Dr. Larry Michael Fraley, M.D. Anesthesiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Commons, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-779-2357 Fax: 207-779-2240 |
Dr. Peter S. Campion, M.D. Anesthesiology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Cmns, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-778-6031 |
Dr. James C. Lancaster, M.D. Anesthesiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Cmns, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-645-5351 |
Dr. Heather L. Decarolis, D.O. Anesthesiology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 111 Franklin Health Cmns, Farmington, ME 04938 Phone: 207-778-6031 |
News Archive
Hastings Center Scholar Erik Parens, PhD, will speak about behavioral genetics to the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues on Monday, February 28. The meeting kicks off the Commission's examination of the ethical and policy issues raised by genetics and neuroscience. Topics will include the use of genetics, neuroscience, and neuroimaging for testing, research, diagnosis, risk identification, and health promotion. Parens was invited to discuss what he considers the most pressing ethical and social issues that behavioral genetics research raises.
Kaiser Health News provides a fresh take on health policy developments with "Hope He Has Insurance" by Chris Weyant.
Ten thousand more employees at five city agencies have signed on to Mayor Rahm Emanuel's plan to raise monthly health insurance premiums by $50 for employees who fail to participate in a "wellness program" to manage chronic health problems. Emanuel hopes to save $20 million in 2012 - and $240 million over four years - by riding herd over costly, but controllable problems like diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease and asthma.
The PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative (MVI) today announced a new collaboration to initiate development toward a vaccine that may eventually help eliminate and eradicate malaria. This collaboration with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHSPH) and the Sabin Vaccine Institute (Sabin) marks MVI's first investment in transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs). This vaccine approach aims to stop the malaria parasite from developing in the mosquito, effectively blocking transmission of malaria from mosquitoes to humans. Malaria kills nearly 900,000 people per year, most of them children younger than age five.
The circuitry of the central nervous system is immensely complex and, as a result, sometimes confounding. When scientists conduct research to unravel the inner workings at a cellular level, they are sometimes surprised by what they find.
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