Sherri A Long, MD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 400 Village Center Dr, Suite 200, North Oaks, MN 55127 Phone: 651-789-9800 Fax: 651-789-9810 |
Anudeep K Rahil, MD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 400 Village Center Dr, North Oaks, MN 55127 Phone: 651-789-9800 Fax: 651-789-9810 |
Dr. Susan Mcclellan Asch, MD Dermatology - Pediatric Dermatology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 34 North Oaks Rd, North Oaks, MN 55127 Phone: 612-414-7800 Fax: 651-275-3325 |
News Archive
Despite working in more routine and less autonomous jobs, having fewer close friends at work, and feeling less supported by their coworkers, blacks report significantly more positive emotions in the workplace than whites, according to a new study in the December issue of Social Psychology Quarterly.
China Sky One Medical, Inc. ("China Sky One Medical" or "the Company") (Nasdaq: CSKI), a leading fully integrated pharmaceutical company producing over-the-counter drugs in the People's Republic of China ("PRC"), today announced that the Company has begun to export its Pain Relief patch to Canada. The first order included 40,000 patches, which are now available in some stores and supermarkets in Vancouver.
Interventional radiologists at Temple University Hospital now are able to treat many patients with minimally invasive procedures not available only a few years ago. "Conditions that used to require extensive surgery now take an hour or less, and patients leave with a bandaid and walk home," says Gary Cohen, M.D., Section Chief of Interventional Radiology and Vice Chairman of Radiology. "How can you beat that?"
In a viewpoint published this week in The Lancet, the Community Research Advisors Group argue that research into bedaquiline – a new drug, fast tracked for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) – should proceed cautiously in people with drug-sensitive tuberculosis.
During depression, the brain becomes less plastic and adaptable, and thus less able to perform certain tasks, like storing memories. Researchers at the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet have now traced the brain's lower plasticity to reduced functionality in its support cells, and believe that learning more about these cells can pave the way for radical new therapies for depression.
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