Specialties

Richard L. Feinberg, MD, FACS

Professor

  • Director, UW Health Vein Center

feinberg@surgery.wisc.edu
(608) 265-4420

Education

  • MD, The George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC
  • General Surgery Residency, The George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC
  • Fellowship in Vascular Surgery, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, VA
  • Fellowship in Endovascular Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH

Clinical Specialties

Dr. Richard Feinberg leads the UW Health Vein Center at 1 South Park and is board certified in vascular surgery, with over 25 years of experience treating venous disease.

It is estimated that almost half of the adult female population are troubled by spider veins or varicose veins and general venous disease. Heredity, pregnancy, weight gain, hormonal shifts and certain occupations may contribute to the formation of small veins that lie close to the surface of the skin.

Dr. Feinberg offers our patients the benefit of minimally invasive diagnostic tools and techniques to treat venous disease, providing patients the highest level of comfort and relief so they may return home with desired results and minimal pain, downtime, and scarring.

Recent Publications

  • Prevalence, impact, and risk factors for hospital-acquired conditions after major surgical resection for cancer: a NSQIP analysis.
    Molena D, Mungo B, Stem M, Feinberg RL, Lidor AO
    J Gastrointest Surg 2015 Jan; 19(1): 142-51; discussion 151
    [PubMed ID: 25199948]

  • Outcomes of operations for benign foregut disease in elderly patients: a National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database analysis.
    Molena D, Mungo B, Stem M, Feinberg RL, Lidor AO
    Surgery 2014 Aug; 156(2): 352-60
    [PubMed ID: 24973127]

  • Hospital-acquired conditions after bariatric surgery: we can predict, but can we prevent?
    Lidor AO, Moran-Atkin E, Stem M, Magnuson TH, Steele KE, Feinberg R, Schweitzer MA
    Surg Endosc 2014 Dec; 28(12): 3285-92
    [PubMed ID: 24935201]

  • Thirty-day outcomes of paraesophageal hernia repair using the NSQIP database: should laparoscopy be the standard of care?
    Mungo B, Molena D, Stem M, Feinberg RL, Lidor AO
    J Am Coll Surg 2014 Aug; 219(2): 229-36
    [PubMed ID: 24891211]

  • Outcomes of esophagectomy for esophageal achalasia in the United States.
    Molena D, Mungo B, Stem M, Feinberg RL, Lidor AO
    J Gastrointest Surg 2014 Feb; 18(2): 310-7
    [PubMed ID: 23963868]

All Publications on PubMed