Alison M. Beer, M.D. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2980 Squalicum Pkwy, Suite 301, Bellingham, WA 98225 Phone: 360-788-6112 Fax: 360-788-6114 |
Gur Raj S. Deol, M.D. Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2980 Squalicum Pkwy Ste 301, Bellingham, WA 98225 Phone: 360-788-6112 Fax: 360-788-6114 |
Omar Arif Jaffer, MD Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2980 Squalicum Pkwy, Suite 301, Bellingham, WA 98225 Phone: 360-788-6112 Fax: 360-788-6114 |
News Archive
Published reports on the usefulness of CT scans for complicated H1N1 cases have spurred use of these procedures in U.S. hospitals. According to healthcare market research publisher Kalorama Information, this opens up a pathway of diagnostics for physicians and overall is a positive sign not only for the technology but also for companies making chemical agents for procedures.
Although long-term care of sick or disabled loved ones is widely recognized as a threat to the caregiver's health and quality of life, a new study led by University at Buffalo psychologist Michael Poulin, PhD, finds that in some contexts, helping valued loved ones may promote the well being of helpers.
The proposed Medicare "bundled" payment system for dialysis is likely to reduce government reimbursements for dialysis units in certain regions of the United States and for some types of facilities, according to research being presented at the American Society of Nephrology's 42nd Annual Meeting and Scientific Exposition in San Diego, CA.
Any enthusiast of winter sports dreads being overtaken by an avalanche, knowing that there is little chance of freeing oneself once buried beneath the mass of snow - snow that becomes hard as concrete until the buried person can no longer move as much as a finger.
Defined sets of factors can reprogram human cells to induced pluripotent stem cells. However, many types of human cells are not easily accessible to minimally invasive procedures. In a paper published in the International and American Associations for Dental Research's Journal of Dental Research, lead researcher K. Tezuka and researchers N. Tamaoki, H. Aoki, T. Takeda-Kawaguchi, K. Iida, T. Kunisada and T. Shibata all from the Gifu University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan; and K. Takahashi, T. Tanaka and S. Yamanaka, all from Kyoto University, Japan, evaluate dental pulp cells as an optimal source of iPS cells, since they are easily obtained from extracted teeth and can be expanded under simple culture conditions.
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