Dr. John Julius Willsen, M.D. Dermatology - Procedural Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1199 Delbon Ave, Suite2, Turlock, CA 95382 Phone: 209-668-3063 Fax: 209-668-4992 |
Dr. Christian Constantin Jones, MD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1000 Delbon Ave Ste 8, Turlock, CA 95382 Phone: 209-226-4644 |
Basil M Hantash, MD, PHD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3800 Geer Rd Ste 200, Turlock, CA 95382 Phone: 209-668-3063 Fax: 209-668-4992 |
News Archive
A nationwide study led by researchers at UCSF provides evidence that inhaled nitric oxide is safe and effective for the prevention of the most common type of long-term lung disease of very premature infants.
SurModics, Inc., a leading provider of drug delivery and surface modification technologies to the healthcare industry, announced today that it has entered into a license agreement with Clinuvel Pharmaceuticals Limited of Melbourne, Australia. Under the agreement, the Company's SurModics Pharmaceuticals unit has licensed certain of its biodegradable polymer implant technology to Clinuvel for the treatment of sun-induced skin disorders. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
Bayshore Home Health announced today the purchase of Saskatoon-based home health care company Nightingale Nursing Group Inc. The acquisition expands Bayshore's presence in the province, complements its existing office in Regina, and provides an opportunity to service additional remote northern communities.
The Wall Street Journal examines how "some local social entrepreneurs are coming up with new ideas to provide the poor with access to better medical services" in Pakistan, where the health care system is "split between low-cost government-funded hospitals offering basic services and expensive private-sector medical institutions ... but the majority of the country's 190 million people have little access to health care."
Doctors say that with more babies born oversized mostly to obese or overweight mothers the risks of shoulder injury and getting stuck during labour is on the rise. Horrifyingly sometimes obstetricians are resorting to breaking baby's collarbones to facilitate delivery because their shoulders get stuck during childbirth. This is usually done in a potentially life-threatening is known as shoulder dystocia that compresses the umbilical cord or puts pressure on the neck, leaving the child starved of oxygen if not delivered immediately.
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