Dr. Robert Lieberson, MD, MHA, FACS, FAANS is a neurosurgeon who was trained at Stanford. He has been in practice for 30 years. There, Dr. Robert Lieberson learned how to be a computer scientist at the University of Penn's Moore School of Engineering. He worked as a computer scientist so that he could go to medical school at the University of Penn. Doctor Robert Lieberson went to medical school and then did seven years of neurosurgical training at Stanford. He also spent a year as a spinal cord injury and research fellow at the same place. Then, after finishing his residency, he built one of the largest neurosurgery practices in Northern California. He also had a large spine and pain practice. Robert Lieberson was the first doctor in Northern California to do outpatient surgery on a cervical disc and the first doctor in the West to do outpatient surgery on a pedicle screw. In 2008, Dr. Robert Lieberson came back to Stanford as a Professor, where he taught and mentored young neurosurgeons about trauma, spine, and CyberKnife, as well as how to use them. For his work, he did brain tumor research at Stanford. He published and spoke on about 50 different topics around the world: in the United States, Europe, and Asia. When Dr. Robert Lieberson isn't working at one of these hospitals, he's working as a locum tenens provider. These places include Howard University in Washington, DC, and UCSF's Alameda County Neurosurgery Division in Oakland, CA. For the first time since 2014, Dr. Robert Lieberson went back to school in 2015. In the University of Southern California, he earned a Master's in Healthcare Administration, which is what he did. Besides continuing his neurosurgical practice, he has worked with many start-up companies, state medical boards and attorneys general to help them with medical computer applications and quality assurance issues. Multiple times, Dr. Lieberson has been recognized by Stanford and by other hospitals he works with.
drrobertlieberson.com