Healthcare Heroes honored by Schneps Media
Briefly

Healthcare Heroes honored by Schneps Media
Professionals from many healthcare fields gathered at Terrace On the Park in Queens for Schneps Media’s Healthcare Hero awards. Hundreds of attendees honored healers and helpers from hospitals to homes and the homeless, with recognition for more than 50 individuals. The event featured remarks from Schneps Media CEO Joshua Schneps and emcee Hazel Sanchez, who described family sacrifices in nursing and anesthesiology. Providers emphasized the awards as a forum connecting inpatient and outpatient professionals with different challenges. Attendees walked a red carpet, posed with trophies, and took time away from high-stress work. Home care leaders described 24/7 operations and personal availability for staff needs, while others traced service ethics to childhood influences.
"Professionals in a wide range of healthcare fields on May 19 united at Terrace On the Park, in Queens, for Schneps Media's Healthcare Hero awards, honoring healers and helpers from hospitals to homes and the homeless. Schneps Media CEO Joshua Schneps greeted hundreds of attendees, singling out a little more than 50 heroes, as not simply essential during the pandemic, but every day."
"“Healthcare workers really have a special place in my heart,” WPIX-11 News anchor and emcee Hazel Sanchez said, noting her mother was a nurse and her father was an anesthesiologist. “As a kid I witnessed how much they sacrificed, not only to provide for our family, but to be there and care for others.”"
"Anthony Minelli, AAP manager for the division of trauma and acute care surgery at NYU Langone Health in Suffolk, said the awards create a forum for a wide range of providers to meet. “It's an amazing opportunity to be with other healthcare providers from inpatient to outpatient,” Minelli said. “Everybody has unique challenges in their specific fields.”"
"Navin Shivpal, CEO of Cottage Home Care Services, employs 5,000 providing care around the clock. “In home care, we operate 24/7. In case they (workers) need anything, they can call me,” he said. “If it's 2 a.m., I'll take care of my workers.”"
Read at www.amny.com
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