Sukarno Chaudhry, M.D. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 4201 Saint Antoine St, Suite 4c, Detroit, MI 48201 Phone: 313-745-4525 |
Geneva Beatrice Tatem, M.D. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2799 W Grand Blvd, Detroit, MI 48202 Phone: 313-916-2436 Fax: 313-916-9102 |
Samran Haider, M.D. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4201 Saint Antoine St Ste 2e, Detroit, MI 48201 Phone: 313-745-4832 |
News Archive
It's easier than ever to sequence our DNA, but doctors still can't exactly tell from our genomes which diseases might befall us. Professor Fritz Roth is setting out to change this by going to basics - to our billion-year-old cousin, baker's yeast.
Pharmacyclics, Inc. today announced that it has been awarded BayBio's 2014 Pantheon DiNA Award for Outstanding Company for its rapid development and commercialization of IMBRUVICA (ibrutinib). The award was presented at BayBio's 11th Annual Pantheon DiNA Awards ceremony in San Francisco.
UNITAID, an international drug financing program established to help fight HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in developing countries, has raised about $2 billion since 2006 through taxes on airline tickets in 15 countries, Philippe Douste-Blazy, chair of the UNITAID executive board, told reporters in Washington on Wednesday, Agence France-Presse reports. According to Douste-Blazy, UNITAID's experience could provide a model for G20 development funding efforts.
African Nations Rightly Proceed With DDT Plans: "Environmental activists inside and outside UNEP love to hate DDT and will seemingly stop at nothing to ensure it is never produced or used. But there is a macabre irony in their anti-DDT campaigns. With all the technological advancement of the 21st century that now ensures the average person born today will live longer than at any time in human history, SADC will be producing a chemical first synthesized in the 1800s.
Learning is easier when it only requires nerve cells to rearrange existing patterns of activity than when the nerve cells have to generate new patterns, a study of monkeys has found. The scientists explored the brain's capacity to learn through recordings of electrical activity of brain cell networks.
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