Dr Mark E Dailey, MD - Medicare Medical Oncology in Hartford, CT

Dr Mark E Dailey, MD is a medicare enrolled "Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology" physician in Hartford, Connecticut. He went to University Of Connecticut School Of Medicine and graduated in 1988 and has 36 years of diverse experience with area of expertise as Medical Oncology. He is a member of the group practice Hartford Hospital and his current practice location is 85 Retreat Ave, Hartford, Connecticut. You can reach out to his office (for appointments etc.) via phone at (860) 249-6291.

Dr Mark E Dailey is licensed to practice in Connecticut (license number 034547) and he also participates in the medicare program. He accepts medicare assignments (which means he accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance) and his NPI Number is 1689600629.

Contact Information

Dr Mark E Dailey, MD
85 Retreat Ave,
Hartford, CT 06106-2527
(860) 249-6291
(860) 728-0151



Physician's Profile

Full NameDr Mark E Dailey
GenderMale
SpecialityMedical Oncology
Experience36 Years
Location85 Retreat Ave, Hartford, Connecticut
Accepts Medicare AssignmentsYes. He accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance.
  Medical Education and Training:
  • Dr Mark E Dailey attended and graduated from University Of Connecticut School Of Medicine in 1988
  NPI Data:
  • NPI Number: 1689600629
  • Provider Enumeration Date: 06/23/2006
  • Last Update Date: 08/07/2012
  Medicare PECOS Information:
  • PECOS PAC ID: 0143259788
  • Enrollment ID: I20050804000559

Medical Identifiers

Medical identifiers for Dr Mark E Dailey such as npi, medicare ID, medicare PIN, medicaid, etc.
IdentifierTypeStateIssuer
1689600629NPI-NPPES
001345471MedicaidCT

Medical Taxonomies and Licenses

TaxonomyTypeLicense (State)Status
207RH0003XInternal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology 034547 (Connecticut)Primary

Medical Facilities Affiliation

Facility NameLocationFacility Type
Hartford HospitalHartford, CTHospital

Group Practice Association

Group Practice NameGroup PECOS PAC IDNo. of Members
Hartford Hospital2567366016827

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Medicare Reassignments

Some practitioners may not bill the customers directly but medicare billing happens through clinics / group practice / hospitals where the provider works. Medicare reassignment of benefits is a mechanism by which practitioners allow third parties to bill and receive payment for medicare services performed by them. Dr Mark E Dailey allows following entities to bill medicare on his behalf.
Entity NameHartford Hospital
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1407806391
PECOS PAC ID: 2567366016
Enrollment ID: O20031125000700

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Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

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Entity NameHartford Hospital
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1770696643
PECOS PAC ID: 2567366016
Enrollment ID: O20031125000752

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Researchers investigate unique features of arcuate neurons in the hypothalamus

Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

While couples often change their lifestyle in order to conceive faster, including crash diets, a new study in mice throws up the possibility that this kind of extreme dietary modification by the father might result in adverse effects on the child conceived in this manner.

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Entity NameWindham Community Memorial Hospital, Inc.
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1023191467
PECOS PAC ID: 2961309059
Enrollment ID: O20031217000231

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Research findings advance development of HIV vaccines that induce broadly neutralizing antibodies

A Duke Health-led research team has described both the pathway of HIV protective antibody development and a synthetic HIV outer envelope mimic that has the potential to induce the antibodies with vaccination.

Researchers investigate unique features of arcuate neurons in the hypothalamus

Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

While couples often change their lifestyle in order to conceive faster, including crash diets, a new study in mice throws up the possibility that this kind of extreme dietary modification by the father might result in adverse effects on the child conceived in this manner.

COVID-19 patients can be infectious even after their symptomatic recovery, study shows

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Read more Medical News

› Verified 2 days ago

Entity NameThe Hospital Of Central Connecticut At New Britain General And Bradley
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1063461481
PECOS PAC ID: 6507776564
Enrollment ID: O20040115000497

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Regular consumption of dietary emulsifiers promotes colorectal cancer in mice

Emulsifiers, which are added to most processed foods to aid texture and extend shelf life, can alter intestinal bacteria in a manner that promotes intestinal inflammation and colorectal cancer, according to a new study.

Research findings advance development of HIV vaccines that induce broadly neutralizing antibodies

A Duke Health-led research team has described both the pathway of HIV protective antibody development and a synthetic HIV outer envelope mimic that has the potential to induce the antibodies with vaccination.

Researchers investigate unique features of arcuate neurons in the hypothalamus

Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

While couples often change their lifestyle in order to conceive faster, including crash diets, a new study in mice throws up the possibility that this kind of extreme dietary modification by the father might result in adverse effects on the child conceived in this manner.

