play here.
>> Kids, yeah. So, secondary visits, you
know, the primary visit is for kids to
have for the family to have a day out,
couple hours, let give mommy a break,
send the father out. Secondary, maybe
they have a sore throat, maybe they have
a fever, but it's mostly like a a
daycare here.
>> Look at this.
>> You know, just so we have some privacy.
>> with a bathroom.
Nice room there, and you have a bathroom
right there. This is for the kids area,
and I'm not going to show the waiting
area cuz there are some patients here,
but it's a beautiful big
>> Very very big waiting area.
>> big spacious waiting area. Let's jump
inside.
>> Let's take a look.
>> rooms. How many How many rooms do you
have? How many exam rooms?
>> We have eight exam rooms.
>> Eight exam rooms?
>> Eight full exam rooms.
>> Eight Eight exam rooms. Everything is
very
new, clean.
>> State of the art.
>> State of the art. It's very air, you
know, it just it gives a very clean vibe
over here. Um
tons of space, a lot of lighting. If you
look at each each of the exam rooms, we
split them up, we split, you know,
>> Look at these nice big exam rooms.
>> So, we have obviously all the regular
types of stuff that you would find in
any urgent care
you know, primary care office like
rapid strep, rapid flus, COVID,
foreign body removals, um
rashes,
infections, but we have some really
great stuff here that we started in
Williamsburg years ago, and Baruch
Hashem we brought it here now upstate,
where we really try managing cases that
we can. Every obviously each case is is
different, but we try doing the best
with you know, for the patient, and if
we could avoid a hospital,
we try to. Obviously, if the patient
needs a hospital, we we will facilitate
that, and we'll start the care, but we
try our best to if it's safe for a
patient to stay home, we do our best to
try it to try
>> So, like what? You give IV here?
>> So, yes, we do So, we have our two sides
of um really three sides of this place.
It's It's like a a U. First side is like
the medical side. We have all the
medical patients that come in through
here.
>> Mhm.
>> And in this room over here, the bigger
room, we do um
we have uh our bedroom.
>> Okay. Let's look over here. What do you
have here?
>> So, here's like, let's say we do IVs,
EKGs. Now, we do uh
>> Oxygen.
>> Yeah, a lot of people can fit in this
room. Obviously, if you have someone
that's acutely ill, respiratory
distress, allergic reaction, something
like that, we put them straight into
this room.
>> So, it's like the
right side, the north.
>> Yeah, the north side of the end of my
mind is, if you know if you know what
that means. But, you know, we have full
IV you know, IV supplies, IV
medications, whether it's IV hydration,
um
>> What's that?
>> This is a wireless EKG machine.
>> Oh, wireless you can get EKG here as
well?
>> We do EKGs here. Uh we had quite a few.
Obviously, upstate it's very you know,
there's not many options and there's
there's really very limited definitive
care. So, we have a lot of patients
coming with a lot of different medical
issues, very complicated things. And
we've had but we've
been able to assist a lot of patients
who had heart attacks that came here to
the center.
>> Really?
>> Came here. We we Yeah, plenty of times.
>> You On that machine, you've seen MIs?
>> We've had MIs. We had last year a
chopper job from this office. A father
came running with a child.
It was a head trauma. Child got
choppered and had a bleed.
>> Wow.
>> They had
>> So, this is out of this room right here?
>> Out of this room. We have, you know,
>> So, you you Do you use that oxygen?
>> We use the oxygen. Obviously, it's it's
a case-by-case basis. If a patient needs
a hospital and needs a definitive care
and needs more more monitoring or higher
level of care or more testing, we send
them out. We do only if it's safe and
it's appropriate do we
>> Keep the patient here?
>> but we we try as best as as possible to
do with with the ignition switch with
with our heart and putting our heart and
soul in every patient. Just trying to do
the best whatever for each patient
individually.
>> Wow. Let's jump into the stitches room
cuz okay. I mean, everybody knows Dr.
Zaler is stitches. I mean, you're a lot
more than that, but you're known for
your stitches. Everybody know Everybody
know that you
>> Thank you. I appreciate that. By the
way, up state, appointment only, please,
for stitches, because if you don't want
to wait 3 hours, because there's 15 cuts
behind you,
well, for an appointment, it just makes
it a lot easier for for everyone else.
For you, I'm sure you don't want to sit
here. So, that's probably the longest
period of waiting is
stitches, because we have
10 to 20 a day. On a Motza Shabbos, I'll
be here till 3:00, 4:00 a.m.
>> No way.
>> So,
>> Wow.
>> Question, does insurance cover stitches?
>> 100%. So, we we we take all New York
insurances,
uh Medicaid, uh Medicare, all the
everything in between. We take many New
Jersey insurances, as well.
Um
and even if someone does not have
insurance, we really work with them.
It's not We make it um even for stitches
or for other things, we make it
inexpensive.
>> the most stitches you've ever given in
your life?
>> I don't know. I I don't I like I tell
all the patients and every patient comes
and says, "You remember me?" I said,
"Not really. I don't remember what I did
this morning." "Oh, you saw me
yesterday. You gave me 25 stitches."
