Dr Sharjeel Ahmed Chaudhry, MD | |
330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215-5491 | |
(617) 632-9236 | |
Not Available |
Full Name | Dr Sharjeel Ahmed Chaudhry |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | Student In An Organized Health Care Education/training Program |
Location | 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, Massachusetts |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Medicare enrolled and may accept medicare through third-party reassignment. May prescribe medicare part D drugs. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1235753153 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
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Dr Sharjeel Ahmed Chaudhry, MD 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215-5491 Ph: (617) 632-9236 | Dr Sharjeel Ahmed Chaudhry, MD 330 Brookline Ave, Boston, MA 02215-5491 Ph: (617) 632-9236 |
News Archive
A new study revealed that your cereal choice at breakfast might have an impact on how much you eat for lunch. Newly published research in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition showed that a hearty bowl of instant oatmeal helped curb food intake at lunch better than a leading oat-based, cold cereal - even when each bowl provided the same number of calories.
New research suggests that physicians can distinguish between a type of thyroid cancer and an identical-looking, non-cancerous thyroid condition by simply determining the activity of three genes.
Pancreatic cancer tumors addicted to mutant Kras signaling for their growth and progression have a ready-made substitute to tap if they're ever forced to go cold-turkey on the mutant oncogene, scientists at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center report in the journal Cell.
New research from University of Minnesota hearing scientists shows that fewer than 20 percent of teenagers in the United States have a hearing loss as a result of exposure to loud sounds, thus offering a different analysis of data reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in August.
As open enrollment for many employer-sponsored health plans approaches, workers are faced with higher premiums in 2011, yet again, MSNBC reports. "The increase is typical of what workers have seen in [the] last three years — around 10 percent. But what's different this year is some employers aren't just blaming the usual suspects for rising premiums — unhealthy workers, over-paid doctors and hospitals, and a bad economy. Now insurance experts and employers are also blaming health care reform.
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