Mrs Megan Lynch Bradshaw, AUD CCC-A | |
7435 W Talcott Ave, Resurrection Medical Center Audiology Dept., Chicago, IL 60631-3707 | |
(773) 774-8000 | |
(773) 792-9774 |
Full Name | Mrs Megan Lynch Bradshaw |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Speciality | Audiologist-hearing Aid Fitter |
Location | 7435 W Talcott Ave, Chicago, Illinois |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Medicare enrolled and may accept medicare through third-party reassignment. May prescribe medicare part D drugs. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1073656757 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Provider Name | Revolution Hearing |
---|---|
Provider Type | Part B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice |
Provider Identifiers | NPI Number: 1154948420 PECOS PAC ID: 6608249727 Enrollment ID: O20231010000751 |
News Archive
For protein-based drugs such as insulin to be taken orally rather than injected, bioengineers need to find a way to shuttle them safely through the stomach to the small intestine where they can be absorbed and distributed by the bloodstream.
In an innovative new procedure, interventional cardiologist Ramesh Mazhari, MD, is one of only a few in the Washington, DC, region to access the coronary arteries through the radial artery on the inside of the wrist.
...as scientists try to develop new antibiotics faster than the bacteria can evolve new resistance strategies. But now, researchers have a new strategy that may give them a leg up in the race - reproducing in the lab the natural evolution of the bacterial enzymes that confer resistance.
Like a stern bodyguard for the central nervous sytem, the blood-brain barrier keeps out anything that could lead to disease and dangerous inflammation-at least when all is functioning normally.
› Verified 5 days ago
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Mrs Megan Lynch Bradshaw, AUD CCC-A 927 Stonehenge Ct, Naperville, IL 60563-2119 Ph: (630) 548-4513 | Mrs Megan Lynch Bradshaw, AUD CCC-A 7435 W Talcott Ave, Resurrection Medical Center Audiology Dept., Chicago, IL 60631-3707 Ph: (773) 774-8000 |
News Archive
For protein-based drugs such as insulin to be taken orally rather than injected, bioengineers need to find a way to shuttle them safely through the stomach to the small intestine where they can be absorbed and distributed by the bloodstream.
In an innovative new procedure, interventional cardiologist Ramesh Mazhari, MD, is one of only a few in the Washington, DC, region to access the coronary arteries through the radial artery on the inside of the wrist.
...as scientists try to develop new antibiotics faster than the bacteria can evolve new resistance strategies. But now, researchers have a new strategy that may give them a leg up in the race - reproducing in the lab the natural evolution of the bacterial enzymes that confer resistance.
Like a stern bodyguard for the central nervous sytem, the blood-brain barrier keeps out anything that could lead to disease and dangerous inflammation-at least when all is functioning normally.
› Verified 5 days ago