Karen M. O'keefe, LCSW-R, CASAC Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 998 Crooked Hill Rd, Building 56, W Brentwood, NY 11717 Phone: 631-761-2177 Fax: 631-761-2282 |
Elfriede Margot Weiss-paquette, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 998 Crooked Hill Rd, Building 71, Second Floor, W Brentwood, NY 11717 Phone: 631-951-2209 Fax: 631-951-2209 |
Vicki O'brien, LCSW Clinical Social Worker Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 998 Crooked Hill Rd, Western Suffolk Center, W Brentwood, NY 11717 Phone: 631-761-3354 Fax: 631-761-3388 |
News Archive
Scott Hiebert, Ph.D., of Vanderbilt University was awarded a $25,000 grant from the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation to further his research in abnormal BCL6 overexpression, which occurs in a common B-cell lymphoma.
Today, Thomas Jefferson University announces a partnership with Exosome Sciences Inc. to evaluate a novel liquid biopsy platform that might offer clinicians new and actionable information about a patient's cancer as the disease progresses and changes, via a simple blood test.
Bacteria are bad. Mothers and doctors, not to mention the cleaning product industry, repeatedly warn of their dangers. But a Stanford University School of Medicine microbiologist is raising the intriguing idea that persistent bacterial and viral infections have benefits.
A new drug could aid in losing weight and keeping it off. The drug, described in the journal Cell Metabolism on July 26, increases sensitivity to the hormone leptin, a natural appetite suppressant found in the body. Although so far the new drug has only been tested on mice, the findings have implications for the development of new treatments for obesity in humans.
A group of scientists at The Scripps Research Institute is reporting a discovery that sheds light on an area of research fundamental to everything from the normal processes that govern the everyday life of human cells to the aberrant mechanisms that underlie many diseases, including cancer and septic shock.
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