Dr. Michael Howard Winston, MD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2 Medical Dr, Suite A, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776 Phone: 631-928-1555 Fax: 631-928-1570 |
Jacqueline Sherry Fern, M.D. Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2 Medical Dr, Suite A, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776 Phone: 631-928-1555 Fax: 631-928-1570 |
Dr. Adam Joseph Korzenko, M.D. Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6 Medical Drive, Port Jefferson Professional Park, Suite D, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776 Phone: 631-928-7922 Fax: 631-928-9246 |
Dr. Peter A Klein, M.D. Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6 Medical Dr, Suite D, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776 Phone: 631-928-7922 Fax: 631-928-9246 |
Mr. Joseph K Cavallo, MD Dermatology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1500 Route 112 Bldg 6, Port Jefferson Station, NY 11776 Phone: 631-732-9090 Fax: 631-732-8235 |
News Archive
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal functional disorder that can greatly affect the patient's well being. Multiple interacting mechanisms, including alterations in the intestinal microbiota, are suspected to lie behind IBS aetiology.
AB SCIEX, a global leader in life science analytical technologies, today announced that it is collaborating with the University of Geneva's Mass Spectrometry Centre to create new workflows and analytical strategies intended to significantly improve drug discovery and development.
The University of Louisville is one of nine pilot sites selected by the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation for its newly established Care Center Network and the PFF Patient Registry program. Rafael Perez, M.D., director of the UofL Interstitial Lung Disease program in the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care & Sleep Disorders Medicine, will lead the UofL site.
New CHILD Study research has found that overweight and obese women are more like to have children who are overweight or obese by three years of age-and that bacteria in the gut may be partially to blame.
The Coalition for Pulmonary Fibrosis (CPF) calls 2009 a year of success in advocacy, research support and awareness, even in a year plagued by the economic recession. PF is a fatal disease that has no known cause, no FDA-approved treatment, and no cure.
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