Dr. Pooya Jazayeri, MD Anesthesiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 741 Londonderry Dr, Sunnyvale, CA 94087 Phone: 917-692-6732 |
Dr. Robert Chan Ang, MD Anesthesiology - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 500 E Remington Dr Ste 18, Sunnyvale, CA 94087 Phone: 408-730-5858 Fax: 408-730-0548 |
Zubia Syed Ahmad, MD Anesthesiology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 301 Old San Francisco Rd, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 Phone: 408-730-4360 |
Cynthia Weller, M.D. Anesthesiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 301 Old San Francisco Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 Phone: 408-739-6000 |
News Archive
Led by La Fondazione Italiana Linfomi, a non-profit Italian professional lymphoma research organization, and supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Celgene Corporation, the Lymphoma Hub has been launched as a new online community for hematologists and oncologists treating lymphoma.
The White House is claiming that the Healthcare.gov website is mostly fixed, that the millions of Americans whose health plans were canceled thanks to government rules may be able to keep them for another year, and that in any event these people will get better plans through ObamaCare exchanges. Whatever the truth of these assertions, those who expect better days ahead for the Affordable Care Act are in for a rude awakening. The shocks-;economic and political-;will get much worse next year and beyond (Michael J. Boskin, 12/15).
Interim data presented today at The International Liver Congress 2015 from the HCV-TARGET study show that all-oral, direct-acting antiviral therapy for hepatitis C (HCV) is well tolerated and highly effective in patients with decompensated cirrhosis.
Medical researchers have discovered a new type of mechanism causing cancer susceptibility, showing that tiny changes in some anti-cancer genes can act as magnets to attract modifying "biochemical tags", effectively switching them off and predisposing families to an increased risk of the disease.
Digoxin, a drug commonly used to treat heart conditions, was associated with a 71 percent higher risk of death and a 63 percent higher risk of hospitalization among adults with diagnosed atrial fibrillation and no evidence of heart failure, according to a Kaiser Permanente study that appears in the current online issue of Circulation: Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology.
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