Uh you know, but it's not I I every day
I wake up, it's a new beginning.
>> Mhm.
>> But,
>> No, but on a single wound, what was the
most like stitches you actually put into
a wound?
>> So, [snorts] unfortunately, we have a
lot of cases where
people go for stitches um in other
places, like they go to the emergency
room somewhere, and they
and we just had recently someone who
went to the emergency room,
needed to go to the emergency room, cuz
they were in a car accident, and had
head trauma.
There was It was a
young woman, in her early 20s, had If I
would show you the cut, it looked
the whole forehead zigzag.
There were eight stitches there. The
thing looked like a total disaster at
They came to me. It was a Motza Shabbos.
It it 2:00 in the morning. I normally
don't do it because we do
fresh lacerations.
But they spoke to me and they pleaded
with me, "Please, can I try helping?"
You know, I looked at it. It was It was
It was very bad.
You redid it. Baruch Hashem, we took out
the stitches. I There must have been 50
stitches in this person's forehead.
>> Wow.
>> Um there was a nose laceration they
didn't even stitch that needed to be
stitched. I took them out. Baruch
Hashem, it looks beautiful. I'm just
happy that I I could help I could help
this person. Um you know, one patient at
a time. And for her, obviously, it's
huge, but Baruch Hashem, I have the you
know, we're given the ability to help,
and that's what we try to do.
Uh who is this?
This is number one. This is Dr. Ben.
>> Dr. Ben in the house.
>> Bubley. He's number one, close friend of
mine.
I don't know if I should say Talmid, he
doesn't like that, but he is
>> [laughter]
>> but he's he's great. We work together
always. We work, you know, very well
together. We've been working together in
Williamsburg for what, 5
>> Almost
>> 5 years already.
Um we deal with acute patients together.
We work um teamwork. And you know, we do
stitches together, we do x-rays
together, we see patients together.
We're always together on the weekends
upstate because Ben has uh
Dr. Ben has his office in 13th Avenue
and I have mine in Williamsburg. But
upstate we come together and on the
weekends we're always here together.
From Friday to Sunday, we're always
working together, so we work
>> Mhm.
That's amazing thing. You guys are in
the community. You're in Williamsburg.
>> Brooke, you know the community, you're
familiar with them with their needs and
all that. That's really great.
>> Yeah, so you know, I came from to
Williamsburg. Next year is going to be
10 years. In 2016, 10 years. I was
looking at the photos from the opening.
We were just [snorts] looking at those
photos.
>> So you know Williamsburg.
>> So I came as a nobody. I didn't know
anyone, didn't speak a word of Yiddish.
I really don't speak Yiddish now, but I
understand most of it. But Baruch
Hashem, you know, we've gained the trust
of the community. There's a lot of
mutual respect that goes into that. You
respect others, you gain you gain
respect back. Nothing is taken for
granted. And Baruch Hashem
>> We put in a lot of effort and hours.
>> Yeah, we put in we put in a lot of work
and really in the end of the day the two
of us just
we want to go home knowing that we did
the best for each patient, knowing that
>> It doesn't It doesn't end there. Like
even when we're home
>> Obviously I
you get people phone calling you from
the house.
>> 20 20 24/7. 24
>> number is private. People, friends,
family, neighbors.
>> So your phone number's out there.
>> Phone number's out there. It's It is
difficult. A lot of times we we need we
each need our own secretary because it's
>> Very busy.
>> Very busy. Everyone needs you know needs
and wants attention. They're especially
upstate.
>> Mhm.
>> I have a lot of my primary care
patients. Ben has a lot of his primary
care patients. Patients are have complex
issues and you know where do you go
upstate when you have you know you can't
just spend two minutes with a patient
and know what's going on. So
you know
>> how you see that you know people come to
Assista and they know they're getting
the doctor who's going to care for them,
who they can call after hours, who's
there for them not just you know in and
out.
>> Also the big manner that we have between
each other is that like we've been able
to
Patient have been able to trust me and
him together work together and
>> Wow, that's amazing.
>> That's amazing, right?
That's the relationship we've been able
to establish over there.
>> Okay, so now we're starting on we have
the medical side which is like the right
wing of the of the facility. Now we have
the middle side which is kind of like
the trauma wing.
>> Trauma.
>> where we do our portable x-rays with the
fluoroscopy, low dose radiation. We have
lead. Now we have if you look around the
room literally for everything whether
it's a boots, fractures, crutches,
ankles, slings.
Um
many different types of wrists wrist
injuries. Also what we do here that's
very that is very unique to to Assista
and to here and to Dr. Ben-Ezra is that
um we do cast here on on site waterproof
casting.
