
Dr. Spiegel completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Vermont and received his Medical Degree from the University of the East, where he studied conventional and tropical medicine and provided health care to the indigent people in the provinces.
Before his involvement in hyperbaric medicine, he served his internship at New Rochelle Hospital Medical Center, and completed his residency in Neurology at The State University of New York Down State Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York where he was also an Assistant Clinical Instructor.
Dr. Spiegel is affiliated with Morton Plant/Mease Hospitals in Dunedin and Countryside, and has been practicing neurology for 25 years in Palm Harbor, Florida. He is actively involved in numerous pharmaceutical clinical trials to further the availability of new medications to assist in the treatment of neurological disorders. Furthermore, he is a proponent and practitioner of hyperbaric medicine as well as an advocate for the use of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) to treat neurological disorders and injuries.
Dr. Spiegel has provided Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy for a wide variety of conditions for a number of years and is at the forefront of bringing this and other innovative and highly successful treatments to our injured military personnel. He is a member of the American Academy of Neurology, American Academy of Pain Management, American Society of Neuro-rehabilitation, American Medical Association, and Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society.
Dr. Spiegel is Founder and Medical Director of the Healing Heroes Network, 501C (3) a nonprofit foundation , whose mission is to provide funding for needed medical care to the service men and women injured in Iraq and Afghanistan after 9/11/01 not covered by the department of veteran's affairs or not provided in a timely fashion

Our hyperbaric doctor completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Vermont in Burlington, and received his Medical Degree from the University of the East in Quezon City, Philippines, where he studied conventional and tropical medicine and provided health care to the indigent people in the provinces.