COVID-19 patients can be infectious even after their symptomatic recovery, study shows

In a new study, researchers found that half of the patients they treated for mild COVID-19 infection still had coronavirus for up to eight days after symptoms disappeared.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 2 days ago

Entity NameThe William W Backus Hospital
Entity TypePart B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice
Entity IdentifiersNPI Number: 1467517235
PECOS PAC ID: 0749170645
Enrollment ID: O20040316000739

News Archive

Regular consumption of dietary emulsifiers promotes colorectal cancer in mice

Emulsifiers, which are added to most processed foods to aid texture and extend shelf life, can alter intestinal bacteria in a manner that promotes intestinal inflammation and colorectal cancer, according to a new study.

Research findings advance development of HIV vaccines that induce broadly neutralizing antibodies

A Duke Health-led research team has described both the pathway of HIV protective antibody development and a synthetic HIV outer envelope mimic that has the potential to induce the antibodies with vaccination.

Researchers investigate unique features of arcuate neurons in the hypothalamus

Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

While couples often change their lifestyle in order to conceive faster, including crash diets, a new study in mice throws up the possibility that this kind of extreme dietary modification by the father might result in adverse effects on the child conceived in this manner.

COVID-19 patients can be infectious even after their symptomatic recovery, study shows

In a new study, researchers found that half of the patients they treated for mild COVID-19 infection still had coronavirus for up to eight days after symptoms disappeared.

Read more Medical News

› Verified 2 days ago

Medicare Part D Prescriber Enrollment

Any physician or other eligible professional who prescribes Part D drugs must either enroll in the Medicare program or opt out in order to prescribe drugs to their patients with Part D prescription drug benefit plans. Dr Mark E Dailey is enrolled with medicare and thus, if eligible, can prescribe medicare part D drugs to patients with medicare part D benefits.

Mailing Address and Practice Location

Mailing AddressPractice Location Address
Dr Mark E Dailey, MD
85 Retreat Ave,
Hartford, CT 06106-2527

Ph: (860) 249-6291
Dr Mark E Dailey, MD
85 Retreat Ave,
Hartford, CT 06106-2527

Ph: (860) 249-6291

News Archive

Regular consumption of dietary emulsifiers promotes colorectal cancer in mice

Emulsifiers, which are added to most processed foods to aid texture and extend shelf life, can alter intestinal bacteria in a manner that promotes intestinal inflammation and colorectal cancer, according to a new study.

Research findings advance development of HIV vaccines that induce broadly neutralizing antibodies

A Duke Health-led research team has described both the pathway of HIV protective antibody development and a synthetic HIV outer envelope mimic that has the potential to induce the antibodies with vaccination.

Researchers investigate unique features of arcuate neurons in the hypothalamus

Maintaining a healthy body weight may be difficult for many people, but it's reassuring to know that our brains and bodies are wired to work together to do just that-in essence, to achieve a phenomenon known as energy balance, a tight matching between the number of calories consumed versus those expended. This careful balance results from a complex interchange of neurobiological crosstalk within regions of the brain's hypothalamus, and when this "conversation" goes awry, obesity or anorexia can result.

Father's nutritional pattern affects child's cardiovascular health

While couples often change their lifestyle in order to conceive faster, including crash diets, a new study in mice throws up the possibility that this kind of extreme dietary modification by the father might result in adverse effects on the child conceived in this manner.

COVID-19 patients can be infectious even after their symptomatic recovery, study shows

In a new study, researchers found that half of the patients they treated for mild COVID-19 infection still had coronavirus for up to eight days after symptoms disappeared.

Read more News

› Verified 2 days ago


Internal Medicine Doctors in Hartford, CT

Gagandeep Singh, MD
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments
Practice Location: 114 Woodland St, Hartford, CT 06105
Phone: 860-714-7446    Fax: 860-714-1508
Yixia Ye, MD
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments
Practice Location: 31 Seymour St Ste 205, Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: 860-524-2610    
Andrew P Scatola, MD
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments
Practice Location: 85 Jefferson Street, Hartford Hospital Cardiology Dept, Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: 860-972-1212    
Dr. David Jay Altszuler, MD
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments
Practice Location: 85 Seymour St Ste 719, Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: 860-522-0604    Fax: 860-522-0604
Dr. Nisha Dhanabalsamy, MBBS
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments
Practice Location: 80 Seymour St, Hartford, CT 06102
Phone: 860-972-0549    
Sindhuja Palle, MD
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare
Practice Location: 80 Seymour St, Hartford, CT 06106
Phone: 860-545-5000    
Dr. Jamie Matthew Roche, M.D.
Hematology & Oncology
Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare
Practice Location: 80 Seymour St, Hartford, CT 06102
Phone: 860-545-3359    

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