Dr Maria Ludy Rizo, MD | |
437 Sw Bethany Dr, Port St Lucie, FL 34986-2136 | |
(772) 344-1775 | |
(772) 344-1786 |
Full Name | Dr Maria Ludy Rizo |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Speciality | Specialist |
Location | 437 Sw Bethany Dr, Port St Lucie, Florida |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Does not participate in Medicare Program. She may not accept medicare assignment. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1275571374 | NPI | - | NPPES |
275172100 | Medicaid | FL | |
01744072 | Medicaid | NY | |
78295 | Other | FL | BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
2080A0000X | Pediatrics - Adolescent Medicine | ME87578 (Florida) | Secondary |
174400000X | Specialist | ME87578 (Florida) | Primary |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Dr Maria Ludy Rizo, MD 437 Sw Bethany Dr, Port St Lucie, FL 34986-2136 Ph: (561) 344-1775 | Dr Maria Ludy Rizo, MD 437 Sw Bethany Dr, Port St Lucie, FL 34986-2136 Ph: (772) 344-1775 |
News Archive
Fostering innovation to speed the improvement of health care is the goal of an $8.3 million grant to researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Patients whose colorectal cancer (CRC) is detected during a screening colonoscopy are likely to survive longer than those who wait until they have symptoms before having the test, according to a study in the July issue of GIE: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, the monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal of the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.
According to an expert desalination plants that are built close to sewage outflows risk contaminating drinking water. An Australian National University professor of infectious diseases and microbiology Peter Collignon said that membrane technology is not fool proof when it comes to screening bugs. This comes coincidentally just after a "reporting error" by Sydney Water that showed E.coli had been found in processed drinking water at its $1.9 billion Kurnell desalination plant in Sydney's south. The plant's intake, which collects water to supply 1.5 million Sydney homes, is about 2.5km north of the Cronulla near-shore sewage outflow.
Chemicals in pharmaceutical drugs can obviously save lives. But as more and stronger chemicals have been introduced, our basic knowledge of the broader health impact of all these chemicals has not kept up with the rapid pace of innovation. There is exceptionally little information on how chemicals in our drugs and also in the environment around us, including on the food we eat, impact some of the most important cells in our body: stem cells. Without basic knowledge and tests on the impact of chemicals on our stem cells, we may be unwittingly damaging essential regenerative functions in our body.
World Vision relief teams in Asia are dispatching emergency supplies - blankets, water, medicines and tents - to thousands of people left homeless by Sunday's tsunamis devastating coastlines for between Indonesia and East Africa.
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