Our passion is to seek opportunities to help all patient populations, with a special commitment to the most vulnerable patients and the most challenged areas of neurodiagnostic service coverage.


We are committed to finding ways to best serve all hospitals, with a special commitment to serve Children’s Hospitals, Veterans Hospitals, County Hospitals, Critical Access Hospitals and others in underserved areas across the country.

We know that there are shortages of technologists and physicians in this vital subspecialty of medicine and our primary goal at Next Gen Neuro is to connect these specialists to the patients and communities who need them the most.  We will provide the quality care commitment and the team to deliver on it, when and where you need us. 

If you have a need for services, in any setting, large or small — please let us know. 
We commit to delivering on our promise.

 
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Why it matters to us

Our Inspiration

These are the stories that inspire us to do what we do every day.

 
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Leisha’s Story:

In 1991 my son Jonathon was born 25 weeks into my pregnancy. I had never imagined I would find myself visiting the NICU as a parent, at the hospital I worked. I had performed EEGs in that NICU many times over the years, but now, on my first visit as a parent, it looked like the most frightening place in the world.  Over time though, it became the place that I could hold my fragile, beautiful child every day. I even became friends with another mom, Claudia who visited daily.

 
 

As the weeks went by, we both noticed that most of the other parents hardly ever visited, and we asked the nurses why. They shared that most of the parents did not live close by like we did.  They came from places hours away, and because of work and family responsibilities, they could only visit on weekends—or, sadly, sometimes during the week when their child took a turn for the worse.

Claudia and I talked sometimes about how grateful we were for those visits with our babies, no matter what the outcome, we had come to know our children, to hold them when they were stable enough, and to talk to them and comfort them when they were not.

I recently heard a NICU nurse give a talk about what it had meant to her nursing team to learn how to put on the electrodes to provide continuous EEG monitoring for their NICU babies.  To them, it meant one less parent who would be separated from their critically ill baby, not to be able to visit, to comfort them, to bond with them. It allowed them to keep the babies that they could otherwise care for but had previously transferred to a distant hospital because they had no ability to provide cEEG monitoring.  For this, her team of dedicated nurses had been willing to step up, to learn a piece of our job when none of us were available.

This is what drives me in my work every day.


To seek opportunities to help patients and their families keep loved ones close together, and provide the services they need.

 
 
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