Dr Andrew M Branham, MD | |
47149 Buse Rd Bldg 1370, Patuxent Rvr, MD 20670-1540 | |
(301) 757-0562 | |
Not Available |
Full Name | Dr Andrew M Branham |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine |
Location | 47149 Buse Rd Bldg 1370, Patuxent Rvr, Maryland |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Does not participate in Medicare Program. He may not accept medicare assignment. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1699838698 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
2083X0100X | Preventive Medicine - Occupational Medicine | MD16060 (Hawaii) | Primary |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Dr Andrew M Branham, MD 47149 Buse Rd Bldg 1370, Patuxent Rvr, MD 20670-1540 Ph: (301) 757-0562 | Dr Andrew M Branham, MD 47149 Buse Rd Bldg 1370, Patuxent Rvr, MD 20670-1540 Ph: (301) 757-0562 |
News Archive
The Biden administration — keeping a campaign promise — announced it would back a temporary waiver of patent protections for the covid-19 vaccines, arousing the ire of the drug industry.
New data released today find that 82 percent of parents of children ages 4-12 with asthma report having restricted playtime activities to help avoid triggers and prevent asthma attacks in their children, with 47% of them keeping children with asthma inside when allergy season is in full swing. Working parents, who more often report experiencing stress related to raising a child with asthma than non-working parents (44% vs. 38%), take more precautions, such as more often swapping carpeting for wood flooring (30% vs. 17%).
Investigators at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey have developed a novel approach for utilizing 4-dimensional (4D) printing of arrays that transform from cell-culture inserts into histological cassettes that hold patient tissue samples for rapid programmable drug testing.
National groups are calling for a permanent solution to the doctor payment formula and warning about a possible shortage in doctors and impending decline in Medicare payments. The Virginian-Pilot reports: "If Congress doesn't intervene, a funding formula will trigger a 21 percent cut in reimbursements to doctors in the Medicare and Tricare programs on March 1, a group of national organizations warned Thursday. That, the group said, will force doctors to drop out of the programs and make it tougher for elderly and military beneficiaries to get health care.
Fewer abortions are taking place worldwide because of increased contraceptive use, a study by the Guttmacher Institute has found, Reuters reports. The study also indicates that 20 million "unsafe abortions, mostly in poorer countries and often carried out by the women themselves using inappropriate drugs or herbal potions, or by untrained traditional healers," still occur each year and kill 70,000 women annually (Kelland, 10/13).
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