Allison Jordan Hudgens, MD | |
40 College St, Burlington, VT 05401-4473 | |
(501) 622-7640 | |
Not Available |
Full Name | Allison Jordan Hudgens |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Speciality | Student In An Organized Health Care Education/training Program |
Location | 40 College St, Burlington, Vermont |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Medicare enrolled and may accept medicare through third-party reassignment. May prescribe medicare part D drugs. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1497259774 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
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Allison Jordan Hudgens, MD 40 College St Apt 311, Burlington, VT 05401-7312 Ph: (501) 622-7640 | Allison Jordan Hudgens, MD 40 College St, Burlington, VT 05401-4473 Ph: (501) 622-7640 |
News Archive
Researchers for the first time have induced robust regeneration of nerve tissue connections in injured adult spinal cord sites that control voluntary movement. These findings provide hope that it may be possible to design therapies for paralysis and other impairments of motor function arising from spinal cord injury.
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons continues to break new ground in patient safety and quality measurement through a new collaboration with the Duke Clinical Research Institute. DCRI will establish a link with STS clinical data and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services claims data. This link will enable participants and researchers using data from the STS National Database to track long-term patient outcomes.
Several Senate Republican leaders are now pushing a new, partial health-overhaul repeal bill that targets a Medicare cost-cutting panel, The Hill reports. The panel, the Independent Payment Advisory Board, would make cost-cutting recommendations whenever spending exceeds set benchmarks. Congress would have to adopt them, or come up with its own plan.
A new pathway for improving vaccines against tuberculosis has been discovered by microbiologists at the University at Buffalo in collaboration with researchers at other universities, according to a paper in the journal Mucosal Immunology, published by the Nature group.
A computational tool developed at the University of Utah (U of U) has successfully identified diseases with unknown gene mutations in three separate cases, U of U researchers and their colleagues report in a new study in The American Journal of Human Genetics. The software, Phevor (Phenotype Driven Variant Ontological Re-ranking tool), identifies undiagnosed illnesses and unknown gene mutations by analyzing the exomes, or areas of DNA where proteins that code for genes are made, in individual patients and small families.
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