Harry Mushlin M.D.

Assistant Professor Of Neurosurgery, Director Of Spine Surgery, Assistant Residency Program Director at Stony Brook Medicine

Harry Mushlin MD is an accomplished neurosurgeon currently serving as an Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery and Director of Spine Surgery at Stony Brook Medicine since August 2021, while also holding the position of Assistant Residency Program Director. Prior to this role, Harry Mushlin was a Clinical Instructor and Fellow in Complex Spine and Neurotrauma at UPMC from July 2020 to July 2021. Harry Mushlin completed a neurosurgery residency at the University of Maryland Medical Center from 2013 to 2020. Educational qualifications include a Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree from New York Medicine Jobs obtained between 2009 and 2013, and a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in Cognitive Neuroscience from The George Washington University earned from 2003 to 2007.

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Stony Brook Medicine

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Stony Brook Medicine expresses our shared mission of research, clinical care and education – a mission embraced by our faculty, staff, researchers, and students. It is the embodiment of everything we do on behalf of the health of patients – not only here in our community, but also in the region and worldwide. Stony Brook Medicine comprises five Health Sciences schools — Renaissance School of Medicine, School of Dental Medicine, School of Health Technology and Management, School of Nursing and School of Social Welfare — as well as Stony Brook University Hospital, Stony Brook Southampton Hospital, Stony Brook Eastern Long Island Hospital, Stony Brook Children’s Hospital and more than 200 community-based healthcare settings throughout Suffolk County. Our health sciences schools work in tandem with our research and clinical care teams to deliver the best ideas in medicine to patients. As an academic medical center, we are all about ideas. Creating them. Nurturing them. Protecting them. Challenging them. Improving them. Teaching them to others. And most importantly of all, delivering them to patients and their families – sooner, smarter and better. An “idea” can be a new treatment protocol, best practices, a bright new researcher we’ve brought in from another institution, the convenience of an outpatient clinic, or simply a more user-friendly way to access our medical care. Ideas drive us, they thrive here, and we are committed to bringing more of them to our patients than anyone else.