If you know, if something requires a
cast or you know, or needs to be molded
a certain way will work with an
orthopedist with an orthopedist crazy
orthopedic surgeon. Do you have an
orthopedist here? So we have so we we
have a
close communication with different
orthopedic surgeons and we'll show them
live images and live views of what's
going on if it needs a little movement
needs a little you know, slight
reduction. We'll do it and they will
always follow up with the orthopedist
after but they give us the ability to
cast the patients here. It used to be
that you had a fracture, you were going
down to the city for everything. Now
90% of the cases of the fractures here
that we see, we can cast on on site
and they can follow up the next day or
the in two days with the orthopedic
surgeons. So you give the cast here. You
do the cast here waterproof. We have
different colors. We have different
colors.
White, black, blue, pink. So for the
girls you have pink cast, the boys you
have everything waterproof. It's all
also all all covered by insurance.
There's no extra added fee for for
waterproof casting.
>> It's great. Wow.
>> We'll remove the cast.
So sometimes in the event let's say a
child has a an injury that we can't take
care of, needs sedation, needs a
hospital,
needs an orthopedist needs surgery. So a
lot of times they'll we'll send them to
the city from here
with a solid especially if they're in
pain. Give them pain medication. We'll
start an IV. We'll give them a video.
We'll give them pain medication and then
what we'll do is we'll follow up with
the orthopedic surgeon and then instead
of them dragging to the city
in four weeks to remove the cast, we'll
remove the cast, we'll repeat the images
and send it to the orthopedist.
>> That's great. This is probably the most
busiest room here in the Catskills.
Lacerations, that's the number one visit
over here. So you do stitches right
here. So lay it down over here.
>> So we this room is quite busy. Um
You know, fortunately, unfortunately,
you know, the parents a lot of times
they feel like they're going to pass
out. So, we
Many times we have multiple patients in
this room.
>> It's like an MCI.
>> You like that, right? It is like a
little MCI, but we Um obviously, the bed
is fully functioning bed. It goes to a
table It goes to a chair.
Um we
keep patients comfortable in here. Uh
it's a nice big room, lit up.
Again, we do um
>> Where is the average stitches you do a
day?
>> 15 to 20 a day.
Uh stitches, mostly faces.
Um
cosmetic best for best cosmetic
outcomes.
You know, we have um top-of-the-line,
top brands um
of stitches, everything that we use. Um
we don't settle, even though these are,
you know, everything is much more
expensive.
We have, you know, for when it comes to
a person when it's, you know, it's very
easy to to do when it's when it's money,
but if it's your child, you'd want the
best. That's what we really try to to
instill and to give to every patient.
Just try Even if it's a small, minor
thing, you have a little cut and, you
know, maybe put some glue or maybe
put a little steri-strip. We always will
do the best. It It's not about the
money. If If the If the patient is going
to have a better cosmetic outcome, we're
going to do the whatever is best. If it
needs a couple just two stitches, we're
going to do two stitches. If it needs 50
stitches, we're going to do 50 stitches.
If it takes me an hour or takes me 5
minutes,
>> Wow.
>> It's It's uh
>> Doctor, I feel you're a showman there.
Your heart.
What is this?
>> This is the the digital X-ray machine,
like you typically have in any um
radiology place or the ER.
>> So, this is a full ER, like you said.
>> I didn't say that. Obviously, if a
patient needs an ER, we we send them to
the ER and you know, unfortunately,
there are a lot of patients upstairs
with a lot of comorbidities, a lot of
things that we can't manage. But, us we
can do our best to at least start the
process and see if we can manage the
patient safely
in an outpatient setting.
Um we have a tech always, get it read by
radiologist, um chest x-rays,
things like that we'll do in here. But
we'll try a most times to use the
fluoroscopy because it's low dose
radiation.
>> Nice. Doctor, thank you so much for
showing me this gorgeous
state-of-the-art Afikim of Monticello.
I'm going to call it Afikim of
Monticello because it's Afikim of the
Catskills cuz people come here from far
and near just to see Dr. Effie, Dr.
Zaller.
Gorgeous location, eight exam rooms plus
stitches, x-rays, IV, oxygen, EKG, and
anything you might need. I call it a
mini ER with the Yiddish heart with Dr.
Zaller over here. You didn't say it, I
said it.
>> [laughter]
>> Camera, the address is 353 East
Broadway. What's the phone number?
>> 845-419-1000.
We're open Sunday through Thursday from
9:00 a.m. to midnight.
Um
>> Friday's probably
>> Friday is 9:00 to 4:00.
>> Motzei Shabbos?
>> And Motzei Shabbos is after Shabbos till
till whenever. I mean
till the till the last last patient
leaves. Obviously, that's what I'm
spending most of my time doing is
stitching. So if it needs to be till
3:00 4:00 a.m.,
uh that's what we need to do.
>> Thank you so much, doctor.
>> So,
you know, the the brand it's Afikim to
your health. You know, we really try to
instill here in our in everyone, whether
it's the
the physicians, the the the staff, the
the mid-levels,
um everyone should, you know, care about
the patient. You're not just another
number. You're not just uh
you know, another uh billing for the
insurance. Really try to care for every
patient, give that level of heart, and
that's really the takeaway from Afikim.
>> Thank you doctor. Assister to your
health.