Dr Abdulaziz Saleh Alfadhel, MD | |
55 Station Lndg, Apt 507, Medford, MA 02155-5007 | |
(617) 283-8318 | |
Not Available |
Full Name | Dr Abdulaziz Saleh Alfadhel |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | General Practice |
Location | 55 Station Lndg, Medford, Massachusetts |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Medicare enrolled and may accept medicare through third-party reassignment. May prescribe medicare part D drugs. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1134503865 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
208D00000X | General Practice | 263595 (Massachusetts) | Primary |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Dr Abdulaziz Saleh Alfadhel, MD 55 Station Lndg, Apt 507, Medford, MA 02155-5007 Ph: (617) 283-8318 | Dr Abdulaziz Saleh Alfadhel, MD 55 Station Lndg, Apt 507, Medford, MA 02155-5007 Ph: (617) 283-8318 |
News Archive
Thirty-two previously unidentified genetic regions associated with osteoporosis and fracture have been identified by a large, worldwide consortium of researchers, including Stanford Prevention Research Center chief John Ioannidis, MD, DSc. Variations in the DNA sequences in these regions confer either risk or protection from the bone-weakening disease. Many, but not all, of the regions encode proteins involved in pathways known to involve bone health.
The World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies (WFNS) representing more than 30,000 neurosurgeons, 114 individual societies and 100 nations has launched World Neurosurgery, the specialty's first publication acting as a global forum for not only high level peer reviewed, clinical and laboratory science, but also the social, political, economic, cultural and educational issues that affect research and care delivery regionally and from a global perspective.
Legislation to overhaul the American health system lacks an overarching plan to curb the rising costs of medicine, according to Atul Gawande, the influential surgeon and writer, in an essay for the Dec. 14 issue of The New Yorker. "Does the bill end medicine's destructive piecemeal payment system? Does it replace paying for quantity with paying for quality? Does it institute nationwide structural changes that curb costs and raise quality? It does not," Gawande writes. "Instead, what it offers is . . . pilot programs."
Celiac disease is a fairly common disease, affecting one to two percent of the European population. It is expressed as a hypersensitivity to gluten, a protein found in cereals such as wheat, barley or rye.
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